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1.
Chang QL  Gummadi SN  Menon AK 《Biochemistry》2004,43(33):10710-10718
Transbilayer flipping of glycerophospholipids in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is a key feature of membrane biogenesis. Flipping appears to be an ATP-independent, bidirectional process facilitated by specific proteins or flippases. Although a phospholipid flippase has yet to be identified, evidence supporting the existence of dedicated flippases was recently obtained through biochemical reconstitution studies showing that certain chromatographically resolved fractions of detergent-solubilized ER proteins were enriched in flippase activity, whereas others were inactive. We now extend these studies by describing two convenient assays of flippase activity utilizing fluorescent phospholipid analogues as transport reporters. We use these assays to show that (i) proteoliposomes generated from a flippase-enriched Triton X-100 extract of ER can flip analogues of phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine, and phosphatidylserine; (ii) flipping of all three phospholipids is likely due to the same flippase(s) rather than distinct, phospholipid-specific transport proteins; (iii) functional flippases represent approximately 1% (w/w) of ER membrane proteins in the Triton extract; and (iv) glycerophospholipid flippase activity in the ER can be attributed to two functionally distinct proteins (or classes of proteins) defined by their sensitivity to the cysteine and histidine modification reagents N-ethylmaleimide and diethylpyrocarbonate, respectively. Analyses of the N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive class of flippase activity revealed that the functionally critical sulfhydryl group in the flippase protein is buried in a hydrophobic environment in the membrane but becomes reactive on extraction of the protein into Triton X-100. This observation holds considerable promise for future attempts to isolate the flippase via an affinity approach.  相似文献   

2.
Sanyal S  Frank CG  Menon AK 《Biochemistry》2008,47(30):7937-7946
Transbilayer movement, or flip-flop, of lipids across the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is required for membrane biogenesis, protein glycosylation, and GPI anchoring. Specific ER membrane proteins, flippases, are proposed to facilitate lipid flip-flop, but no ER flippase has been biochemically identified. The glycolipid Glc 3Man 9GlcNAc 2-PP-dolichol is the oligosaccharide donor for protein N-glycosylation reactions in the ER lumen. Synthesis of Glc 3Man 9GlcNAc 2-PP-dolichol is initiated on the cytoplasmic side of the ER and completed on the lumenal side, requiring flipping of the intermediate Man 5GlcNAc 2-PP-dolichol (M5-DLO) across the ER. Here we report the reconstitution of M5-DLO flipping in proteoliposomes generated from Triton X-100-extracted Saccharomyces cerevisiae microsomal proteins. Flipping was assayed by using the lectin Concanavalin A to capture M5-DLOs that had been translocated from the inner to the outer leaflet of the vesicles. M5-DLO flipping in the reconstituted system was ATP-independent and trypsin-sensitive and required a membrane protein(s) that sedimented at approximately 4 S. Man 7GlcNAc 2-PP-dolichol, a higher-order lipid intermediate, was flipped >10-fold more slowly than M5-DLO at 25 degrees C. Chromatography on Cibacron Blue dye resin enriched M5-DLO flippase activity approximately 5-fold and resolved it from both the ER glycerophospholipid flippase activity and the genetically identified flippase candidate Rft1 [Helenius, J., et al. (2002) Nature 415, 447-450]. The latter result indicates that Rft1 is not the M5-DLO flippase. Our data (i) demonstrate that the ER has at least two distinct flippase proteins, each specifically capable of translocating a class of phospholipid, and (ii) provide, for the first time, a biochemical means of identifying the M5-DLO flippase.  相似文献   

