Lipid homoeostasis and Golgi secretory function

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Abstract

The unique lipid composition of the Golgi membranes is critical for maintaining their structural and functional identity, and is regulated by local lipid metabolism, a variety of lipid-binding, -modifying, -sensing and -transfer proteins, and by selective lipid sorting mechanisms. A growing body of evidence suggests that certain lipids, such as phosphoinositides and diacylglycerol, regulate Golgi-mediated transport events. However, their exact role in this process, and the underlying mechanisms that maintain their critical levels in specific membrane domains of the Golgi apparatus, remain poorly understood. Nevertheless, recent advances have revealed key regulators of lipid homoeostasis in the Golgi complex and have demonstrated their role in Golgi secretory function. ©2006 Biochemical Society.

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Lev, S. (2006). Lipid homoeostasis and Golgi secretory function. In Biochemical Society Transactions (Vol. 34, pp. 363–366). https://doi.org/10.1042/BST0340363

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