首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Seminal amyloids are well known for their role in enhancing HIV infection. Among all the amyloidogenic peptides identified in human semen, PAP248‐286 was found to be the most active and was termed as semen‐derived enhancer of viral infection (SEVI). Although amyloidogenic nature of the peptide is mainly linked with enhancement of the viral infection, the most active physiological conformation of the aggregated peptide remains inconclusive. Lipids are known to modulate aggregation pathway of a variety of proteins and peptides and constitute one of the most abundant biomolecules in human semen. PAP248‐286 significantly differs from the other known amyloidogenic peptides, including Aβ and IAPP, in terms of critical concentration, surface charge, fibril morphology, and structural transition during aggregation. Hence, in the present study, we aimed to assess the effect of a lipid, 1,2‐dioleoyl‐sn‐glycero‐3‐phosphocholine (DOPC), on PAP248‐286 aggregation and the consequent conformational outcomes. Our initial observation suggested that the presence of the lipid considerably influenced the aggregation of PAP248‐286. Further, ZDOCK and MD simulation studies of peptide multimerization have suggested that the hydrophobic residues at C‐terminus are crucial for PAP248‐286 aggregation and are anticipated to be major DOPC‐interacting partners. Therefore, we further assessed the aggregation behaviour of C‐terminal (PAP273‐286) fragment of PAP248‐286 and observed that DOPC possesses the ability to interfere with the aggregation behaviour of both the peptides used in the current study. Mechanistically, we propose that the presence of DOPC causes considerable inhibition of the peptide aggregation by interfering with the peptide's disordered state to β‐sheet transition.  相似文献   

2.
Amyloid fibrils formed by peptides found in semen have been shown to enhance HIV infectivity in vitro. The first of these peptides to be identified was the 248–286 fragment of prostatic acid phosphatase (PAP248–286) (Munich et al., 2007). PAP248–286 is highly cationic, and its fibrils might facilitate infection by decreasing the electrostatic repulsion between the negatively charged surfaces of the virus and the target cell. Whereas PAP248–286 can easily form fibrils in seminal fluid, it needs rapid agitation in other environments, and certain ions have been shown to be critical for its assembly into fibrils (Olsen et al., 2012). However, mutation of the positively charged residues to alanine results in a peptide (PAP248–286Ala) that can more easily form fibrilar aggregates. We studied PAP248–286 and PAP248–286Ala fibril formation in water and water?+?NaCl environments. While PAP248-286Ala can efficiently form fibrils in both water and water?+?NaCl, PAP248-286 can only do so in a water?+?NaCl solution. The inability of PAP248–286 to form fibrils in water could be due solely to repulsion between the positively charged peptides, an effect that might be diminished by the presence of salt. However, it is also possible that the explanation lies in PAP248–286’s failure to populate conformations that can easily lead to ordered aggregates. To answer this question, using molecular dynamics simulations, we characterized the ensemble of conformations populated by the two peptides in water and water?+?NaCl environments. The results indicate that PAP248-286Ala favors contacts that stabilize a strand-turn-strand, or β-arch, motif around P31, the only proline residue in the sequence. Because β-arches are a common feature in amyloid fibrils, and because it is very unlikely that a proline residue would be in any position other than the β-arch, we expect the formation of this motif to be the rate-limiting step in PAP248–286Ala / PAP248–286 fibril formation. Moreover, the contacts stabilizing the β-arch would bring positively charged residues into contact in PAP248–286, which, consistent with the experimental results, would be facilitated by the presence of negative ions. To summarize, we have tried to understand if the inability of PAP248–286 to efficiently form fibrils in water is only due to a slower aggregation caused by electrostatic repulsion between the positively charged peptides. Our data suggest that this effect is also due to electrostatic repulsion between the residues within each monomeric peptide, which prevents PAP248–286 from populating conformations that would lead to ordered aggregates.  相似文献   

