Although the transcriptome, proteome, and interactome of several eukaryotic model organisms have been described in detail, lipidomes remain relatively uncharacterized. Using Saccharomyces cerevisiae as an example, we demonstrate that automated shotgun lipidomics analysis enabled lipidome-wide absolute quantification of individual molecular lipid species by streamlined processing of a single sample of only 2 million yeast cells. By comparative lipidomics, we achieved the absolute quantification of 250 molecular lipid species covering 21 major lipid classes. This analysis provided Ϸ95% coverage of the yeast lipidome achieved with 125-fold improvement in sensitivity compared with previous approaches. Comparative lipidomics demonstrated that growth temperature and defects in lipid biosynthesis induce ripple effects throughout the molecular composition of the yeast lipidome. This work serves as a resource for molecular characterization of eukaryotic lipidomes, and establishes shotgun lipidomics as a powerful platform for complementing biochemical studies and other systems-level approaches.fatty acid elongation ͉ S. cerevisiae ͉ shotgun lipidomics T he lipidome of eukaryotic cells consists of hundreds to thousands of individual lipid species that constitute membranes, store metabolic energy and function as bioactive molecules (1-3). Despite the extensive characterization of proteins, their association into complexes and activities (4-6), it is still difficult to assess how perturbations within the lipid metabolic network affect the full lipidome of cells. This work shows that lipidome-wide quantification of individual molecular lipid species (molecules with defined chemical structure) by absolute quantification (expressed in mol or mol%) provides a new approach to relate lipidomics and functional genomics studies.The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae serves as a prime model organism for studying the molecular organization and regulatory circuitry of eukaryotic lipidomes (7-9). It uses a relatively simple and conserved network of lipid metabolic pathways (Fig. 1) that synthesize a few hundred molecular lipid species constituting its full lipidome (3). The lipidome diversity is primarily determined by the fatty acid synthase (10), the ⌬-9 desaturase (11) and the fatty acid elongation complex (12) that produce only saturated or mono-unsaturated fatty acids having 10 to 26 carbon atoms for the biosynthesis of glycerolipids, glycerophospholipids, and sphingolipids. Importantly, several metabolic conversions interlink sphingolipid, glycerophospholipid, and glycerolipid metabolism such that any perturbation within the metabolic network is prone to induce lipidome-wide ripple effects. Remarkably, numerous genes involved in lipid metabolism and trafficking can be mutated or deleted without apparent physiological consequences (Fig. 1).Despite remarkable methodological advances, lipidomics seldom complements functional genomics efforts owing to three major factors. First, analysis of glycerophospholipids and sphingolipids requires ...
Cell membranes are composed of a lipid bilayer, containing proteins that span the bilayer and/or interact with the lipids on either side of the two leaflets. Although recent advances in lipid analytics show that membranes in eukaryotic cells contain hundreds of different lipid species, the function of this lipid diversity remains enigmatic. The basic structure of cell membranes is the lipid bilayer, composed of two apposing leaflets, forming a twodimensional liquid with fascinating properties designed to perform the functions cells require. To coordinate these functions, the bilayer has evolved the propensity to segregate its constituents laterally. This capability is based on dynamic liquid-liquid immiscibility and underlies the raft concept of membrane subcompartmentalization. This principle combines the potential for sphingolipid-cholesterol self-assembly with protein specificity to focus and regulate membrane bioactivity. Here we will review the emerging principles of membrane architecture with special emphasis on lipid organization and domain formation.
Lipid rafts are nanoscopic assemblies of sphingolipids, cholesterol, and specific membrane proteins that contribute to lateral heterogeneity in eukaryotic membranes. Separation of artificial membranes into liquid-ordered (Lo) and liquid-disordered phases is regarded as a common model for this compartmentalization. However, tight lipid packing in Lo phases seems to conflict with efficient partitioning of raft-associated transmembrane (TM) proteins. To assess membrane order as a component of raft organization, we performed fluorescence spectroscopy and microscopy with the membrane probes Laurdan and C-laurdan. First, we assessed lipid packing in model membranes of various compositions and found cholesterol and acyl chain dependence of membrane order. Then we probed cell membranes by using two novel systems that exhibit inducible phase separation: giant plasma membrane vesicles [Baumgart et al. (2007) Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 104:3165-3170] and plasma membrane spheres. Notably, only the latter support selective inclusion of raft TM proteins with the ganglioside GM1 into one phase. We measured comparable small differences in order between the separated phases of both biomembranes. Lateral packing in the ordered phase of giant plasma membrane vesicles resembled the Lo domain of model membranes, whereas the GM1 phase in plasma membrane spheres exhibited considerably lower order, consistent with different partitioning of lipid and TM protein markers. Thus, lipid-mediated coalescence of the GM1 raft domain seems to be distinct from the formation of a Lo phase, suggesting additional interactions between proteins and lipids to be effective.generalized polarization value ͉ giant unilamellar vesicle ͉ membrane organization ͉ lipid sorting ͉ lipid raft T he lipid raft hypothesis postulates that selective interactions among sphingolipids, cholesterol, and membrane proteins contribute to lateral membrane heterogeneity (1). A tenet of the model is that small, dynamic cholesterol-sphingolipid-enriched assemblies can be induced to coalesce into larger, more stable structures through clustering of domain components (2). Although experimental data support cholesterol-dependent nano-scale membrane heterogeneity (3-8) and selective domain formation upon raft cross-linking (9-12), the mechanisms that govern such associations in cell membranes remain unclear.On the molecular level, a key feature that is thought to contribute to raft assembly is the propensity of cholesterol to pack tightly with saturated acyl chains of lipids causing them to adopt an extended conformation (13,14). In multi-component model membranes (n Ͼ 2), this interaction can lead to microscopically separate fluid membrane phases: the liquid-ordered (Lo) phase, enriched in saturated (sphingo-)lipids and cholesterol in a highly condensed state, and the liquid-disordered (Ld) phase, enriched in unsaturated glycerophospholipid in a disordered state (15)(16)(17).Several features of the Lo phase in model membranes correspond to the predicted properties of lipid rafts in cel...
