Advances in Sphingolipid Biology: Implications for Cellular Signaling and Immune Response
A special issue of International Journal of Molecular Sciences (ISSN 1422-0067). This special issue belongs to the section "Molecular Biology".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (1 July 2024) | Viewed by 3591
Special Issue Editor
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Sphingolipids are key membrane components and therefore crucial in defining the biophysical properties of cellular membranes. Beyond the crucial role of sphingolipids as important structural lipids, they also exhibit signaling capacity. Most notably, bioactive sphingolipid metabolites, such as ceramides, sphingosine, and sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P), can act as signaling entities themselves or execute signaling by regulating cellular protein compartmentalization and thereby activity. Very complex networks of sphingolipid-synthesizing and -metabolizing enzymes are involved in the homeostatic control of sphingolipid levels. Defects in sphingolipid homeostasis have been associated with several human diseases due to neurological and immune pathophysiology, as well as cancer and infection diseases, thus underlining the importance of sphingolipid research. Structural diversity, subcellular distribution complexity, and the highly dynamic metabolism of sphingolipids are only a few of the challenges that ought to be met in studies on the biological functions of sphingolipids. An even more complex picture involves evolving the study of sphingolipids on an organismic level. Their highly specific pattern of sphingolipid content controls cellular heterogenicity and differentiation fate, the processes of which are not fully understood. Studies on a multidisciplinary approach of sphingolipids require biochemical, biophysical, and “omics” approaches applied in biological systems.
This Special Issue invites manuscripts that focus on the sphingolipid role in cellular signaling and immune responses in a cell-specific manner. The profiles of sphingolipid-interacting proteins and other lipids in cellular membranes of different types of immune cells are poorly characterized. Therefore, manuscripts that derive from multidisciplinary efforts to reveal the molecular mechanisms of the sphingolipid role in pathophysiological conditions or in cellular defense against invading pathogens are especially welcome.
Dr. Avota Elita
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- sphingolipids
- ceramides
- sphingomyelinases
- ceramidases
- sphingomyelin
- lipid homeostasis
- signaling
- immune response
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