3.
Sahu SK  Gummadi SN 《Biochemistry》2008,47(39):10481-10490
Phospholipid translocation (flip-flop) in biogenic (self-synthesizing) membranes such as the endoplasmic reticulum of eukaryotic cells (rat liver) and bacterial cytoplasmic membranes is a fundamental step in membrane biogenesis. It is known that flip-flop in these membranes occurs without a metabolic energy requirement, bidirectionally with no specificity for phospholipid headgroup. In this study, we demonstrate for the first time ATP-independent flippase activity in endoplasmic reticulum membranes of plants using spinach as a model system. For this, we generated proteoliposomes from a Triton X-100 extract of endoplasmic reticulum membranes of spinach and assayed them for flippase activity using fluorescently labeled phospholipids. The half-time for flipping was found to be 0.7-1.0 min. We also show that (a) proteoliposomes can flip fluorescently labeled analogues of phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine, (b) flipping activity is protein-mediated, (c) more than one class of lipid translocator (flippase) is present in spinach membranes, based on the sensitivity to protease and protein-modifying reagents, and (d) translocation of PC and PE is affected differently upon treatment with protease and protein-modifying reagents. Ca (2+)-dependent scrambling activity was not observed in the vesicles reconstituted from plant ER membranes, ruling out the possibility of the involvement of scramblase in translocation of phospholipids. These results suggest the existence of biogenic membrane flippases in plants and that the mechanism of membrane biogenesis is similar to that found in animals.  相似文献   

4.
Most glycosphingolipids are synthesized by the sequential addition of monosaccharides to glucosylceramide (GlcCer) in the lumen of the Golgi apparatus. Because GlcCer is synthesized on the cytoplasmic face of Golgi membranes, it must be flipped to the non-cytoplasmic face by a lipid flippase in order to nucleate glycosphingolipid synthesis. Halter et al. (Halter, D., Neumann, S., van Dijk, S. M., Wolthoorn, J., de Mazière, A. M., Vieira, O. V., Mattjus, P., Klumperman, J., van Meer, G., and Sprong, H. (2007) Pre- and post-Golgi translocation of glucosylceramide in glycosphingolipid synthesis. J. Cell Biol. 179, 101–115) proposed that this essential flipping step is accomplished via a complex trafficking itinerary; GlcCer is moved from the cytoplasmic face of the Golgi to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) by FAPP2, a cytoplasmic lipid transfer protein, flipped across the ER membrane, then delivered to the lumen of the Golgi complex by vesicular transport. We now report biochemical reconstitution studies to analyze GlcCer flipping at the ER. Using proteoliposomes reconstituted from Triton X-100-solubilized rat liver ER membrane proteins, we demonstrate rapid (t½ < 20 s), ATP-independent flip-flop of N-(6-((7-nitro-2–1,3-benzoxadiazol-4-yl)amino)hexanoyl)-d-glucosyl-β1–1′-sphingosine, a fluorescent GlcCer analog. Further studies involving protein modification, biochemical fractionation, and analyses of flip-flop in proteoliposomes reconstituted with ER membrane proteins from yeast indicate that GlcCer translocation is facilitated by well characterized ER phospholipid flippases that remain to be identified at the molecular level. By reason of their abundance and membrane bending activity, we considered that the ER reticulons and the related Yop1 protein could function as phospholipid-GlcCer flippases. Direct tests showed that these proteins have no flippase activity.  相似文献   

5.
Transbilayer movement of phospholipids in biological membranes is mediated by energy-dependent and energy-independent flippases. Available methods for detection of flippase mediated transversal flip-flop are essentially based on spin-labeled or fluorescent lipid analogues. Here we demonstrate that shape change of giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs) can be used as a new tool to study the occurrence and time scale of flippase-mediated transbilayer movement of unlabeled phospholipids. Insertion of lipids into the external leaflet created an area difference between the two leaflets that caused the formation of a bud-like structure. Under conditions of negligible flip-flop, the bud was stable. Upon reconstitution of the energy-independent flippase activity of the yeast endoplasmic reticulum into GUVs, the initial bud formation was reversible, and the shapes were recovered. This can be ascribed to a rapid flip-flop leading to relaxation of the monolayer area difference. Theoretical analysis of kinetics of shape changes provides self-consistent determination of the flip-flop rate and further kinetic parameters. Based on that analysis, the half-time of phospholipid flip-flop in the presence of endoplasmic reticulum proteins was found to be on the order of few minutes. In contrast, GUVs reconstituted with influenza virus protein formed stable buds. The results argue for the presence of specific membrane proteins mediating rapid flip-flop.  相似文献   

