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The Vps13-like protein BLTP2 regulates phosphatidylethanolamine levels to maintain plasma membrane fluidity and breast cancer aggressiveness

Subhrajit Banerjee, Stephan Daetwyler, Xiaofei Bai, Morgane Michaud, Juliette Jouhet, Derk D. Binns, Shruthi Madhugiri, Emma Johnson, Chao-Wen Wang, Reto Fiolka, Alexandre Toulmay, William A. Prinz

2025Nature Cell Biology15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Lipid transport proteins (LTPs) facilitate non-vesicular lipid exchange between cellular compartments and have critical roles in lipid homeostasis. A recently identified family of bridge-like LTPs (BLTPs) is thought to form lipid-transporting conduits between organelles. One of these, BLTP2, is conserved across species but its function is not known. Here we show that BLTP2 regulates plasma membrane (PM) fluidity by increasing phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) levels in the PM. BLTP2 localizes to endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-PM contact sites, and transports PE in vivo, suggesting it drives PE movement from ER to PM. We find that BLTP2 works in parallel with another pathway that regulates intracellular PE distribution and PM fluidity. BLTP2 expression correlates with breast cancer aggressiveness. We found that BLTP2 facilitates growth of a triple negative breast cancer cell line and sustains its aggressiveness in an in vivo model of metastasis, suggesting maintenance of PM fluidity by BLTP2 may be critical for tumorigenesis in humans.

Topics & Concepts

Endoplasmic reticulumPhosphatidylethanolamineCell biologyBiologyLipid dropletMembrane fluidityLipid raftOrganelleChemistryBiochemistrySignal transductionPhospholipidMembranePhosphatidylcholineLipid Membrane Structure and BehaviorCellular transport and secretionEndoplasmic Reticulum Stress and Disease