3.
Amyloid fibers in human semen known as SEVI (semen-derived enhancer of viral infection) dramatically increase the infectivity of HIV and other enveloped viruses, which appears to be linked to the promotion of bridging interactions and the neutralization of electrostatic repulsion between the host and the viral cell membranes. The SEVI precursor PAP(248-286) is mostly disordered when bound to detergent micelles, in contrast to the highly α-helical structures found for most amyloid proteins. To determine the origin of this difference, the structures of PAP(248-286) were solved in aqueous solution and with 30% and 50% trifluoroethanol. In solution, pulsed field gradient (PFG)-NMR and (1)H-(1)H NOESY experiments indicate that PAP(248-286) is unfolded to an unusual degree for an amyloidogenic peptide but adopts significantly helical structures in TFE solutions. The clear differences between the structures of PAP(248-286) in TFE and SDS indicate electrostatic interactions play a large role in the folding of the peptide, consistent with the slight degree of penetration of PAP(248-286) into the hydrophobic core of the micelle. This is another noticeable difference between PAP(248-286) and other amyloid peptides, which generally show penetration into at least the headgroup region of the bilayer, and may explain some of the unusual properties of SEVI.  相似文献   

4.
Semen-derived enhancer of viral infection (SEVI) is the term given to the amyloid fibrils formed by a 39-amino acid fragment (PAP248–286) of prostatic acidic phosphatase (PAP) found in human semen. SEVI enhances human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infectivity by four to five orders of magnitude (Münch et al., 2007). Here, we show by various biophysical techniques including Thioflavin T fluorescence, circular dichroism spectroscopy and transmission electron microscopy that fragments encompassing the central region of SEVI, i.e. PAP248–271 and PAP257–267, form fibrils of similar morphology to SEVI. Our results show that the central region, residues PAP267–271, is crucially important in promoting SEVI fibril formation. Furthermore, SEVI and fibrillar forms of these peptide fragments are toxic to neuronal pheochromocytoma 12 cells but not to epithelial colon carcinoma cells. These findings imply that although SEVI assists in the attachment of HIV-1 to immune cells, it may not facilitate HIV entry by damaging the epithelial cell layer that presents a barrier to the HIV.  相似文献   

5.
Amyloid fibrils contained in semen, known as SEVI, or semen-derived enhancer of viral infection, have been shown to increase the infectivity of HIV dramatically. However, previous work with these fibrils has suggested that extensive time and nonphysiologic levels of agitation are necessary to induce amyloid formation from the precursor peptide (a proteolytic cleavage product of prostatic acid phosphatase, PAP(248-286)). Here, we show that fibril formation by PAP(248-286) is accelerated dramatically in the presence of seminal plasma (SP) and that agitation is not required for fibrillization in this setting. Analysis of the effects of specific SP components on fibril formation by PAP(248-286) revealed that this effect is primarily due to the anionic buffer components of SP (notably inorganic phosphate and sodium bicarbonate). Divalent cations present in SP had little effect on the kinetics of fibril formation, but physiologic levels of Zn(2+) strongly protected SEVI fibrils from degradation by seminal proteases. Taken together, these data suggest that in the in vivo environment, PAP(248-286) is likely to form fibrils efficiently, thus providing an explanation for the presence of SEVI in human semen.  相似文献   

6.
Semen-derived enhancer of viral infection (SEVI), an amyloid fibril formed from a cationic peptide fragment of prostatic acidic phosphatase (PAP), dramatically enhances the infectivity of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1). Insoluble, sedimentable fibrils contribute to SEVI-mediated enhancement of virus infection. However, the SEVI-forming PAP(248–286) peptide is able to produce infection-enhancing structures much more quickly than it forms amyloid fibrils. This suggests that soluble supramolecular assemblies may enhance HIV-1 infection. To address this question, non-SEVI amyloid-like fibrils were derived from general amphipathic peptides of sequence Ac-Kn(XKXE)2-NH2. These cationic peptides efficiently self-assembled to form soluble, fibril-like structures that were, in some cases, able to enhance HIV-1 infection even more efficiently than SEVI. Experiments were also performed to determine whether agents that efficiently shield the charged surface of SEVI fibrils block SEVI-mediated infection-enhancement. To do this, we generated self-assembling anionic peptides of sequence Ac-En(XKXE)2-NH2. One of these peptides completely abrogated SEVI-mediated enhancement of HIV-1 infection, without altering HIV-1 infectivity in the absence of SEVI. Collectively, these data suggest that soluble SEVI assemblies may mediate infection-enhancement, and that anionic peptide supramolecular assemblies have the potential to act as anti-SEVI microbicides.  相似文献   

