首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


Cytoskeletal Components Define Protein Location to Membrane Microdomains
Authors:Witold G Szymanski  Henrik Zauber  Alexander Erban  Michal Gorka  Xu Na Wu  Waltraud X Schulze
Institution:From the ‡Max Planck Institute of Molecular Plant Physiology, 14476 Potsdam, Germany; ;§Max-Delbrück Center of Molecular Medicine, Robert-Rössle-Straβe 10, 13092 Berlin, Germany; ;¶University of Hohenheim, Department of Plant Systems Biology, 70593 Stuttgart, Germany
Abstract:The plasma membrane is an important compartment that undergoes dynamic changes in composition upon external or internal stimuli. The dynamic subcompartmentation of proteins in ordered low-density (DRM) and disordered high-density (DSM) membrane phases is hypothesized to require interactions with cytoskeletal components. Here, we systematically analyzed the effects of actin or tubulin disruption on the distribution of proteins between membrane density phases. We used a proteomic screen to identify candidate proteins with altered submembrane location, followed by biochemical or cell biological characterization in Arabidopsis thaliana. We found that several proteins, such as plasma membrane ATPases, receptor kinases, or remorins resulted in a differential distribution between membrane density phases upon cytoskeletal disruption. Moreover, in most cases, contrasting effects were observed: Disruption of actin filaments largely led to a redistribution of proteins from DRM to DSM membrane fractions while disruption of tubulins resulted in general depletion of proteins from the membranes. We conclude that actin filaments are necessary for dynamic movement of proteins between different membrane phases and that microtubules are not necessarily important for formation of microdomains as such, but rather they may control the protein amount present in the membrane phases.Living cells need borders and molecular compartments for biochemical reactions and storage of metabolites. The plasma membrane therefore is a prerequisite for the evolution of different life forms. It consists of a phospholipid bilayer into which proteins and special lipid species such as sterols, sphingolipids, and glycolipids are inserted. The first complex model of plasma membrane was proposed in 1972 by Jonathan Singer and Garth Nicolson (1), replacing the concept of the plasma membrane as a strict protein–lipid–protein sandwich that was generally accepted until then. In Singer and Nicolson''s model, the cell membrane is a two-dimensionally oriented viscous solution in which the membrane constituents are orientated in the most thermodynamically favorable manner, hiding hydrophobic hydrocarbon chains inside the lipid bilayer and exposing polar and ionic groups to the aqueous phase. This fluid mosaic model also implied that membrane proteins as well as lipid components are distributed in a homogeneous lipid bilayer at long range, but they can form specific aggregates and phases at short range, which were also termed “lipid rafts” or membrane microdomains.Over the past 30 years, it has become evident that the plasma membrane is not such a homogeneous structure as it was initially proposed. We now know that the lipid bilayer is asymmetric (2) and that the free diffusion of membrane proteins is restricted by their interactions with intracellular and extracellular components (3). More recently, Simons and Ikonen suggested that large ordered phases, enriched with cholesterol and sphingolipids, emerge within the plasma membrane and that they function as platforms for enrichment of certain proteins while excluding others (4). This current membrane model suggests that the mixture of sterols and polar lipids within the plasma membrane can appear in two distinct phases: liquid disordered (Ld) and liquid ordered (Lo) phase (5). In this view, the so-called membrane microdomains are considered to be part of the Lo phase. Based on work on model membranes, it is suggested that lateral segregation of components into Ld and Lo phases occurs spontaneously (6) with the self-associating properties between sterols and highly saturated hydrocarbon chains of phopsho- and sphingolipids as the main driving force (7). Additionally, it is suggested that also specific lipid-protein and protein-protein interactions are essential for the formations of membrane domains as well as for stabilization of smaller nanodomains which subsequently may cause formation of larger platforms. In contrast to the animal cells, in plants these membrane microdomains seem to be rather immobile (8), possibly due to their attachment to the outer cell wall. More recently, it became obvious that membrane microdomains within a single cell are highly diverse and of different compositions (9). Generally, in the plant model, organisms'' plasma membrane microdomains turned out to be important in plant defense (10, 11), cell polarity (12, 13), and general signaling properties of the plasma membrane (14, 15).The cytoskeleton was identified as an essential cellular component with important roles in membrane topography, bordering, trafficking, and organelle movement (16). Single particle tracking in mammalian cells revealed that the transferrin receptor and macroglobulin receptor demonstrate normal Brownian diffusion but only within a specific membrane compartment (17). Two hypothetical models were proposed in order to explain this phenomenon (supplemental Fig. 1). Direct interactions between transmembrane proteins and cytoskeleton are suggested to creates a barrier, called “fence,” where cytosolic parts of transmembrane proteins collides with cytoskeletal components, limiting their diffusion to certain areas. These molecules can jump over the “fence” to a neighboring compartment, possibly due to the dynamic nature of the interaction of membrane proteins and cytoskeleton, where they are again temporally trapped (17). This phenomenon was recently described also in A. thaliana where the interplay between membrane microdomains and microtubules plays a role in secondary cell wall formation (reviewed in (18)). The second model assumes, additionally, that particular transmembrane proteins are anchored to and lined up along cytoskeleton and act as “pickets” to arrest free diffusion of other membrane components, including nontransmembrane proteins, within the enclosed compartment (19).For plants, the composition of these sterol-rich membranes phases was analyzed in several biochemical studies (14, 2022). Thereby, low-density preparations of plasma membrane fractions after treatment with nonionic detergents (DRM1 fractions) were considered as a biochemical representation enriched in cellular membrane ordered phases or microdomains. Proteomic studies in mammalian cells consistently reported that the DRM fraction is highly enriched with several cytoskeletal proteins such as actin, tubulin, myosin, dynamin, actinin, and supervillin (2325). Additionally, the level of phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PI(4,5)P2), a lipid connecting the plasma membrane to actin filaments, was also significantly elevated in DRM preparations (26). Treatment with microtubule and actin depolymerizing agent results in drastic loss of many signaling proteins from these DRM fractions prepared from adult rat cardiac myocytes (27) or human embryonic retinal cells (28).Based on this knowledge, we propose two hypothetical models for the relationship between cytoskeleton and membrane microdomains for plant cells: (i) Actin filaments and microtubules could be important in the membrane phase separation or formation of the membrane microdomains themselves. In this case, disruption of the cytoskeleton would cause a lack of phase segregation in the plasma membrane. (ii) The cytoskeleton is only important for the incorporation of specific protein into the sterol-enriched regions but not for the general formation of these phase separations. This view implies that phase separations or membrane microdomains would still be present after cytoskeleton disruption but their protein composition can be different. Another possible scenario is (iii) that cytoskeletal elements serve as anchors for membrane microdomains at particular position in the plasma membrane, so the absence of these anchors would cause the increased mobility of microdomains (supplemental Fig. 1).The primary aim of this study was to characterize the interplay between cytoskeletal components and different membrane phases (microdomains) in A. thaliana suspension cell cultures. To reach this goal, biochemical and proteomic approaches were combined with confocal microscopy and activity assays measuring the influence of actin or tubulin disruption on the composition, localization, and biochemical properties of the sterol-enriched membrane microdomains. Thereby, for biochemical analyses, low-density detergent-resistant membrane fractions are analyzed as containing cellular sterol-rich membrane compartments.
Keywords:
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号