» Articles » PMID: 10747887

Distinct Roles of Two Intracellular Phospholipase A2s in Fatty Acid Release in the Cell Death Pathway. Proteolytic Fragment of Type IVA Cytosolic Phospholipase A2alpha Inhibits Stimulus-induced Arachidonate Release, Whereas That of Type VI...

Overview
Journal J Biol Chem
Specialty Biochemistry
Date 2000 Apr 5
PMID 10747887
Citations 51
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Cytosolic phospholipase A(2)alpha (cPLA(2)alpha; type IVA), an essential initiator of stimulus-dependent arachidonic acid (AA) metabolism, underwent caspase-mediated cleavage at Asp(522) during apoptosis. Although the resultant catalytically inactive N-terminal fragment, cPLA(2)(1-522), was inessential for cell growth and the apoptotic process, it was constitutively associated with cellular membranes and attenuated both the A23187-elicited immediate and the interleukin-1-dependent delayed phases of AA release by several phospholipase A(2)s (PLA(2)s) involved in eicosanoid generation, without affecting spontaneous AA release by PLA(2)s implicated in phospholipid remodeling. Confocal microscopic analysis revealed that cPLA(2)(1-522) was distributed in the nucleus. Pharmacological and transfection studies revealed that Ca(2+)-independent PLA(2) (iPLA(2); type VI), a phospholipid remodeling PLA(2), contributes to the cell death-associated increase in fatty acid release. iPLA(2) was cleaved at Asp(183) by caspase-3 to a truncated enzyme lacking most of the first ankyrin repeat, and this cleavage resulted in increased iPLA(2) functions. iPLA(2) had a significant influence on cell growth or death, according to cell type. Collectively, the caspase-truncated form of cPLA(2)alpha behaves like a naturally occurring dominant-negative molecule for stimulus-induced AA release, rendering apoptotic cells no longer able to produce lipid mediators, whereas the caspase-truncated form of iPLA(2) accelerates phospholipid turnover that may lead to apoptotic membranous changes.

Citing Articles

Stem cells tightly regulate dead cell clearance to maintain tissue fitness.

Stewart K, Abdusselamoglu M, Tierney M, Gola A, Hur Y, Gonzales K Nature. 2024; 633(8029):407-416.

PMID: 39169186 PMC: 11390485. DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-07855-6.


Noncanonical Regulation of cAMP-Dependent Insulin Secretion and Its Implications in Type 2 Diabetes.

Ramanadham S, Turk J, Bhatnagar S Compr Physiol. 2023; 13(3):5023-5049.

PMID: 37358504 PMC: 10809800. DOI: 10.1002/cphy.c220031.


Extracellular vesicles in β cell biology: Role of lipids in vesicle biogenesis, cargo, and intercellular signaling.

Aguirre R, Kulkarni A, Becker M, Lei X, Sarkar S, Ramanadham S Mol Metab. 2022; 63:101545.

PMID: 35817393 PMC: 9294332. DOI: 10.1016/j.molmet.2022.101545.


Furosine, a Maillard Reaction Product, Triggers Necroptosis in Hepatocytes by Regulating the RIPK1/RIPK3/MLKL Pathway.

Li H, Wang Y, Yang H, Zhang Y, Xing L, Wang J Int J Mol Sci. 2019; 20(10).

PMID: 31091743 PMC: 6566718. DOI: 10.3390/ijms20102388.


Mutations in the Drosophila homolog of human PLA2G6 give rise to age-dependent loss of psychomotor activity and neurodegeneration.

Iliadi K, Gluscencova O, Iliadi N, Boulianne G Sci Rep. 2018; 8(1):2939.

PMID: 29440694 PMC: 5811537. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-21343-8.