Nicholas C. Zitomer,
Trevor Mitchell,
Kenneth A. Voss, Genevieve S. Bondy,
Sarah T. Pruett,
Ethel C. Garnier-Amblard,
Lanny S. Liebeskind,
Hyejung Park,
Elaine Wang,
M. Cameron Sullards,
Jr. Alfred H. Merrill,
Ronald T. Riley
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ABSTRACT: Fumonisin B1 (FB1) is a mycotoxin that inhibits ceramide synthases (CerS) and causes kidney and liver toxicity and other disease. Inhibition
of CerS by FB1 increases sphinganine (Sa), Sa 1-phosphate, and a previously unidentified metabolite. Analysis of the latter by quadrupole-time-of-flight
mass spectrometry assigned an m/z = 286.3123 in positive ionization mode, consistent with the molecular formula for deoxysphinganine (C18H40NO). Comparison with a synthetic standard using liquid chromatography, electrospray tandem mass spectrometry identified the
metabolite as 1-deoxysphinganine (1-deoxySa) based on LC mobility and production of a distinctive fragment ion (m/z 44, CH3CH=NH +2) upon collision-induced dissociation. This novel sphingoid base arises from condensation of alanine with palmitoyl-CoA via
serine palmitoyltransferase (SPT), as indicated by incorporation of l-[U-13C]alanine into 1-deoxySa by Vero cells; inhibition of its production in LLC-PK1 cells by myriocin, an SPT inhibitor; and the absence of incorporation of [U-13C]palmitate into 1-[13C]deoxySa in LY-B cells, which lack SPT activity. LY-B-LCB1 cells, in which SPT has been restored by stable transfection,
however, produce large amounts of 1-[13C]deoxySa. 1-DeoxySa was elevated in FB1-treated cells and mouse liver and kidney, and its cytotoxicity was greater than or equal to that of Sa for LLC-PK1 and DU-145 cells. Therefore, this compound is likely to contribute to pathologies associated with fumonisins. In the absence
of FB1, substantial amounts of 1-deoxySa are made and acylated to N-acyl-1-deoxySa (i.e. 1-deoxydihydroceramides). Thus, these compounds are an underappreciated category of bioactive sphingoid bases and “ceramides”
that might play important roles in cell regulation.
Journal of Biological Chemistry 02/2009; 284(8):4786-4795. · 4.77 Impact Factor