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Keywords = sphingomyelin deacylase

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21 pages, 10664 KB  
Article
Overexpression of the β-Subunit of Acid Ceramidase in the Epidermis of Mice Provokes Atopic Dermatitis-like Skin Symptoms
by Miho Sashikawa-Kimura, Mariko Takada, Md Razib Hossain, Hidetoshi Tsuda, Xiaonan Xie, Mayumi Komine, Mamitaro Ohtsuki and Genji Imokawa
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2024, 25(16), 8737; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms25168737 - 10 Aug 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2769
Abstract
We previously reported that a pathogenic abnormality in the barrier and water-holding functions of the stratum corneum (SC) in the skin of patients with atopic dermatitis (AD) is mainly attributable to significantly decreased levels of total ceramides in the SC. That decrease is [...] Read more.
We previously reported that a pathogenic abnormality in the barrier and water-holding functions of the stratum corneum (SC) in the skin of patients with atopic dermatitis (AD) is mainly attributable to significantly decreased levels of total ceramides in the SC. That decrease is mediated by the abnormal expression of a novel ceramide-reducing enzyme, sphingomyelin/glucosylceramide deacylase (SGDase), which is the β-subunit (ASAH1b) of acid ceramidase. In this study, we determined whether mice overexpressing ASAH1b in their epidermis develop AD-like skin symptoms. We generated transgenic (TG) mice overexpressing ASAH1b, regulated by the involucrin promoter, to localize its expression in the upper epidermis. After hair removal using a depilatory cream containing glycolic acid, the TG mice without any visible skin inflammation at 8 weeks of age had increased levels of ASAH1b and decreased levels of SC ceramide, with disrupted barrier functions measured by trans-epidermal water loss compared to the wild-type (WT) mice. Interestingly, enzymatic assays revealed that SGDase activity was not detectable in the skin of the TG mice compared to WT mice. Immunological staining revealed that there was an increased expression level of IL-33 in the epidermis and an accumulation of macrophages in the dermis of TG mice compared to WT mice, which are phenotypic characteristics of AD, that were exacerbated by tape-stripping of the skin. In the skin of the TG mice, the mRNA levels of IL-5, CCL11, IL-22, CXCL10, and IFNγ were significantly upregulated compared to the WT mice, and tape-stripping significantly increased the mRNA levels of IL-4, IL-33, CXCL1, CXCL12, TLR9, and CD163 compared to WT mice. These findings strongly indicate that the skin of the depilatory cream-treated TG mice exists in an atopic dry skin condition that is highly sensitive to various environmental stimuli. The sum of our results suggests that ASAH1b itself, even in the absence of its enzymatic activity, is a major etiologic factor for atopic dry skin symptoms via an unknown mechanism. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Molecular Immunology)
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14 pages, 1854 KB  
Article
Identification of a Novel Acid Sphingomyelinase Activity Associated with Recombinant Human Acid Ceramidase
by Xingxuan He and Edward H. Schuchman
Biomolecules 2023, 13(11), 1623; https://doi.org/10.3390/biom13111623 - 6 Nov 2023
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 3347
Abstract
Acid ceramidase (AC) is a lysosomal enzyme required to hydrolyze ceramide to sphingosine by the removal of the fatty acid moiety. An inherited deficiency in this activity results in two disorders, Farber Lipogranulomatosis and spinal muscular atrophy with myoclonic epilepsy, leading to the [...] Read more.
