Lipid Acyl Chain Remodeling in Yeast

Publication date

2016-01-19

Authors

Renne, Mike FISNI 0000000443826953
Bao, XueORCID 0000-0002-5129-0728ISNI 000000049281246X
De Smet, C.H.ISNI 0000000394382726
de Kroon, Anton IISNI 0000000390026724

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Abstract

Membrane lipid homeostasis is maintained by de novo synthesis, intracellular transport, remodeling, and degradation of lipid molecules. Glycerophospholipids, the most abundant structural component of eukaryotic membranes, are subject to acyl chain remodeling, which is defined as the post-synthetic process in which one or both acyl chains are exchanged. Here, we review studies addressing acyl chain remodeling of membrane glycerophospholipids in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, a model organism that has been successfully used to investigate lipid synthesis and its regulation. Experimental evidence for the occurrence of phospholipid acyl chain exchange in cardiolipin, phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylinositol, and phosphatidylethanolamine is summarized, including methods and tools that have been used for detecting remodeling. Progress in the identification of the enzymes involved is reported, and putative functions of acyl chain remodeling in yeast are discussed.

Keywords

acyl chain exchange, membrane lipids, lipid homeostasis, phospholipases, acyltransferases, transacylases

Citation

Renne, M F, Bao, X, De Smet, C H & de Kroon, A I P M 2016, 'Lipid Acyl Chain Remodeling in Yeast', Lipid Insights, vol. 8, no. Suppl 1, pp. 33-40. https://doi.org/10.4137/LPI.S31780