Lipid synthesis must be precisely regulated to support membrane growth and organelle biogenesis during cell division, yet little is known about how this process is coordinated with other cell cycle events. Here, we show that de novo synthesis of sphingolipids during the S and G2 phases of the cell cycle is essential to increasing nuclear membranes. Indeed, the products of serine palmitoyltransferase (SPT), long-chain bases, localize to the nucleus and are integral components of nuclear membranes in yeast and human cells. Importantly, inhibition of SPT fails to induce cell cycle arrest, causing nuclear membrane collapse and loss of viability in yeast cells. In human cells, this causes abnormal nuclear morphology and genomic instability, evidenced by the increased incidence of nuclear blebs, micronuclei, anaphase bridges, and multipolar mitosis. These results indicate that dysregulated cell division under low sphingolipid availability can drive several disease-associated phenotypes, including aberrant nuclear morphologies and genomic instability.
Sphingolipid synthesis maintains nuclear membrane integrity and genome stability during cell division / S. Hwang, W. Russo, J. Cormier, J. Johnson, S. Martin, M.R. Ippolito, S. Cordone, R. Li, L.J. Zhu, S. Santaguida, E.M. Torres. - In: THE JOURNAL OF CELL BIOLOGY. - ISSN 0021-9525. - 224:8(2025), pp. 1-23. [10.1083/jcb.202407209]
Sphingolipid synthesis maintains nuclear membrane integrity and genome stability during cell division
S. Martin;M.R. Ippolito;S. Cordone;S. Santaguida;
2025
Abstract
Lipid synthesis must be precisely regulated to support membrane growth and organelle biogenesis during cell division, yet little is known about how this process is coordinated with other cell cycle events. Here, we show that de novo synthesis of sphingolipids during the S and G2 phases of the cell cycle is essential to increasing nuclear membranes. Indeed, the products of serine palmitoyltransferase (SPT), long-chain bases, localize to the nucleus and are integral components of nuclear membranes in yeast and human cells. Importantly, inhibition of SPT fails to induce cell cycle arrest, causing nuclear membrane collapse and loss of viability in yeast cells. In human cells, this causes abnormal nuclear morphology and genomic instability, evidenced by the increased incidence of nuclear blebs, micronuclei, anaphase bridges, and multipolar mitosis. These results indicate that dysregulated cell division under low sphingolipid availability can drive several disease-associated phenotypes, including aberrant nuclear morphologies and genomic instability.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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