7.
PAP248–286 is a 39-residue fragment (residues 248 to 286) derived from protease cleavage of prostatic acidic phosphatase in semen. The amyloid fibrils formed in vitro by PAP248–286 can dramatically enhance human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. To our knowledge, we present the first report that the HIV-enhancing potency of fibrils formed by PAP248–286 is morphology dependent. We identified pleomorphic fibrils by transmission electron microscopy in two buffer conditions. Our solid-state NMR data showed that these fibrils consist of molecules in distinct conformations. In agreement with NMR, fluorescence measurements confirmed that they are assembled along different pathways, with distinct molecular structures. Furthermore, our cell-based infectivity tests detected distinct HIV-enhancing potencies for fibrils in distinct morphologies. In addition, our transmission electron microscopy and NMR results showed that semen-derived enhancer of viral infection fibrils formed in sodium bicarbonate buffer remain stable over time, but semen-derived enhancer of viral infection fibrils formed in phosphate buffered saline keep evolving after the initial 7 days incubation period. Given time, most of the assemblies in phosphate buffered saline will turn into elongated thin fibrils. They have similar secondary structure but different packing than thin fibrils formed initially after 7 days incubation.  相似文献   

8.
精液源性病毒增强因子(Semen-derived enhancer of viral infection,SEVI)是前列腺酸性磷酸酶(Prostatic acidphosphatase,PAP)位于PAP248-286的多肽片段,可增强人免疫缺陷病毒(Human immunodeficiency virus,HIV)的感染性。SEVI促进HIV感染的作用机制包括:①富含阳离子氨基酸残基的SEVI能通过静电作用降低HIV病毒颗粒与靶细胞之间的静电排斥;②SEVI在人体液中呈无序状态,利于病毒与靶细胞膜相互作用;③SEVI直接捕获HIV颗粒,提高病毒在靶细胞表面沉降速度,促进病毒与靶细胞的吸附和融合。目前已发现能抑制SEVI活性的物质包括:绿茶来源的EGCG(没食子儿茶素没食子酸酯)、氨基喹啉类小分子化合物Surfen、ThT类似物BTA-EG6等,能通过阻断HIV与SEVI结合或阻止其淀粉样纤维的形成,降低SEVI的病毒感染增强作用。研究SEVI的生物学特性及作用机制对防治HIV感染具有较为重要的指导意义。  相似文献   

9.
Polyanionic candidate microbicides, including cellulose sulfate, carrageenan, PRO 2000, were proven ineffective in preventing HIV-1 transmission and even cellulose sulfate showed increased risk of HIV acquisition in the Phase III efficacy trials. Semen plays critical roles in HIV-1 sexual transmission. Specifically, amyloid fibrils formed by fragments of prostatic acidic phosphatase (PAP) in semen termed semen-derived enhancer of virus infection (SEVI) could drastically enhance HIV-1 infection. Here we investigated the interaction between polyanions and PAP248-286, a prototype peptide of SEVI, to understand the possible cause of polyanionic candidate microbicides to fail in clinical trials. We found anionic polymers could efficiently promote SEVI fibril formation, most likely mediated by the natural electrostatic interaction between polyanions and PAP248-286, as revealed by acid native PAGE and Western blot. The overall anti-HIV-1 activity of polyanions in the presence or absence of PAP248-286 or semen was evaluated. In the viral infection assay, the supernatants of polyanions/PAP248-286 or polyanions/semen mixtures containing the free, unbound polyanionic molecules showed a general reduction in antiviral efficacy, while the pellets containing amyloid fibrils formed by the polyanion-bound PAP248-286 showed aggravated enhancement of viral infection. Collectively, from the point of drug-host protein interaction, our study revealed that polyanions facilitate SEVI fibril formation to promote HIV-1 infection, thus highlighting a molecular mechanism underlying the failure of polyanions in clinical trials and the importance of drug-semen interaction in evaluating the anti-HIV-1 efficacy of candidate microbicides.  相似文献   

