Ceramide in apoptosis—does it really matter?

K Hofmann, VM Dixit - Trends in biochemical sciences, 1998 - cell.com
Trends in biochemical sciences, 1998cell.com
During recent years, ceramide has received a lot of attention as a possible mediator of the
cellular responses to a variety of apoptotic stimuli. In a manner analogous to generation of
its sibling diacylglycerol, ceramide is generated by a phospholipase-C-type reaction from its
lipid precursor sphingomyelin. Two observations led to the proposal that ceramide plays a
role in apoptosis:(1) treatment of cells with tumor necrosis factor or other inducers of
apoptosis leads to activation of sphingomyelinases and to an increase in cellular ceramide …
Abstract
During recent years, ceramide has received a lot of attention as a possible mediator of the cellular responses to a variety of apoptotic stimuli. In a manner analogous to generation of its sibling diacylglycerol, ceramide is generated by a phospholipase-C-type reaction from its lipid precursor sphingomyelin. Two observations led to the proposal that ceramide plays a role in apoptosis: (1) treatment of cells with tumor necrosis factor or other inducers of apoptosis leads to activation of sphingomyelinases and to an increase in cellular ceramide levels; (2) ectopic generation or administration of ceramide can mimic apoptotic cell death. Recently, several observations have challenged the notion that ceramide is an important cell-death mediator and have prompted a re-evaluation of previously published results.
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