Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3352995 Immunity 2014 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

•α-linked monoglycosylceramides are endogenous ligands of NKT cells•Mammalian cells can produce small amounts of α-linked monoglycosylceramides•Catabolic enzymes control the amount of α-galactosylceramides in cells•Synthetic β-glycosylceramides are often contaminated with α-anomers

SummaryGlycosylceramides in mammalian species are thought to be present in the form of β-anomers. This conclusion was reinforced by the identification of only one glucosylceramide and one galactosylceramide synthase, both β-transferases, in mammalian genomes. Thus, the possibility that small amounts of α-anomers could be produced by an alternative enzymatic pathway, by an unfaithful enzyme, or spontaneously in unusual cellular compartments has not been examined in detail. We approached the question by taking advantage of the exquisite specificity of T and B lymphocytes and combined it with the specificity of catabolic enzymes of the sphingolipid pathway. Here, we demonstrate that mammalian immune cells produce constitutively very small quantities of α-glycosylceramides, which are the major endogenous ligands of natural killer T cells. Catabolic enzymes of the ceramide and glycolipid pathway tightly control the amount of these α-glycosylceramides. The exploitation of this pathway to manipulate the immune response will create new therapeutic opportunities.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Immunology and Microbiology Immunology
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