Lipid rafts

Editorial: Membrane lipids in T cell functions

Plasma membrane lipids play essential roles in regulating T cell signaling, differentiation, and
effector functions. The major lipid species in the plasma membrane are glycerophospholipids,
sphingolipids, and sterol lipids. TCR and costimulatory molecules lead to profound changes in
the composition, distribution, and dynamic of plasma membrane lipids. For instance, cholesterol,
sphingomyelin, and saturated phosphocholine are enriched at the contact zone between T cells

Neuroglobin overexpression plays a pivotal role in neuroprotection through mitochondrial raft-like microdomains in neuroblastoma SK-N-BE2 cells

Since stressing conditions induce a relocalization of endogenous human neuroglobin (NGB) to mitochondria, this research is aimed to evaluate the protective role of NGB overexpression against neurotoxic stimuli, through mitochondrial lipid raft-associated complexes. To this purpose, we built a neuronal model of oxidative stress by the use of human dopaminergic neuroblastoma cells, SK-N-BE2, stably overexpressing NGB by transfection and treated with 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium ion (MPP+). We preliminary observed the redistribution of NGB to mitochondria following MPP+ treatment.

Recruitment of mitofusin 2 into "lipid rafts" drives mitochondria fusion induced by Mdivi-1

The regulation of the mitochondrial dynamics and the balance between fusion and fission processes are crucial for the health and fate of the cell. Mitochondrial fusion and fission machinery is controlled by key proteins such as mitofusins, OPA-1 and several further molecules. In the present work we investigated the implication of lipid rafts in mitochondrial fusion induced by Mdivi-1. Our results underscore the possible implication of lipid "rafts" in mitochondrial morphogenetic changes and their homeostasis.

On the role of sphingolipids in cell survival and death

Sphingolipids, universal components of biological membranes of all eukaryotic organisms, from yeasts to mammals, in addition of playing a structural role, also play an important part of signal transduction pathways. They participate or, also, ignite several fundamental subcellular signaling processes but, more in general, they directly contribute to key biological activities such as cell motility, growth, senescence, differentiation as well as cell fate, i.e., survival or death.

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