10.
All living organisms adapt their membrane lipid composition in response to changes in their environment or diet. These conserved membrane‐adaptive processes have been studied extensively. However, key concepts of membrane biology linked to regulation of lipid composition including homeoviscous adaptation maintaining stable levels of membrane fluidity, and gel‐fluid phase separation resulting in domain formation, heavily rely upon in vitro studies with model membranes or lipid extracts. Using the bacterial model organisms Escherichia coli and Bacillus subtilis, we now show that inadequate in vivo membrane fluidity interferes with essential complex cellular processes including cytokinesis, envelope expansion, chromosome replication/segregation and maintenance of membrane potential. Furthermore, we demonstrate that very low membrane fluidity is indeed capable of triggering large‐scale lipid phase separation and protein segregation in intact, protein‐crowded membranes of living cells; a process that coincides with the minimal level of fluidity capable of supporting growth. Importantly, the in vivo lipid phase separation is not associated with a breakdown of the membrane diffusion barrier function, thus explaining why the phase separation process induced by low fluidity is biologically reversible.  相似文献   

11.
In semen, proteolytic peptide fragments from prostatic acid phosphatase can form amyloid fibrils termed SEVI (semen-derived enhancer of viral infection). These fibrils greatly enhance human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infectivity by increasing the attachment of virions to target cells. Therefore, SEVI may have a significant impact on whether HIV is successfully transmitted during sexual contact. Here, we demonstrate that surfen, a small molecule heparan sulfate proteoglycan antagonist, inhibits both SEVI- and semen-mediated enhancement of HIV type 1 infection. Surfen interferes with the binding of SEVI to both target cells and HIV type 1 virions but does not deaggregate SEVI fibrils. Because SEVI can increase HIV infectivity by several orders of magnitude, supplementing current HIV microbicide candidates with SEVI inhibitors, such as surfen, might greatly increase their potency.  相似文献   

12.
Mutation studies previously showed that the lentivirus lytic peptide (LLP2) sequence of the cytoplasmic C-terminal tail of the HIV-1 gp41 envelope protein inhibited viral-initiated T-cell death and T-cell syncytium formation, at which time in the HIV life cycle the gp41 protein is embedded in the T-cell membrane. In striking contrast, the mutants did not affect virion infectivity, during which time the gp41 protein is embedded in the HIV envelope membrane. To examine the role of LLP2/membrane interactions, we applied synchrotron x-radiation to determine structure of hydrated membranes. We focused on WT LLP2 peptide (+3 charge) and MX2 mutant (−1 charge) with membrane mimics for the T-cell and the HIV-1 membranes. To investigate the influence of electrostatics, cholesterol content, and peptide palmitoylation, we also studied three other LLP2 variants and HIV-1 mimics without negatively charged lipids or cholesterol as well as extracted HIV-1 lipids. All LLP2 peptides bound strongly to T-cell membrane mimics, as indicated by changes in membrane structure and bending. In contrast, none of the weakly bound LLP2 variants changed the HIV-1 membrane mimic structure or properties. This correlates well with, and provides a biophysical basis for, previously published results that reported lack of a mutant effect in HIV virion infectivity in contrast to an inhibitory effect in T-cell syncytium formation. It shows that interaction of LLP2 with the T-cell membrane modulates biological function.  相似文献   

