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Structural basis of lipid head group entry to the Kennedy pathway by FLVCR1.

Yeeun SonTimothy C KennyArtem KhanKivanç BirsoyRichard K Hite
Published in: Nature (2024)
Phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine, the two most abundant phospholipids in mammalian cells, are synthesized de novo by the Kennedy pathway from choline and ethanolamine, respectively 1-6 . Despite the essential roles of these lipids, the mechanisms that enable the cellular uptake of choline and ethanolamine remain unknown. Here we show that the protein encoded by FLVCR1, whose mutation leads to the neurodegenerative syndrome posterior column ataxia and retinitis pigmentosa 7-9 , transports extracellular choline and ethanolamine into cells for phosphorylation by downstream kinases to initiate the Kennedy pathway. Structures of FLVCR1 in the presence of choline and ethanolamine reveal that both metabolites bind to a common binding site comprising aromatic and polar residues. Despite binding to a common site, FLVCR1 interacts in different ways with the larger quaternary amine of choline in and with the primary amine of ethanolamine. Structure-guided mutagenesis identified residues that are crucial for the transport of ethanolamine, but dispensable for choline transport, enabling functional separation of the entry points into the two branches of the Kennedy pathway. Altogether, these studies reveal how FLVCR1 is a high-affinity metabolite transporter that serves as the common origin for phospholipid biosynthesis by two branches of the Kennedy pathway.
Keyphrases
  • fatty acid
  • oxidative stress
  • induced apoptosis
  • high resolution
  • crispr cas
  • amino acid
  • cell proliferation
  • small molecule
  • early onset
  • cell cycle arrest
  • case report
  • cell death
  • protein protein
  • protein kinase
  • pi k akt