Cell Reports (Mar 2018)

Ceramide-Protein Interactions Modulate Ceramide-Associated Lipotoxic Cardiomyopathy

  • Stanley M. Walls,
  • Anthony Cammarato,
  • Dale A. Chatfield,
  • Karen Ocorr,
  • Greg L. Harris,
  • Rolf Bodmer

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 10
pp. 2702 – 2715

Abstract

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Summary: Lipotoxic cardiomyopathy (LCM) is characterized by abnormal myocardial accumulation of lipids, including ceramide; however, the contribution of ceramide to the etiology of LCM is unclear. Here, we investigated the association of ceramide metabolism and ceramide-interacting proteins (CIPs) in LCM in the Drosophila heart model. We find that ceramide feeding or ceramide-elevating genetic manipulations are strongly associated with cardiac dilation and defects in contractility. High ceramide-associated LCM is prevented by inhibiting ceramide synthesis, establishing a robust model of direct ceramide-associated LCM, corroborating previous indirect evidence in mammals. We identified several CIPs from mouse heart and Drosophila extracts, including caspase activator Annexin-X, myosin chaperone Unc-45, and lipogenic enzyme FASN1, and remarkably, their cardiac-specific manipulation can prevent LCM. Collectively, these data suggest that high ceramide-associated lipotoxicity is mediated, in part, through altering caspase activation, sarcomeric maintenance, and lipogenesis, thus providing evidence for conserved mechanisms in LCM pathogenesis in mammals. : Lipotoxic cardiomyopathy (LCM) is characterized by abnormal myocardial accumulation of lipids, including ceramide. Here, Walls et al. find that ceramide feeding or ceramide-elevating genetic manipulations induce LCM. They identified several ceramide-interacting proteins, whose subsequent cardiac-specific manipulation can prevent LCM by altering caspase activation, sarcomeric maintenance, and lipogenesis. Keywords: heart, sphingolipids, Drosophila, diabetic cardiac disease, myriocin, apoptosis, lipogenesis, Unc-45, Annexin, FASN