REVIEW: Influence of Sphingolipids on T Lymphocyte Activation
E. A. Martinova
Institute of Nutrition, Russian Academy of Medical Sciences, Ustinsky
proezd 2/14, Moscow, 109240 Russia; fax: (095) 298-1872
Submitted June 30, 1997
Sphingolipid metabolism in immune cells results in formation of a second
lipid messenger, e.g., ceramide, sphingosine, ceramide-1-phosphate, and
sphingosine-1-phosphate. They are involved in a common signaling which
controls the main stages of the lymphocyte development,
differentiation, activation, and proliferation in response to a
mitogenic and antigenic stimuli, and to initiate programmed cell death.
Both, the sphingomyelin cycle products and inhibitor of ceramide
synthase--fumonisin B1--have been shown to affect the CD3, CD4, CD8,
CD45, and other T lymphocyte surface antigen expression, to disrupt
lymphocyte subpopulation balance, to inhibit DNA synthesis in normal
lymphocytes, and to suppress an immune response to T-dependent antigens
in vivo. The common targets of the TCR/CD3-derived and
sphingolipid-mediated signaling pathways may provide the sphingolipid
effect on immune cells.
KEY WORDS: sphingosine, ceramide, fumonisin B1, T lymphocyte,
TCR/CD3 complex, activation, signal transduction