39 research outputs found

    Neuronal Conduction of Excitation without Action Potentials Based on Ceramide Production

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    International audienceBACKGROUND: Action potentials are the classic mechanism by which neurons convey a state of excitation throughout their length, leading, after synaptic transmission, to the activation of other neurons and consequently to network functioning. Using an in vitro integrated model, we found previously that peripheral networks in the autonomic nervous system can organise an unconventional regulatory reflex of the digestive tract motility without action potentials. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: In this report, we used combined neuropharmacological and biochemical approaches to elucidate some steps of the mechanism that conveys excitation along the nerves fibres without action potentials. This mechanism requires the production of ceramide in membrane lipid rafts, which triggers in the cytoplasm an increase in intracellular calcium concentration, followed by activation of a neuronal nitric oxide synthase leading to local production of nitric oxide, and then to guanosine cyclic monophosphate. This sequence of second messengers is activated in cascade from rafts to rafts to ensure conduction of the excitation along the nerve fibres. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our results indicate that second messengers are involved in neuronal conduction of excitation without action potentials. This mechanism represents the first evidence-to our knowledge-that excitation is carried along nerves independently of electrical signals. This unexpected ceramide-based conduction of excitation without action potentials along the autonomic nerve fibres opens up new prospects in our understanding of neuronal functioning

    Lipid rafts: dream or reality for cholesterol transporters?

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    The original publication is available at www.springerlink.comInternational audienceAs a key constituent of the cell membranes, cholesterol is an endogenous component of mammalian cells of primary importance, and is thus subjected to highly regulated homeostasis at the cellular level as well as at the level of the whole body. This regulation requires adapted mechanisms favoring the handling of cholesterol in aqueous compartments, as well as its transfer into or out of membranes, involving membrane proteins. A membrane exhibits functional properties largely depending on its lipid composition and on its structural organization, which very often involves cholesterol-rich microdomains. Then there is the appealing possibility that cholesterol may regulate its own transmembrane transport at a purely functional level, independently of any transcriptional regulation based on cholesterol-sensitive nuclear factors controling the expression level of lipid transport proteins. Indeed, the main cholesterol "transporters" presently believed to mediate for instance the intestinal absorption of cholesterol, that are SR-BI, NPC1L1, ABCA1, ABCG1, ABCG5/G8 and even P-glycoprotein, all present privileged functional relationships with membrane cholesterol-containing microdomains. In particular, they all more or less clearly induce membrane disorganization, supposed to facilitate cholesterol exchanges with the close aqueous medium. The actual lipid substrates handled by these transporters are not yet unambiguously determined, but they likely concern the components of membrane microdomains. Conversely, raft alterations may provide specific modulations of the transporter activities, as well as they can induce indirect effects via local perturbations of the membrane. Finally, these cholesterol transporters undergo regulated intracellular trafficking, with presumably some relationships to rafts which remain to be clarified

    Cholesterol and Sphingomyelin-Containing Model Condensed Lipid Monolayers: Heterogeneities Involving Ordered Microdomains Assessed by Two Cholesterol Derivatives.

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    International audienceLipid monolayers are often considered as model membranes, but they are also the physiologic lipid part of the peripheral envelope of lipoproteins and cytosolic lipid bodies. However, their structural organization is still rather elusive, in particular when both cholesterol and sphingomyelin are present. To investigate such structural organization of hemimembranes, we measured, using alternative current voltammetry, the differential capacitance of condensed phosphatidylcholine-based monolayers as a function of applied potential, which is sensitive to their lipid composition and molecular arrangement. Especially, monolayers containing both sphingomyelin and cholesterol, at 15% w/w, presented specific characteristics of the differential capacitance versus potential curves recorded, which was indicative of specific interactions between these two lipid components. We then compared the behavior of two cholesterol derivatives (at 15% w/w), 21-methylpyrenyl-cholesterol (Pyr-met-Chol) and 22-nitrobenzoxadiazole-cholesterol (NBD-Chol), with that of cholesterol when present in model monolayers. Indeed, these two probes were chosen because of previous findings reporting opposite behaviors within bilayer membranes regarding their interaction with ordered lipids, with only Pyr-met-Chol mimicking cholesterol well. Remarkably, in monolayers containing sphingomyelin or not, Pyr-met-Chol and NBD-Chol presented contrasting behaviors, and Pyr-met-Chol mimicked cholesterol only in the presence of sphingomyelin. These two observations (i.e., optimal amounts of sphingomyelin and cholesterol, and the ability to discriminate between Pyr-met-Chol and NBD-Chol) can be interpreted by the existence of heterogeneities including ordered patches in sphingomyelin- and cholesterol-containing monolayers. Since such monolayer lipid arrangement shares some properties with the raft-type lipid microdomains well-described in sphingomyelin- and cholesterol-containing bilayer membranes, our data thus strongly suggest the existence of compact and ordered microdomains in model lipid monolayers

