EukaryoticHopanoids: Deciphering the regulatory network behind unusual lipids in eukaryotes
Lead Research Organisation:
King's College London
Department Name: Randall Div of Cell and Molecular Biophy
Abstract
Eukaryotes use sterols to modulate biophysical properties of cellular membranes, whereas some bacteria produce hopanoids as sterol mimics. Unlike sterols, hopanoids do not require oxygen for their biosynthesis. Interestingly, some eukaryotic organisms populating hypoxic environments, including several species of pathogenic fungi, appear to have acquired squalene-hopene cyclase (SHC), the enzyme responsible for hopanoid production, through horizontal gene transfer. How SHC is "domesticated", and how the regulation of hopanoid and sterol production is coordinated, is unknown. I will probe these fundamental questions using a comparative biology approach. The fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces japonicus relies on SHC to grow anaerobically, whereas its relative, Schizosaccharomyces pombe, is an obligate aerobe lacking SHC. I will use a combination of molecular genetics, cell biology, protein and lipid biochemistry, and next generation sequencing approaches to explain 1) how hopanoid production is regulated; 2) how hopanoids contribute to cellular and organismal physiology in the presence and absence of oxygen; and 3) how S. japonicus balances the production of ergosterol and hopanoids depending on environmental conditions. Understanding how hopanoid synthesis is regulated and how it contributes to cellular physiology may help define new targets for antifungal therapies. It may also become useful in industrial biotechnology applications, for instance to support yeast growth in anoxic environment of bioreactors. Importantly, probing this rich biology will also provide wider insights into the principles of membrane organization and function and shed light on the mechanisms underlying "domestication" of horizontally transferred genes in eukaryotes.
People |
ORCID iD |
| Snezhana Oliferenko (Principal Investigator) | |
| Elisa Gomez Gil (Fellow) |
Publications
| Description | Milena Schuhmacher lab |
| Organisation | Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL) |
| Country | Switzerland |
| Sector | Public |
| PI Contribution | We are leading the project. |
| Collaborator Contribution | In this recently initiated collaboration, the Schuhmacher lab aims to synthesize a bifunctional click chemistry enabled hopanoid diplopterol, so that we can use it in downstream applications, e.g., for identification of eukaryotic diplopterol interacting proteins, and for determining its subcellular localization. |
| Impact | Not yet. |
| Start Year | 2024 |
| Description | The Vigh lab |
| Organisation | Hungarian Academy of Sciences (MTA) |
| Department | Biological Research Centre (BRC) |
| Country | Hungary |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | We discovered that cellular membranes in the related fission yeast species S. pombe and S. japonicus are made of structurally distinct phospholipids due to the difference in fatty acid synthase activities, and showed that evolutionary changes in lipid metabolism require extensive adaptation of the membrane-associated proteome. Intellectually, this is our project. We have been the driving force for this collaboration, performing the bulk of the genetics, cell biological and biophysical experiments. |
| Collaborator Contribution | Our wonderful collaborators in Hungary have performed shotgun lipidomics and lipid fragmentation analyses described in the recently published paper. We continue working with them. |
| Impact | doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2019.11.043 |
| Start Year | 2017 |
| Description | Undergraduate research project |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an open day or visit at my research institution |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | Local |
| Primary Audience | Undergraduate students |
| Results and Impact | Elisa Gomez Gil, a postdoc on the award, has been supervising a 3rd year undergraduate student Elizabeth Carter. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2025 |