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1.
J Lipid Res ; : 100574, 2024 Jun 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38857781

ABSTRACT

Bis(monoacylglycerol)phosphate (BMP) is an acidic glycerophospholipid localized to late endosomes and lysosomes. However, the metabolism of BMP is poorly understood. Because many drugs that cause phospholipidosis inhibit lysosomal phospholipase A2 (LPLA2, PLA2G15, LYPLA3) activity, we investigated whether this enzyme has a role in BMP catabolism. The incubation of recombinant human LPLA2 (hLPLA2) and liposomes containing the naturally occurring BMP (sn-(2-oleoyl-3-hydroxy)-glycerol-1-phospho-sn-1'-(2'-oleoyl-3'-hydroxy)-glycerol (S,S-(2,2',C18:1)-BMP) resulted in the deacylation of this BMP isomer. The deacylation rate was 70 times lower than that of dioleoyl phosphatidylglycerol (DOPG), an isomer and precursor of BMP. The release rates of oleic acid from DOPG and four BMP stereoisomers by LPLA2 differed. The rank order of the rates of hydrolysis were DOPG>S,S-(3,3',C18:1)-BMP>R,S-(3,1',C18:1)-BMP>R,R-(1,1',C18:1)>S,S-(2,2')-BMP. The cationic amphiphilic drug amiodarone (AMD) inhibited the deacylation of DOPG and BMP isomers by hLPLA2 in a concentration dependent manner. Under these experimental conditions, the IC50s of amiodarone-induced inhibition of the four BMP isomers and DOPG were less than 20 µM and approximately 30 µM, respectively. BMP accumulation was observed in AMD-treated RAW 264.7 cells. The accumulated BMP was significantly reduced by exogenous treatment of cells with active recombinant hLPLA2 but not with diisopropylfluorophosphate-inactivated recombinant hLPLA2. Finally, a series of cationic amphiphilic drugs known to cause phospholipidosis were screened for inhibition of LPLA2 activity as measured by either the transacylation or fatty acid hydrolysis of BMP or phosphatidylcholine as substrates. Fifteen compounds demonstrated significant inhibition with IC50s ranging from 6.8 to 63.3 µM. These results indicate that LPLA2 degrades BMP isomers with different substrate specificities under acidic conditions and may be the key enzyme associated with BMP accumulation in drug-induced phospholipidosis.

2.
Neurobiol Stress ; 15: 100376, 2021 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34401412

ABSTRACT

The microbiome co-evolved with their mammalian host over thousands of years. This commensal relationship serves a pivotal role in various metabolic, physiological, and immunological processes. Recently we discovered impaired adrenal catecholamine stress responses in germ-free mice suggesting developmental modification of the reflex arc or absence of an ongoing microbiome signal. To determine whether maturational arrest or an absent bacteria-derived metabolite was the cause, we tested whether depleting gut microbiome in young adult animals could also alter the peripheral stress responses to insulin-induced hypoglycemia. Groups of C57Bl6 male mice were given regular water (control) or a cocktail of non-absorbable broad-spectrum antibiotics (Abx) in the drinking water for two weeks before injection with insulin or saline. Abx mice displayed a profound decrease in microbial diversity and abundance of Bacteroidetes and Firmicutes, plus a markedly enlarged caecum and no detectable by-products of bacterial fermentation (sp. short chain fatty acids, SCFA). Tonic and stress-induced epinephrine levels were attenuated. Recolonization (Abx + R) restored bacterial diversity, but not the sympathoadrenal system responsiveness or caecal acetate, propionate and butyrate levels. In contrast, corticosterone (HPA) and glucagon (parasympathetic) resting values and responses to hypoglycemia remained similar across all conditions. Oral supplementation with SCFA improved epinephrine responses to hypoglycaemia. Whole genome shotgun sequence profiling of fecal samples from control, Abx and Abx + R cohorts identified nine microbes (SCFA producers) absent from both Abx and Abx + R groups. These results implicate gut microbiome depletion plus its attendant reduction in SCFA signalling in adversely affecting the release of epinephrine in response to hypoglycemia. We speculate that regardless of postnatal age, a mutable microbiome messaging system exists throughout life. Unravelling these mechanisms could lead to new therapeutic possibilities through controlled manipulation of the gut microbiota and its ability to alter systemic neurotransmitter responsiveness.

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