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Springer, Journal of Membrane Biology, 1(215), p. 27-35, 2007

DOI: 10.1007/s00232-007-9002-7

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Mechanism of Lysophosphatidylcholine-Induced Lysosome Destabilization

Journal article published in 2007 by Jin-Shan Hu, Ying Bin Li, Ying-Bin Li, Jiong-Wei Wang ORCID, Lin Sun, Guo-Jiang Zhang
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Lysosomal destabilization is critical for the organelle and living cells. Phospholipase A(2 )(PLA(2)) was shown to be able to destabilize lysosomes under some conditions. By what mechanism the enzyme affects lysosomal stability is not fully studied. In this study, we investigated the effects of lysophosphatidylcholine (lysoPC), a PLA(2)-produced lipid metabolite, on lysosomal ion permeability, osmotic sensitivity and stability. By measuring lysosomal beta-hexosaminidase free activity, membrane potential, proton leakage and their enzyme latency loss in hypotonic sucrose medium, we established that lysoPC could increase the lysosomal permeability to both potassium ions and protons and enhance lysosomal osmotic sensitivity. These changes in lysosomal membrane properties promoted entry of potassium ions into lysosomes via K(+)/H(+) exchange. The resultant osmotic imbalance across the membranes led to losses of lysosomal integrity. The enhancement of lysosomal osmotic sensitivity caused the lysosomes to become more liable to destabilization in osmotic shock. These results suggest that lysoPC may play a key role in PLA(2)-induced lysosomal destabilization.