13.
Fusion between viral envelopes and host cell membranes, which is mediated by special glycoproteins anchored on the viral membrane, is required for HIV viral entry and infection. The HIV gp41 fusion peptide (FP), which initiates membrane fusion, adopts either an α-helical or β-sheeted structure depending on the cholesterol concentration. We used phosphocholine spin labels on the lipid headgroup and different positions on the acyl chain to detect its perturbation on lipid bilayers containing different cholesterol concentrations by electron-spin resonance. Our findings were as follows. 1), gp41 FP affects the lipid order in the same manner as previously shown for influenza hemagglutinin FP, i.e., it has a cooperative effect versus the peptide/lipid ratio, supporting our hypothesis that membrane ordering is a common prerequisite for viral membrane fusion. 2), gp41 FP induces membrane ordering in all lipid compositions studied, whereas a nonfusion mutant FP perturbs lipid order to a significantly smaller extent. 3), In high-cholesterol-containing lipid bilayers, where gp41 FP is in the β-aggregation conformation, its effect on the lipid ordering reaches deeper into the bilayer. The different extent to which the two conformers perturb is correlated with their fusogenicity. The possible role of the two conformers in membrane fusion is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Domain of Unknown Function 89 (DUF89) proteins are metal-dependent phosphohydrolases. Exemplary DUF89 enzymes differ in their metal and phosphosubstrate preferences. Here, we interrogated the activities and structures of two DUF89 paralogs from fission yeast—Duf89 and Duf8901. We find that Duf89 and Duf8901 are cobalt/nickel-dependent phosphohydrolases adept at hydrolyzing p-nitrophenylphosphate and PPi. Crystal structures of metal-free Duf89 and Co2+-bound Duf8901 disclosed two enzyme conformations that differed with respect to the position of a three-helix module, which is either oriented away from the active site in Duf89 or forms a lid over the active site in Duf8901. Lid closure results in a 16 Å movement of Duf8901 Asp195, vis-à-vis Asp199 in Duf89, that brings Asp195 into contact with an octahedrally coordinated cobalt. Reaction of Duf8901 with BeCl2 and NaF in the presence of divalent cations Co2+, Ni2+, or Zn2+ generated covalent Duf8901-(Asp248)–beryllium trifluoride (BeF3)•Co2+, Duf8901-(Asp248)–BeF3•Ni2+, or Duf8901-(Asp248)–BeF3•Zn2+ adducts, the structures of which suggest a two-step catalytic mechanism via formation and hydrolysis of an enzyme-(aspartyl)–phosphate intermediate. Alanine mutations of Duf8901 Asp248, Asn249, Lys401, Asp286, and Asp195 that interact with BeF3•Co2+ squelched p-nitrophenylphosphatase activity. A 1.8 Å structure of a Duf8901-(Asp248)–AlF4–OH2•Co2+ transition-state mimetic suggests an associative mechanism in which Asp195 and Asp363 orient and activate the water nucleophile. Whereas deletion of the duf89 gene elicited a phenotype in which expression of phosphate homeostasis gene pho1 was derepressed, deleting duf8901 did not, thereby hinting that the DUF89 paralogs have distinct functional repertoires in vivo.  相似文献   

