Journal of Lipid Research (Nov 2018)

Tsc3 regulates SPT amino acid choice in Saccharomyces cerevisiae by promoting alanine in the sphingolipid pathway

  • Jihui Ren,
  • Essa M. Saied,
  • Aaron Zhong,
  • Justin Snider,
  • Christian Ruiz,
  • Christoph Arenz,
  • Lina M. Obeid,
  • Geoffrey D. Girnun,
  • Yusuf A. Hannun

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 59, no. 11
pp. 2126 – 2139

Abstract

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The generation of most sphingolipids (SPLs) starts with condensation between serine and an activated long-chain fatty acid catalyzed by serine palmitoyltransferase (SPT). SPT can also use other amino acids to generate small quantities of noncanonical SPLs. The balance between serine-derived and noncanonical SPLs is pivotal; for example, hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy type I results from SPT mutations that cause an abnormal accumulation of alanine-derived SPLs. The regulatory mechanism for SPT amino acid selectivity and physiological functions of noncanonical SPLs are unknown. We investigated SPT selection of amino acid substrates by measuring condensation products of serine and alanine in yeast cultures and SPT use of serine and alanine in a TSC3 knockout model. We identified the Tsc3 subunit of SPT as a regulator of amino acid substrate selectivity by demonstrating its primary function in promoting alanine utilization by SPT and confirmed its requirement for the inhibitory effect of alanine on SPT utilization of serine. Moreover, we observed downstream metabolic consequences to Tsc3 loss: serine influx into the SPL biosynthesis pathway increased through Ypk1-depenedent activation of SPT and ceramide synthases. This Ypk1-dependent activation of serine influx after Tsc3 knockout suggests a potential function for deoxy-sphingoid bases in modulating Ypk1 signaling.

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