6.
Extraction and detergent/lipid activation of dolichol kinase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The CTP-dependent dolichol kinase from bovine liver microsomes was optimally extracted using either 0.5% sodium deoxycholate or 0.5% Triton X-100 containing 0.5 M NH4Cl. All activity was found in the supernatant fraction following high-speed centrifugation. This fraction was depleted of phospholipid (phospholipid remaining, less than 5% of total) by gel chromatography of the 0.5% deoxycholate extract. This partially purified enzyme was maximally activated 9- or 53-fold over controls in the presence of 0.1% deoxycholate or 0.1% Triton X-100, respectively. Stimulation of the kinase was also observed with mixtures of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine and deoxycholate. The level of stimulation by these mixtures was up to 20-fold higher than that observed in controls having deoxycholate alone. Dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine alone was not stimulatory. A 1:1 molar ratio of Triton X-100 or deoxycholate to dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine was optimal for enzyme activation. The half-maximum velocity of the dephospholipidated enzyme at 1:1 molar ratio of detergent to dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine was obtained at 150 or 550 microM CTP in the presence of deoxycholate or Triton X-100, respectively. It has been observed, therefore, that dolichol kinase may be extracted from liver microsomes, depleted of endogenous phospholipids and activated by specific molar ratios of detergent to phospholipid.  相似文献   

7.
Phospholipid flipping in biogenic membranes is a key feature of membrane bilayer assembly. Flipping is facilitated by proteinaceous transporters (flippases) that do not need metabolic energy to function. No flippase has yet been identified. The architecture of the E. coli protein translocon suggests that it could account for the flippase activity in the bacterial inner membrane. To test this possibility, we used E. coli cells depleted of SecYE or YidC to assay flipping in proteoliposomes reconstituted from detergent extracts of their inner membranes. We conclude that the protein translocon contributes minimally, if at all, to phospholipid flippase activity in the inner membrane.  相似文献   

8.
The transbilayer movement of glycosphingolipids has been characterized in Golgi, ER, plasma, and model membranes using spin-labeled and fluorescent analogues of the monohexosylsphingolipids glucosylceramide and galactosylceramide and of the dihexosylsphingolipid lactosylceramide. In large unilamellar lipid vesicles, monohexosylsphingolipids underwent a slow transbilayer diffusion (half-time between 2 and 5 h at 20 degrees C). Similarly, the inward redistribution of these sphingolipids in the plasma membrane of the hepatocyte-like cell line HepG2 and of erythrocytes was slow. However, in rat liver ER and Golgi membranes, we found a rapid transbilayer movement of spin-labeled monohexosylsphingolipids (half-time of approximately 3 min at 20 degrees C), which suggests the existence of a monohexosylsphingolipid flippase. The transbilayer movement of glucosylceramide in the Golgi and the ER displayed a saturable behavior, was inhibited by proteolysis, did not require Mg-ATP, and occurs in both directions. Treatment with DIDS inhibited the flip-flop of glucosylceramide but not that of phosphatidylcholine. These data suggest that the transbilayer movement of monoglucosylceramide in the ER and in the Golgi involves a protein that could be distinct from that previously evidenced for glycerophospholipids in the ER. In vivo, transbilayer diffusion should promote a symmetric distribution of monohexosylsphingolipids which are synthesized in the cytosolic leaflet. This should allow glucosylceramide rapid access to the lumenal leaflet where it is converted to lactosylceramide. No significant transbilayer movement of lactosylceramide occurred in both artificial and natural membranes over 1 h. Thus, lactosylceramide, in turn, is unable to diffuse to the cytosolic leaflet and remains at the lumenal leaflet where it undergoes the subsequent glycosylations.  相似文献   