    Hypercholesterolemia of obese mice with deletion of vascular adhesion protein-1 occurs without other atherosclerosis risk factor

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    Aim: Encoded by Aoc3 gene, Vascular Adhesion Protein-1 (VAP-1), also called semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase (SSAO), is a protein supporting leucocyte extravasation to inflammation sites and catalyzing the oxidation of primary amines. We previously observed that a genetically-modified mouse model lacking active VAP-1/SSAO is obese and hypercholesterolemic. Here, we further studied the alterations related to factors that increase or alleviate the risk of atherosclerosis.Methods: Body weight and glucose tolerance were determined in mice homozygous for a null mutation of Aoc3 (AOC3KO) and fed standard or high-fat diet (HFD). White adipose tissue (WAT) inflammation was assessed by immunohistological observations. Cholesterol trafficking was explored by determining plasma and tissue levels and key enzyme expression. Vascular reactivity and VAP-1/SSAO activity were assessed via hydrogen peroxide release, uric acid and nitrate/nitrite levels.Results: AOC3KO mice were devoid of VAP-1/SSAO protein and activity, while, in WT control, WAT was the richest anatomical location regarding the capacity to oxidize benzylamine. AOC3KO mice were obese but did not exhibit alteration of glucose tolerance or insulin secretion. The elevated plasma cholesterol of AOC3KO mice was further increased by HFD, with LDL cholesterol levels higher than in WT. An increased cholesteryl ester accumulation occurred in plasma, liver and WAT, with higher HMGCoA expression in WAT and slightly reduced SR-BI hepatic transporters. However, in AOC3KO mice, no sign of WAT inflammation was detected, while lower hydrogen peroxide release and higher nitrite levels were found in aorta and kidney.Conclusion: The obesity of AOC3KO mice occurred with hypercholesterolemia but without other atherosclerosis risk factors, such as worsened insulin sensitivity, WAT inflammation, increased oxidative stress and reduced nitric oxide availability

    Transforming growth factor activity is a key determinant for the effect of estradiol on fatty streak deposit in hypercholesterolemic mice.

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    International audienceOBJECTIVE: Whereas estradiol prevents fatty streak deposit in immunocompetent apoE-/- or LDLr-/- mice, it is totally ineffective in immunodeficient mice, underlining the key role of immunoinflammation in this effect. In the present work, the role of several major pro- and antiinflammatory cytokines involved in the atheromatous process was evaluated in the effect of estradiol on fatty streak constitution. METHODS AND RESULTS: The preventive effect of estradiol was fully maintained in LDLr-/- mice grafted with bone marrow from either IFN-gamma or interleukin (IL)-12-deficient mice, showing that this beneficial effect was not mediated through a specific decrease in the production of these 2 proinflammatory cytokines. Furthermore, IL-10-/- apoE-/- mice remained protected by estradiol, excluding a significant contribution of this antiinflammatory cytokine. In contrast, the protective effect of estradiol was (1) associated with enhanced aortic expression of TGF-beta1 in apoE-/- mice during early steps of atherogenesis; (2) abolished and even reversed in apoE-/- mice administered with a neutralizing anti-TGF-beta antibody; (3) abolished in LDLr-/- mice grafted with bone marrow from Smad3-deficient mice. CONCLUSIONS: The status of the TGF-beta pathway crucially determines the antiatherogenic effect of estradiol in hypercholesterolemic mice, whereas neither IFN-gamma, IL-12, nor IL-10 are specifically involved in this protection

    Fluorescent probes for detecting cholesterol-rich ordered membrane microdomains: entangled relationships between structural analogies in the membrane and functional homologies in the cell

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    This review addresses the question of fluorescent detection of ordered membrane (micro) domains in living (cultured) cells, with a "practical" point of view since the situation is much more complicated than for studying model membranes. We first briefly recall the bases of model membrane structural organization involving liquid-ordered and -disordered phases, and the main features of their counterparts in cell membranes that are the various microdomains. We then emphasize the utility of the fluorescent probes derived from cholesterol, and delineate the respective advantages, limitations and drawbacks of the existing ones. In particular, besides their intramembrane behavior, their relevant characteristics should integrate their different cellular fates for membrane turn-over, trafficking and metabolism, in order to evaluate and improve their efficiency for in-situ probing membrane microdomains in the cell physiology context. Finally, at the present stage, it appears that Bdp-Chol and Pyr-met-Chol display well complementary properties, allowing to use them in combination to improve the reliability of the current experimental approaches. But the field is still open, and there remains much work to perform in this research area
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