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Chapter category: Signal Transduction

Ceramide Glycosylation and Chemotherapy Resistance

This chapter appears in the following book:

Ceramide Signaling

Edited by: Anthony H. Futerman
ISBN: 0-306-47442-5
» Get more information about this book at landesbioscience.com «

Chapter authors:
Myles C. Cabot

Multidrug resistance, inherent or acquired, is a frequent characteristic of cancer cells and is difficult to predict and to manage. Multidrug resistance is caused by multiple mechanisms, including the dysfunctional metabolism of the lipid second messenger ceramide. The cytotoxic effect of various chemotherapeutics is decreased when the generation of ceramides is impaired, which results in the ineffectiveness of routine dosage and the need for higher, even more toxic drug levels. Needless to emphasize, this is a most undesirable situation; patients and oncologists would welcome its possible correction. Here we review ceramide metabolism with relationship to both blocking and potentiating the toxic response of cancer cells to chemotherapy. It is hoped that administering agents to target ceramide metabolism in combination with chemotherapy will improve response rates, especially in those patients with metastatic disease.

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Additional chapters from this book:

Ceramide in Serum Lipoproteins: Function and Regulation of Metabolism

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Serum ceramide levels increase during the acute phase response to inflammation in animal models and in humans. Two major mechanisms appear to mediate these changes. The bacterial endotoxin, LP...

Crosstalk of Ceramide with Cell Survival Signaling

Toshiro Okazaki, Tadakazu Kondo, Mitsumasa Watanabe, Yoshimitsu Taguchi and Takeshi Yabu

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Ceramide in Apoptosis: Possible Biophysical Foundations of Action

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One of the conserved lipid signaling systems in multicellular organisms is the SM cycle.1,2 The key molecule in this cascade is ceramide, which has been identified to serve as a sec...

Therapeutic Implications of Ceramide-Regulated Signaling Cascades

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From "Bench to Bedside" is the often-used phrase that alludes to the potential clinical or therapeutic benefits of innovative basic science research or technologies. However, the "Bench to Bed...

Ceramide in the Regulation of Neuronal Development: Two Faces of a Lipid

Christian Riebeling and Anthony H. Futerman

The notion proposed over a decade ago that ceramide is involved in cellular signaling events has stimulated a large number of studies that have attempted to define the precise function(s) of c...

Ceramide-Mediated Receptor Clustering

Erich Gulbins and Heike Grassmé

Many stress or pro-apoptotic stimuli such as irradiation, heat shock, UV light, bacterial or viral infections, ligation of CD95 or the tumor necrosis factor receptor have been shown to activat...

Molecular Evolution of Neutral Ceramidase: From Bacteria to Mammals

Makoto Ito, Nozomu Okino, Motohiro Tani, Susumu Mitsutake and Katsuhiro Kita

Ceramidase is a hydrolase capable of cleaving the N-acyl linkage between a sphingosine base and a fatty acid of ceramide. Recent extensive studies have revealed that ceramidases can be ...

Ceramide Glycosylation and Chemotherapy Resistance

Myles C. Cabot

Multidrug resistance, inherent or acquired, is a frequent characteristic of cancer cells and is difficult to predict and to manage. Multidrug resistance is caused by multiple mechanisms, including...

Kinase Suppressor of Ras as a Ceramide-Activated Protein Kinase

D. Brent Polk, Jose Lozano and Richard N. Kolesnick

Ceramide has received attention as a second messenger in a number of biological systems determining cellular proliferation, differentiation and apoptosis. Among the targets of ceramide activat...

Insights into the Modulation of Ceramide Metabolism by Naturally Occurring and Synthetic Sphingolipid Analogs as Monitored by Electrospray Tandem Mass

Alfred H. Merrill, M. Cameron Sullards, Jeremy C. Allegood, Elaine Wang, Stephen C. Linn, Lindsay Andras, Dennis C. Liotta, Michaela Hartl and Hans-Ulrich Humpf

Fumonisins have considerable structural similarity to sphinganine, as illustrated in Figure 1 for one of the most prevalent species (fumonisin B1, FB1) and its backbone amino...

The Role of Serine/Threonine Protein Phosphatases in Ceramide Signaling

Charles E. Chalfant and Yusuf A. Hannun

Sphingolipids serve as potential reservoirs for bioactive lipids and are now included with the well established mediators of signal transduction such as diacylglycerol, phosphatidylinositides,...

Neurons, Neurotrophins and Ceramide Signaling: Do Domains and Pores Contribute to the Dichotomy?

Rick T. Dobrowsky

Over the last decade, ceramide has received considerable notoriety as a lipid second messenger that mediates a variety of cell stress responses induced by numerous agonists and environmental s...

Ceramide Signaling in Cannabinoid Action

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Cannabinoids, the active components of Cannabis sativa (marijuana) and their endogenous counterparts, exert their effects by binding to specific Gi/o-protein-coupled receptors that ...

The Cross-Talk Between Nitric Oxide and Ceramide and Its Role in Apoptosis

Rico Barsacchi, Clara Sciorati and Emilio Clementi

Nitric oxide (NO), a shortlived pleiotropic messenger, is known to interact with signaling pathways operated by other messenger molecules, including ions, cyclic nucleotides, protein kinases a...

Ceramide in Apoptosis: The FAN Thesis, Not a Fantasy

Bruno Segui, Olivier Cuvillier, Sophie Malagarie-Cazenave, Sophie Levesque, Valerie Gouaze, Nathalie Andrieu-Abadie and Thierry Levade

The sphingolipid ceramide has recently been proposed as a new apoptotic cell death mediator. Here the role of the FAN (Factor Associated with Neutral sphingomyelinase activation) protein in ap...


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