Tissue differentiation is an important process that involves major cellular membrane remodeling. We used Madin-Darby canine kidney cells as a model for epithelium formation and investigated the remodeling of the total cell membrane lipidome during the transition from a nonpolarized morphology to an epithelial morphology and vice versa. To achieve this, we developed a shotgun-based lipidomics workflow that enabled the absolute quantification of mammalian membrane lipidomes with minimal sample processing from low sample amounts. Epithelial morphogenesis was accompanied by a major shift from sphingomyelin to glycosphingolipid, together with an increase in plasmalogen, phosphatidylethanolamine, and cholesterol content, whereas the opposite changes took place during an epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition. Moreover, during polarization, the sphingolipids became longer, more saturated, and more hydroxylated as required to generate an apical membrane domain that serves as a protective barrier for the epithelial sheet.epithelial polarity | shotgun lipidomics | high resolution mass spectrometry | Forssman glycosphingolipid | epithelial-mesenchymal transition G ain and loss of epithelial polarity are fundamental processes in tissue differentiation (1, 2). These processes have been extensively studied not only in the context of embryogenesis but in tumor progression and metastasis (1). Although cell polarization necessarily implies major changes in the structure and properties of the cell membranes, the exact changes in the molecular composition of their membrane lipidome remain unknown.Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells are a cell culture model for epithelial polarization (3,4). When seeded at low density, MDCK cells undergo a morphological change from a fibroblast-like morphology to a well-polarized epithelium (5) and have recently also been adapted to undergo an epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) (6). Epithelial cells have evolved characteristic apical and basolateral membrane domains, separated by tight junctions, with specific protein and lipid composition (7,8). The unusual robustness of the apical membrane is largely attributable to its special lipid composition (9-11).In this work, we applied shotgun MS for comprehensive and quantitative characterization of mammalian cellular membranes (12). By combining high mass resolution MS, an improved extraction procedure that increases the recovery of polar lipids (13), and the use of internal standard mixtures for absolute quantification, we expanded the lipid repertoire covered by shotgun lipidomics to glycosphingolipids (GSPs). Importantly, the analysis of the GSPs did not require the hydrolysis of glycerophospholipids (GPs) (14), and this simplification allowed us to determine the membrane lipidome with unprecedented comprehensiveness (more than 300 lipid species from 14 different lipid classes) from a single sample of 10 5 cells.We further elucidated how the lipidome is remodeled during the course of MDCK cell epithelial polarization. We found that when these c...
Interorgan lipid transport occurs via lipoproteins, and altered lipoprotein levels correlate with metabolic disease. However, precisely how lipoproteins affect tissue lipid composition has not been comprehensively analyzed. Here, we identify the major lipoproteins of Drosophila melanogaster and use genetics and mass spectrometry to study their assembly, interorgan trafficking, and influence on tissue lipids. The apoB-family lipoprotein Lipophorin (Lpp) is the major hemolymph lipid carrier. It is produced as a phospholipid-rich particle by the fat body, and its secretion requires Microsomal Triglyceride Transfer Protein (MTP). Lpp acquires sterols and most diacylglycerol (DAG) at the gut via Lipid Transfer Particle (LTP), another fat body-derived apoB-family lipoprotein. The gut, like the fat body, is a lipogenic organ, incorporating both de novo–synthesized and dietary fatty acids into DAG for export. We identify distinct requirements for LTP and Lpp-dependent lipid mobilization in contributing to the neutral and polar lipid composition of the brain and wing imaginal disc. These studies define major routes of interorgan lipid transport in Drosophila and uncover surprising tissue-specific differences in lipoprotein lipid utilization.
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