Acid ceramidase (AC) is a lysosomal enzyme required to hydrolyze ceramide to sphingosine by the removal of the fatty acid moiety. An inherited deficiency in this activity results in two disorders, Farber Lipogranulomatosis and spinal muscular atrophy with myoclonic epilepsy, leading to the accumulation of ceramides and other sphingolipids in various cells and tissues. In addition to ceramide hydrolysis, several other activities have been attributed to AC, including a reverse reaction that synthesizes ceramide from free fatty acids and sphingosine, and a deacylase activity that removes fatty acids from complex lipids such as sphingomyelin and glycosphingolipids. A close association of AC with another important enzyme of sphingolipid metabolism, acid sphingomyelinase (ASM), has also been observed. Herein, we used a highly purified recombinant human AC (rhAC) and novel UPLC-based assay methods to investigate the recently described deacylase activity of rhAC against three sphingolipid substrates, sphingomyelin, galactosyl- and glucosylceramide. No deacylase activities were detected using this method, although we did unexpectedly identify a significant ASM activity using natural (C-18) and artificial (Bodipy-C12) sphingomyelin substrates as well as the ASM-specific fluorogenic substrate, hexadecanoylamino-4-methylumbelliferyl phosphorylcholine (HMU-PC). We showed that this ASM activity was not due to contaminating, hamster-derived ASM in the rhAC preparation, and that the treatment of ASM-knockout mice with rhAC significantly reduced sphingomyelin storage in the liver. However, unlike the treatment with rhASM, this did not lead to elevated ceramide or sphingosine levels. Full article
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33 pages, 15996 KB  
Review
Cutting Edge of the Pathogenesis of Atopic Dermatitis: Sphingomyelin Deacylase, the Enzyme Involved in Its Ceramide Deficiency, Plays a Pivotal Role
by Genji Imokawa
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2021, 22(4), 1613; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms22041613 - 5 Feb 2021
Cited by 27 | Viewed by 6025
Abstract
Atopic dermatitis (AD) is characterized clinically by severe dry skin and functionally by both a cutaneous barrier disruption and an impaired water-holding capacity in the stratum corneum (SC) even in the nonlesional skin. The combination of the disrupted barrier and water-holding functions in [...] Read more.
Atopic dermatitis (AD) is characterized clinically by severe dry skin and functionally by both a cutaneous barrier disruption and an impaired water-holding capacity in the stratum corneum (SC) even in the nonlesional skin. The combination of the disrupted barrier and water-holding functions in nonlesional skin is closely linked to the disease severity of AD, which suggests that the barrier abnormality as well as the water deficiency are elicited as a result of the induced dermatitis and subsequently trigger the recurrence of dermatitis. These functional abnormalities of the SC are mainly attributable to significantly decreased levels of total ceramides and the altered ceramide profile in the SC. Clinical studies using a synthetic pseudo-ceramide (pCer) that can function as a natural ceramide have indicated the superior clinical efficacy of pCer and, more importantly, have shown that the ceramide deficiency rather than changes in the ceramide profile in the SC of AD patients plays a central role in the pathogenesis of AD. Clinical studies of infants with AD have shown that the barrier disruption due to the ceramide deficiency is not inherent and is essentially dependent on postinflammatory events in those infants. Consistently, the recovery of trans-epidermal water loss after tape-stripping occurs at a significantly slower rate only at 1 day post-tape-stripping in AD skin compared with healthy control (HC) skin. This resembles the recovery pattern observed in Niemann–Pick disease, which is caused by an acid sphingomyelinase (aSMase) deficiency. Further, comparison of ceramide levels in the SC between before and after tape-stripping revealed that whereas ceramide levels in HC skin are significantly upregulated at 4 days post-tape-stripping, their ceramide levels remain substantially unchanged at 4 days post-tape-stripping. Taken together, the sum of these findings strongly suggests that an impaired homeostasis of a ceramide-generating process may be associated with these abnormalities. We have discovered a novel enzyme, sphingomyelin (SM) deacylase, which cleaves the N-acyl linkage of SM and glucosylceramide (GCer). The activity of SM deacylase is significantly increased in AD lesional epidermis as well as in the involved and uninvolved SC of AD skin, but not in the skin of patients with contact dermatitis or chronic eczema, compared with HC skin. SM deacylase competes with