9.
Polar lipids must flip-flop rapidly across biological membranes to sustain cellular life [1, 2], but flipping is energetically costly [3] and its intrinsic rate is low. To overcome this problem, cells have membrane proteins that function as lipid transporters (flippases) to accelerate flipping to a physiologically relevant rate. Flippases that operate at the plasma membrane of eukaryotes, coupling ATP hydrolysis to unidirectional lipid flipping, have been defined at a molecular level [2]. On the other hand, ATP-independent bidirectional flippases that translocate lipids in biogenic compartments, e.g., the endoplasmic reticulum, and specialized membranes, e.g., photoreceptor discs [4, 5], have not been identified even though their activity has been recognized for more than 30 years [1]. Here, we demonstrate that opsin is the ATP-independent phospholipid flippase of photoreceptor discs. We show that reconstitution of opsin into large unilamellar vesicles promotes rapid (τ<10 s) flipping of phospholipid probes across the vesicle membrane. This is the first molecular identification of an ATP-independent phospholipid flippase in any system. It reveals an unexpected activity for opsin and, in conjunction with recently available structural information on this G protein-coupled receptor [6, 7], significantly advances our understanding of the mechanism of ATP-independent lipid flip-flop.  相似文献   

10.
The membrane nature of squalene oxide cyclase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae was investigated by comparing properties of the enzyme recovered from both microsomes and the soluble fraction of the yeast homogenate. The "apparent soluble" form and microsomal form of the enzyme were both stimulated by the presence of mammalian soluble cytoplasm and corresponded to one another in response to detergents Triton X-100 and Triton X-114. The observed strong dependence of the enzyme activity on the presence of detergents and the behavior of the enzyme after Triton X-114 phase separation were peculiar to a lipophilic membrane-bound enzyme. A study of the conditions required to extract the enzyme from microsomes confirmed the lipophilic character of the enzyme. Microsomes, exposed to ipotonic conditions to remove peripheral membrane proteins, retained most of the enzyme activity within the integral protein fraction. Quantitative dissociation of the enzyme from membranes occurred only if microsomes were treated with detergents (Triton X-100 or octylglucoside) at concentrations which alter membrane integrity. The squalene oxide cyclase was purified 140 times from yeast microsomes by (a) removal of peripheral proteins, (b) extraction of the enzyme from the integral protein fraction with octylglucoside, and (c) separation of the solubilized proteins by DEAE Bio-Gel A chromatography. Removal of the peripheral proteins seemed to be a key step necessary for obtaining high yields.  相似文献   

11.
Phospholipid translocation (flip-flop) across membrane bilayers is typically assessed via assays utilizing partially water-soluble phospholipid analogs as transport reporters. These assays have been used in previous work to show that phospholipid translocation in biogenic (self-synthesizing) membranes such as the endoplasmic reticulum is facilitated by specific membrane proteins (flippases). To extend these studies to natural phospholipids while providing a framework to guide the purification of a flippase, we now describe an assay to measure the transbilayer translocation of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine, a membrane-embedded phospholipid, in proteoliposomes generated from detergent-solubilized rat liver endoplasmic reticulum. Translocation was assayed using phospholipase A(2) under conditions where the vesicles were determined to be intact. Phospholipase A(2) rapidly hydrolyzed phospholipids in the outer leaflet of liposomes and proteoliposomes with a half-time of approximately 0.1 min. However, for flippase-containing proteoliposomes, the initial rapid hydrolysis phase was followed by a slower phase reflecting flippase-mediated translocation of phospholipids from the inner to the outer leaflet. The amplitude of the slow phase was decreased in trypsin-treated proteoliposomes. The kinetic characteristics of the slow phase were used to assess the rate of transbilayer equilibration of phospholipids. For 250-nm diameter vesicles containing a single flippase, the half-time was 3.3 min. Proportionate reductions in equilibration half-time were observed for preparations with a higher average number of flippases/vesicle. Preliminary purification steps indicated that flippase activity could be enriched approximately 15-fold by sequential adsorption of the detergent extract onto anion and cation exchange resins.  相似文献   

12.
1. The lipid requirement for maximum desaturase activity was investigated using acetone/water mixtures. It was shown that for maximum stearoyl-CoA desaturase activity of hen liver microsomes neither the total neutral lipid fraction nor 44% of the phospholipid fraction were required. 2. The effect of sodium deoxycholate, Triton X-100, Nonidet P-40 and Bio-solv on the enzyme activity indicated that the neutral detergents had a milder effect than the ionic detergent but both classes could cause considerable irreversible loss of activity. 3. The treatment of the microsomes with 2.5% (v/v) water in acetone greatly improved the effective solubilising power of Triton X-100. The yield of desaturase in the 100 000 X g supernatant obtained by treating the microsomal fraction in this way was strongly dependent upon protein concentration. Maximum solubilisation was achieved with25 mg protein per ml 1% (w/v) Triton X-100 in 0.1 M potassium phosphate buffer pH 7.4. 4. A comparison of the properties of the solubilised and membrane-bound enzyme was made by an investigation of: (i) the temperature and pH optimum, (ii) activation energy and (iii) the effect of inhibitors on the enzyme activity.  相似文献   

