Abstract

Cellular membranes contain many lipids, some of which, such as sphingolipids, have important structural and signaling functions. The common sphingolipid glucosylceramide (GlcCer) is present in plants, fungi, and animals. As a major plant sphingolipid, GlcCer is involved in the formation of lipid microdomains, and the regulation of GlcCer is key for acclimation to stress. Although the GlcCer biosynthetic pathway has been elucidated, little is known about GlcCer catabolism, and a plant GlcCer-degrading enzyme (glucosylceramidase (GCD)) has yet to be identified. Here, we identified AtGCD3, one of four Arabidopsis thaliana homologs of human nonlysosomal glucosylceramidase, as a plant GCD. We found that recombinant AtGCD3 has a low Km for the fluorescent lipid C6-NBD GlcCer and preferentially hydrolyzes long acyl-chain GlcCer purified from Arabidopsis leaves. Testing of inhibitors of mammalian glucosylceramidases revealed that a specific inhibitor of human β-glucosidase 2, N-butyldeoxynojirimycin, inhibits AtGCD3 more effectively than does a specific inhibitor of human β-glucosidase 1, conduritol β-epoxide. We also found that Glu-499 and Asp-647 in AtGCD3 are vital for GCD activity. GFP-AtGCD3 fusion proteins mainly localized to the plasma membrane or the endoplasmic reticulum membrane. No obvious growth defects or changes in sphingolipid contents were observed in gcd3 mutants. Our results indicate that AtGCD3 is a plant glucosylceramidase that participates in GlcCer catabolism by preferentially hydrolyzing long-acyl-chain GlcCers.

Highlights

  • Cellular membranes contain many lipids, some of which, such as sphingolipids, have important structural and signaling functions

  • We report the cloning, heterologous expression, and enzymatic characterization of an Arabidopsis thaliana glucosylceramidase, which displays amino acid sequence similarity to the human nonlysosomal glucosylceramidase known as ␤-glucosidase 2 (GBA2), an enzyme involved in glucosylceramide catabolism [15, 16]

  • The activity of the mammalian nonlysosomal glucosylceramidase GBA2 can be reversibly inhibited by alkylated imino sugars [15, 17, 18]; for example, N-butyldeoxynojirimycin (NBDNJ) exclusively inhibits human GBA2 [18], and conduritol B-epoxide (CBE) inhibits GBA and affects GBA2 activity (18 – 20). We found that both NB-DNJ and CBE inhibited the glucosylceramidase activity of AtGCD3 (Fig. 2, D and E)

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Summary

ARTICLE cro

We characterized the enzymatic activity of the protein encoded by At4g10060 and showed its optimal pH and substrate preference for long-acyl-chain GlcCers (C16C18). Identification of this enzyme uncovers a missing link in our understanding of GlcCer metabolism in plants. Benzoxadiazol-4-yl)amino]hexanoyl]-D-erythro-sphingosine; hydroxyceramide, ceramide with ␣-hydroxylated fatty acid; MGDG, monogalactosyldiacylglycerol; PM, plasma membrane; ER, endoplasmic reticulum; ESI, electrospray ionization; GIPC, glycosyl inositolphosphoceramide.

Results
Substrate Enzyme Km
Discussion
Experimental procedures
Extraction of natural glucosylceramides
Construction of vectors
Enzyme activity
Activity on GlcCer from Arabidopsis leaves
Sphingolipid analysis
Full Text
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