Ceramide signaling in fenretinide-induced endothelial cell apoptosis

78Citations
Citations of this article
35Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Stress stimuli can mediate apoptosis by generation of the lipid second messenger, ceramide. Herein we investigate the molecular mechanism of ceramide signaling in endothelial apoptosis induced by fenretinide (N-(4-hydroxyphenyl)retinamide (4-HPR)). 4-HPR, a synthetic derivative of retinoic acid that induces ceramide in tumor cell lines, has been shown to have antiangiogenic effects, but the molecular mechanism of these is largely unknown. We report that 4-HPR was cytotoxic to endothelial cells (50% cytotoxicity at 2.4 μM, 90% at 5.36 μM) and induced a caspase-dependent endothelial apoptosis. 4-HPR (5 μM) increased ceramide levels in endothelial cells 5.3-fold, and the increase in ceramide was required to achieve the apoptotic effect of 4-HPR. The 4-HPR-induced increase in ceramide was suppressed by inhibitors of ceramide synthesis, fumonisin B1, myriocin, and L-cycloserine, and 4-HPR transiently activated serine palmitoyltransferase, demonstrating that 4-HPR induced de novo ceramide synthesis. Sphingomyelin levels were not altered by 4-HPR, and desipramine had no effect on ceramide level, suggesting that sphingomyelinase did not contribute to the 4-HPR-induced ceramide increase. Finally, the pancaspase inhibitor, t-butyloxy-carbonyl-aspartyl[O-methyl]-fluoromethyl ketone, suppressed 4-HPR-mediated apoptosis but not ceramide accumulation, suggesting that ceramide is upstream of caspases. Our results provide the first evidence that increased ceramide biosynthesis is required for 4-HPR-induced endothelial apoptosis and present a molecular mechanism for its antiangiogenic effects.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Erdreich-Epstein, A., Tran, L. B., Bowman, N. N., Wang, H., Cabot, M. C., Durden, D. L., … Millard, M. (2002). Ceramide signaling in fenretinide-induced endothelial cell apoptosis. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 277(51), 49531–49537. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M209962200

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free