13.
The effects of phospholipids on the reaction catalyzed by UDP-GlcNAc:dolichol phosphate GlcNAc-1-phosphate transferase have been studied with delipidated rat lung microsomes. Deoxycholate-solubilized enzyme was depleted of measurable phospholipid by either gel filtration on Sephadex G-100 or affinity chromatography on pentyl-agarose. The latter procedure also removed nucleotide and sugar nucleotide hydrolases. Delipidated protein fractions were devoid of GlcNAc-1-phosphate transferase activity unless supplemented with phospholipids. Maximal recovery of enzyme activity was obtained with an approximate 1:1 weight ratio of phosphatidylglycerol:phosphatidylcholine, with the observed rate being synergistic as compared to rates observed for each individual phospholipid. Variable recoveries of enzyme activity were obtained with mixtures containing other acidic phospholipids and phosphatidylcholine. Enzyme activity in the fraction eluted from pentyl-agarose could be recovered, after removal of Triton X-100, with sedimented phospholipid vesicles. Significant stabilization of enzyme activity associated with the phospholipid vesicles was obtained by the inclusion of dolichol phosphate.  相似文献   

14.
Rat liver microsomes contain a Triton X-100 solubilizable vitamin K-dependent carboxylase activity that converts specific glutamyl residues of a microsomal prothrombin precursor to gamma-carboxyglutamyl residues. This activity has been studied in partially (0.25% Triton X-100) and completely (1.0% Triton X-100) solubilized rat liver microsomal preparations. The rate of vitamin K-dependent carboxylation of endogenous microsomal protein precursors was very rapid in the completely solubilized liver microsomal preparation, and carboxylation of an exogenous peptide substrate (Phe-Leu-Glu-Glu-Leu) proceeded at the same time. In the partially solubilized liver microsomal preparation, the rate of protein carboxylation was greatly reduced, and a lag in carboxylation of the exogenous substrate was observed. When microsomal preparations which were depleted of endogenous precursors were used, this lag was eliminated. These data suggest that both substrates utilize the same microsomal pool of carboxylase and that the fraction of the carboxylase bound to the endogenous precursors is not immediately available to exogenous substrates.  相似文献   

15.
Human phospholipid scramblase 1 (SCR) is a 318 amino acid protein that was originally described as catalyzing phospholipid transbilayer (flip-flop) motion in plasma membranes in a Ca2+-dependent, ATP-independent way. Further studies have suggested an intranuclear role for this protein in addition. A putative transmembrane domain located at the C terminus (aa 291–309) has been related to the flip-flop catalysis. In order to clarify the role of the C-terminal region of SCR, a mutant was produced (SCRΔ) in which the last 28 amino acid residues were lacking, including the α-helix. SCRΔ had lost the scramblase activity and its affinity for Ca2+ was decreased by one order of magnitude. Fluorescence and IR spectroscopic studies revealed that the C-terminal region of SCR was essential for the proper folding of the protein. Moreover, it was found that Ca2+ exerted an overall destabilizing effect on SCR, which might facilitate its binding to membranes.  相似文献   