aSMase and β-glucocerebrosidase (BGCase) to hydrolyze their common substrates, SM and GCer, to yield their lysoforms sphingosylphosphorylcholine (SPC) and glucosylsphingosine (GSP), respectively, instead of ceramide. Consistently, those reaction products (SPC and GSP) accumulate to a greater extent in the involved and uninvolved SC of AD skin compared with chronic eczema or contact dermatitis skin as well as HC skin. Successive chromatographies were used to purify SM deacylase to homogeneity with a single band of ≈43 kDa and with an enrichment of >14,000-fold. Analysis of a protein spot with SM deacylase activity separated by 2D-SDS-PAGE using MALDI-TOF MS/MS allowed its amino acid sequence to be determined and to identify it as the β-subunit of acid ceramidase (aCDase), an enzyme consisting of α- and β-subunits linked by amino-bonds and a single S-S bond. Western blotting of samples treated with 2-mercaptoethanol revealed that whereas recombinant human aCDase was recognized by antibodies to the α-subunit at ≈56 and ≈13 kDa and the β-subunit at ≈43 kDa, the purified SM deacylase was detectable only by the antibody to the β-subunit at ≈43 kDa. Breaking the S-S bond of recombinant human aCDase with dithiothreitol elicited the activity of SM deacylase with an apparent size of ≈40 kDa upon gel chromatography in contrast to aCDase activity with an apparent size of ≈50 kDa in untreated recombinant human aCDase. These results provide new insights into the essential role of SM deacylase as the β-subunit aCDase that causes the ceramide deficiency in AD skin. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Molecular Mechanisms of Skin Aging and Atopic Dermatitis)
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22 pages, 21541 KB  
Article
Sphingomyelin Deacylase, the Enzyme Involved in the Pathogenesis of Atopic Dermatitis, Is Identical to the β-Subunit of Acid Ceramidase
by Yasuhiro Teranishi, Hiroshi Kuwahara, Masaru Ueda, Tadashi Takemura, Masanori Kusumoto, Keiji Nakamura, Jun Sakai, Toru Kimura, Yasuji Furutani, Makoto Kawashima, Genji Imokawa and Mari Nogami-Itoh
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2020, 21(22), 8789; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms21228789 - 20 Nov 2020
Cited by 11 | Viewed by 4805
Abstract
A ceramide deficiency in the stratum corneum (SC) is an essential etiologic factor for the dry and barrier-disrupted skin of patients with atopic dermatitis (AD). Previously, we reported that sphingomyelin (SM) deacylase, which hydrolyzes SM and glucosylceramide at the acyl site to yield [...] Read more.
A ceramide deficiency in the stratum corneum (SC) is an essential etiologic factor for the dry and barrier-disrupted skin of patients with atopic dermatitis (AD). Previously, we reported that sphingomyelin (SM) deacylase, which hydrolyzes SM and glucosylceramide at the acyl site to yield their lysoforms sphingosylphosphorylcholine (SPC) and glucosylsphingosine, respectively, instead of ceramide and/or acylceramide, is over-expressed in AD skin and results in a ceramide deficiency. Although the enzymatic properties of SM deacylase have been clarified, the enzyme itself remains unidentified. In this study, we purified and characterized SM deacylase from rat skin. The activities of SM deacylase and acid ceramidase (aCDase) were measured using SM and ceramide as substrates by tandem mass spectrometry by monitoring the production of SPC and sphingosine, respectively. Levels of SM deacylase activity from various rat organs were higher in the order of skin > lung > heart. By successive chromatography using Phenyl-5PW, Rotofor, SP-Sepharose, Superdex 200 and Shodex RP18-415, SM deacylase was purified to homogeneity with a single band of an apparent molecular mass of 43 kDa with an enrichment of > 14,000-fold. Analysis by MALDI-TOF MS/MS using a protein spot with SM deacylase activity separated by 2D-SDS-PAGE allowed its amino acid sequence to be determined and identified as the β-subunit of aCDase, which consists of α- and β-subunits linked by amino bonds and a single S-S bond. Western blotting of samples treated with 2-mercaptoethanol revealed that, whereas recombinant human aCDase was recognized by antibodies to the α-subunit at ~56 kDa and ~13 kDa and the β-subunit at ~43 kDa, the purified SM deacylase was detectable only by the antibody to the β-subunit at ~43 kDa. Breaking the S-S bond of recombinant human aCDase with dithiothreitol elicited the activity of SM deacylase with ~40 kDa upon gel chromatography. These results provide new insights into the essential role of SM deacylase expressed as an aCDase-degrading β-subunit that evokes the ceramide deficiency in AD skin. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Molecular Mechanisms of Skin Aging and Atopic Dermatitis)
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