ARASHIKI Nobuto
   Department   School of Medicine, School of Medicine
   Position   Assistant Professor
Language English
Category Chapter contribution
Title Chapter 6 - Role of Cholesterol in Maintaining Asymmetric Distribution of Phosphatidylserine in Plasma Membranes
Book title The Molecular Nutrition of Fats
Responsible for Chapter 6
ISBN 9780128112977
Editor Vinood Patel
Edition, Volume, Page pp.77-86
Total page number 444
PublisherACADEMIC PRESS
Publication place
(City and country)
Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
Author and coauthor Nobuto Arashiki, Yuichi Takakuwa
Publication date 2019/01
Summary Cholesterol, an essential lipid component of plasma membranes, regulates membrane fluidity and the formation of lipid rafts. Phospholipids are asymmetrically distributed between the lipid bilayer in plasma membranes; notably, phosphatidylserine (a bioactive phospholipid) is distributed solely in the inner leaflet. However, its distribution is disrupted (exposed to the outer leaflet) during cell death and several other cellular reactions. Recent studies have shown that cholesterol has a novel function in regulating the asymmetric distribution of phosphatidylserine. In this chapter, we explain the physiological significance and regulatory mechanisms of phosphatidylserine distribution in human erythrocytes (see Section 2), with an in-depth understanding of its relation to cholesterol, and further examine this more concisely in platelets (see Section 3) and apoptotic cells (see Section 4), with a discussion on the latest findings. Finally, we discuss an innate evolutionary insurance against the complete loss of flippase activity, and the appropriate selection of scramblases in these 3 cell types.