16.
Nicolson T  Mayinger P 《FEBS letters》2000,476(3):277-281
The molecular basis of transbilayer movement or flipping of phospholipids in the endoplasmic reticulum is largely unknown. To circumvent the problems inherent to studies with artificial phospholipid analogs, we studied microsomal flip-flop of endogenous phosphatidylethanolamine in yeast. The transbilayer transport of phosphatidylethanolamine was measured in reconstituted proteoliposomes derived from microsomal detergent extracts. Our results demonstrate that flipping is protease sensitive but does not require metabolic energy. Our assay is the first to use the endogenous substrate of the so-called 'flippase' to study phospholipid translocation in endomembranes and may therefore be crucial for the understanding of the catalytic properties of this elusive enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
The conditions for the incorporation of sialic acid (N-acetylneuraminic acid) from CMP-sialic acid into endogenous acceptors of rat liver microsomes has been studied. It is shown that the incorporating activity can be solubilized by extraction of the microsomes with a mild detergent, Triton X-100. The specific activity of the soluble system is about sixfold compared to the original microsomes. Removal of lipids from the system greatly reduces its ability to incorporate sialic acid. Recombination with phospholipids prepared from liver microsomes restores the activity. Other lipids are ineffective, and single phospholipid fractions are less effective than the phospholipid mixture. It is concluded that the system studied, comprising both sialyl transferase and sialyl acceptor-protein is a typical intrinsic membrane protein system, dependent on a hydrophobic environment for full activity.  相似文献   

18.
The conditions for the incorporation of sialic acid (N-acetylneuraminic acid) from CMP-sialic acid into endogenous acceptors of rat liver microsomes has been studied. It is shown that the incorporating activity can be solubilized by extraction of the microsomes with a mild detergent, Triton X-100. The specific activity of the soluble system is about sixfold compared to the original microsomes. Removal of lipids from the system greatly reduces its ability to incorporate sialic acid. Recombination with phospholipids prepared from liver microsomes restores the activity. Other lipids are ineffective, and single phospholipid fractions are less effective than the phospholipid mixture. It is concluded that the system studied, comprising both sialyl transferase and sialyl acceptor-protein is a typical intrinsic membrane protein system, depedent on a hydrophobic environment for full activity.  相似文献   

19.
Phospholipase A1, A2 and lysophospholipase activities in microsomes of Novikoff hepatoma host rat liver and regenerating rat liver were compared using 1-[9', 10'-3H2]palmitoyl-2-[1'-14C] linoleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine, 1-[1' -3H-]hexadecyl-2-acyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine, and 1-[9', 10'-3H2]palmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine as substrates. 1. Microsomes of all three tissues showed two pH dependent peaks of hydrolytic activity, one at pH 7.5 and another at pH 9.5. 2. Phospholipid hydrolytic activity in microsomes from host liver and regenerating liver require Ca2+ for hydrolysis at pH 9.5, but not at pH 7.5. Hepatoma microsomes require Ca2+ for activity at both pH values. 3. Phospholipase A1 activity, stimulated by addition of Triton X-100 to the incubation mixtures, was detected in both host liver and regenerating liver microsomes. There was no evidence of phospholipase A1 activity in hepatoma microsomes. 4. Phospholipase A2 was detected in microsomes of all three tissues using 1-[1'-3H] hexadecyl-2-acyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine as a substrate. The activity required calcium and was inhibited by Triton X-100. 5. Lysophospholipase activity was evident in the microsomes from all three tissues. The activity was inhibited by both Ca2+ and Triton X-100. 6. Differences were also detected between host liver and hepatoma microsomal phospholipid hydrolase activities with respect to the effect of increasing protein concentration, apparent Michaelis-Menten constants, and time course of the reaction.  相似文献   

20.
P4‐ATPases are phospholipid flippases that translocate phospholipids from the exoplasmic/luminal to the cytoplasmic leaflet of biological membranes. All P4‐ATPases in yeast and some in other organisms are required for membrane trafficking; therefore, changes in the transbilayer lipid composition induced by flippases are thought to be crucial for membrane deformation. However, it is poorly understood whether the phospholipid‐flipping activity of P4‐ATPases can promote membrane deformation. In this study, we assessed membrane deformation induced by flippase activity via monitoring the extent of membrane tubulation using a system that allows inducible recruitment of Bin/amphiphysin/Rvs (BAR) domains to the plasma membrane (PM). Enhanced phosphatidylcholine‐flippase activity at the PM due to expression of ATP10A, a member of the P4‐ATPase family, promoted membrane tubulation upon recruitment of BAR domains to the PM. This is the important evidence that changes in the transbilayer lipid composition induced by P4‐ATPases can deform biological membranes.  相似文献   

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