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Home - Biology - The cholesterol sensor that fine-tunes cellular membranes

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The cholesterol sensor that fine-tunes cellular membranes

Last updated: January 22, 2026 5:03 am
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The latest discoveries in Cell Biology

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The cholesterol sensor that fine-tunes cellular membranes

A study in the Journal of Cell Biology reveals a direct link between cholesterol levels and the synthesis of sphingolipids, key structural components of cell membranes. Researchers found that when cellular cholesterol is depleted, a protein called cTAGE5, part of the cellular transport machinery, accelerates the movement of ceramide lipids from their production site in the endoplasmic reticulum to the Golgi apparatus. This trafficking boost leads to increased production of very-long-chain sphingomyelin, a process that helps cells retain remaining cholesterol at the plasma membrane, demonstrating a sophisticated homeostatic feedback loop.

Why it might matter to you:
This work uncovers a fundamental mechanism of cellular lipid homeostasis, a process critical for organelle integrity and function. For researchers investigating cellular disruptions in fertility and aging, such as those affecting ovarian follicles or gamete quality, understanding how cells sense and compensate for lipid imbalances provides a new lens. It suggests that dysregulation in these trafficking and synthesis pathways could be a previously overlooked factor in cellular stress and dysfunction within reproductive tissues.


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