KARAKTERISERING AV EN PLASMABUREN SIGNALMOLEKYL SOM STIMULERAR FRISÄTTNING AV SFINGOSIN-1-FOSFAT FRÅN RÖDA BLODKROPPAR
Abstract
Bioactive sphingolipid Sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) is found in blood, where it plays an important part in, for example, angiogenesis. S1P is synthesized in hepatocytes, vascular endothelium and blood cells, then
transported with high-density lipoprotein (HDL) or albumin in plasma. S1P can accumulate in, and be
released from red blood cells. In experiments, red blood cells (human) were removed from the plasma to
examine under which conditions they released S1P. S1P only released from the blood cells when incubated
in plasma, not other types of media. This poses the question, what kind of molecule in plasma controls the
release of S1P from red blood cells? Previous experiments shows that the molecule might be a protein. The
purpose of this study is to characterize and, if possible, identify the signalling molecule. The method
consisted of several parts, initially with protein precipitation of the plasma. Precipitated and whole plasma
was then fractionated with spin columns with different filter sizes (50kD, 100kD, 300kD) to determine if
the size of the protein affects the release of S1P. Blood samples were taken from volunteers and the red
blood cells were separated out before being added to untreated or treated plasma. After incubation, lipids
were extracted from the samples and then analyzed by LC-MS. Albumin depleted plasma was also incubated
with red blood cells to investigate the effect it might have on the release of S1P. Results shows S1P release
in the samples with plasma fractionated with all three filter sizes but not from the samples where the plasma
proteins are filtered out. It also shows that S1P was not released when incubated with albumin depleted
plasma. The conclusion from this study is that the molecule that signals the release of S1P is likely a protein
bound to albumin, and this complex is larger than 300kD.
Degree
Student essay
Date
2022-10-19Author
Nordström, Matilda
Keywords
Sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P); Red blood cells; Plasma; Signaling molecule; LC-MC
Language
swe