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Monitoring Sphingolipid Trafficking in Cells using Fluorescence Microscopy

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Sphingolipids are structural components of organelle membranes that also participate in signal transduction pathways. Complex sphingolipids are trafficked from their site of synthesis in organelles of the early secretory pathway… Click to show full abstract

Sphingolipids are structural components of organelle membranes that also participate in signal transduction pathways. Complex sphingolipids are trafficked from their site of synthesis in organelles of the early secretory pathway to the Golgi apparatus, the plasma membrane, and the endo‐lysosomal system. We have developed fluorescence microscopy–based methods to monitor sphingolipid trafficking in coordination with secretory protein sorting. A sphingomyelin binding protein fused to a fluorescent protein, which we term “EQ‐SM,” is implemented to monitor sphingomyelin trafficking from the Golgi apparatus to the plasma membrane via secretory vesicles. A protocol is provided to determine if a query protein of interest is secreted from the cell via vesicles enriched in EQ‐SM, an indication that the vesicle membrane is enriched in sphingomyelin. A complementary protocol is described that implements a chemically modified form of sphingosine, a metabolic precursor to complex sphingolipids, to visualize ceramide and complex sphingolipids in fixed cells. © 2018 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Keywords: microscopy; sphingolipid trafficking; fluorescence microscopy; complex sphingolipids; monitoring sphingolipid

Journal Title: Current Protocols in Cell Biology
Year Published: 2019

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