Mitochondria-mediated production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) plays a key role in apoptosis. Mitochondrial phospholipid cardiolipin molecules are likely the main target of ROS because they are particularly rich in polyunsaturated fatty acids. They are also located in the inner mitochondrial membrane near the ROS-producing sites. Under physiological conditions mitochondria can repair peroxidative damage in part through a remodeling mechanism via the deacylation-reacylation cycle
The G1 phase of the cell cycle is characterized by a high rate of membrane phospholipid turnover. Cells regulate this turnover by coordinating the opposing actions of CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase and the group VI Ca2+-independent phospholipase A2 (iPLA2). However, little is known about how such turnover affects cell-cycle progression. Here, we show that G1-phase phospholipid turnover is essential for cell proliferation. Specific inhibition of iPLA2 arrested cells in the G1 phase of the cell cycle. This G1-phase arrest was associated with marked upregulation of the tumour suppressor p53 and the expression of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21cip1. Inactivation of iPLA2 failed to arrest p53-deficient HCT cells in the G1 phase and caused massive apoptosis of p21-deficient HCT cells, suggesting that this G1-phase arrest requires activation of p53 and expression of p21cip1. Furthermore, downregulation of p53 by siRNA in p21-deficient HCT cells reduced the cell death, indicating that inhibition of iPLA2 induced p53-dependent apoptosis in the absence of p21cip1. Thus, our study reveals hitherto unrecognized cooperation between p53 and iPLA2 to monitor membrane-phospholipid turnover in G1 phase. Disrupting the G1-phase phospholipid turnover by inhibition of iPLA2 activates the p53-p21cip1 checkpoint mechanism, thereby blocking the entry of G1-phase cells into S phase.
ABSTRACT. A new method of fractionation and purification of different life cycle stages of microsporidia Nosema grylli, parasitizing the fat body of cricket Gryllus bimaculatus, by centrifugation in Percoll density gradient is elaborated. The whole procedure can be summarized as: 1) infected fat body preparation, 2) homogenization in buffer and filtration through cotton wad and filter paper, 3) first centrifuging, resulting in the separation of the pellet into three layers containing different life cycle stages, 4) second centrifuging of the chosen layer in Percoll density gradient, 5) washing out the Percoll from the fraction under study. After centrifugation in Percoll density gradient, meronts and early sporonts form a band in the area corresponding to density 1.016 g/ml. Mature spores form the pellet at the bottom of centrifuge tube, while immature spores are distributed throughout the layer of 1.016 g/ml up to the bottom of the centrifuge tube, according to their buoyant densities. The offered technique is simple, it takes about one hour and may become a routine procedure for biochemical studies on microsporidia.
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