15.
The xenotropic murine leukemia virus-related virus (XMRV) has recently been detected in prostate cancer tissues and may play a role in tumorigenesis. It is currently unclear how this virus is transmitted and which factors promote its spread in the prostate. We show that amyloidogenic fragments known as semen-derived enhancer of virus infection (SEVI) originating from prostatic acid phosphatase greatly increase XMRV infections of primary prostatic epithelial and stromal cells. Hybrid simian/human immunodeficiency chimeric virus particles pseudotyped with XMRV envelope protein were used to demonstrate that the enhancing effect of SEVI, or of human semen itself, was at the level of viral attachment and entry. SEVI enhanced XMRV infectivity but did not bypass the requirement for the xenotropic and polytropic retrovirus receptor 1. Furthermore, XMRV RNA was detected in prostatic secretions of some men with prostate cancer. The fact that the precursor of SEVI is produced in abundance by the prostate indicates that XMRV replication occurs in an environment that provides a natural enhancer of viral infection, and this may play a role in the spread of this virus in the human population.Viruses are etiologic agents of various human cancers, including cervical carcinoma (caused by human papillomavirus), Kaposi''s sarcoma (caused by human herpesvirus 8), hepatocellular carcinoma (caused by hepatitis B virus and hepatitis C virus), and adult T-cell leukemia (caused by human T-cell leukemia virus type 1) (6). Genetic and epidemiologic evidence suggests that prostate cancer may also have an infectious etiology, although a causative agent has not been identified (4, 12). The gammaretrovirus xenotropic murine leukemia virus-related virus (XMRV) is a candidate human tumor virus based on its association in human prostate tumors with a reduced-activity variant of the antiviral gene, RNASEL (also known as the hereditary prostate cancer 1 gene or HPC1) (17) and because it is a member of a viral family known to cause leukemias and lymphomas in different mammalian species (8). Interferon, through its effector RNase L, potently inhibits XMRV replication (5). XMRV integration sites in human prostate cancer tissues were mapped to cancer breakpoints, common fragile sites, micro-RNA genes, and cancer-related genes (11). Many of these genes are implicated directly or indirectly in prostate cancer and metabolic pathways that affect prostate cancer, including androgen signaling. XMRV has also been observed in prostate tissue from a nonfamilial prostate cancer patient and in an individual without prostate cancer (7). The possible role of XMRV in prostatic cancer raises questions about its ability to infect the prostate and the route of viral transmission.Recently, it has been shown that fragments of prostatic acid phosphatase (PAP), an abundant nonspecific protein phosphatase produced by the prostate (18) and secreted in semen in large quantities (about 2 mg/ml) (16), form amyloid fibrils that drastically enhance human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection (14). The fibrils of PAP248-286, termed semen-derived enhancer of virus infection (SEVI), enhanced the infectious virus titer by several orders of magnitude by capturing HIV-1 virions and promoting their attachment to target cells. The ability of SEVI to promote the interaction between virions and the cell surface is independent of the viral glycoprotein and hence is not restricted to HIV-1, although subsequent fusion between the viral and cellular membranes still required gp120, CD4, and an appropriate coreceptor (14). A recent study indicates that the positive charges on SEVI (pI = 10.21) promote infectivity by neutralizing negative-charge repulsion between HIV particles and the cell surface (15).Because SEVI originates from the prostate (the organ from which XMRV infection was discovered [17]) and promotes viral attachment in a relatively nonspecific manner, we sought to determine its effect on XMRV infection. Here we demonstrate that XMRV infectivity is greatly enhanced by SEVI or human semen and that XMRV RNA is detectable in expressed prostatic secretions (EPS) from human tumor-bearing prostates.  相似文献   

16.
BackgroundSemen is a major vehicle for HIV transmission. Prostatic acid phosphatase (PAP) fragments, such as PAP248-286, in human semen can form amyloid fibrils to enhance HIV infection. Other endogenous or exogenous factors present during sexual intercourse have also been reported to promote the formation of seminal amyloid fibrils.

Methodology and Principal Findings

Here, we demonstrated that a synthetic 15-residue peptide derived from the HIV-1 gp120 coreceptor-binding region, designated enhancing peptide 2 (EP2), can rapidly self-assemble into nanofibers. These EP2-derivated nanofibers promptly accelerated the formation of semen amyloid fibrils by PAP248-286, as shown by Thioflavin T (ThT) and Congo red assays. The amyloid fibrils presented similar morphology, assessed via transmission electron microscopy (TEM), in the presence or absence of EP2. Circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy revealed that EP2 accelerates PAP248-286 amyloid fibril formation by promoting the structural transition of PAP248-286 from a random coil into a cross-β-sheet. Newly formed semen amyloid fibrils effectively enhanced HIV-1 infection in TZM-bl cells and U87 cells by promoting the binding of HIV-1 virions to target cells.

Conclusions and Significance

Nanofibers composed of EP2 promote the formation of PAP248-286 amyloid fibrils and enhance HIV-1 infection.  相似文献   

17.
Some lipid mixtures form membranes containing submicroscopic (nanodomain) ordered lipid domains (rafts). Some of these nanodomains are so small (radius <5 nm) that they cannot be readily detected with Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET)-labeled lipid pairs with large Ro. We define such domains as ultrananodomains. We studied the effect of lipid structure/composition on the formation of ultrananodomains in lipid vesicles using a dual-FRET-pair approach in which only one FRET pair had Ro values that were sufficiently small to detect the ultrananodomains. Using this approach, we measured the temperature dependence of domain and ultrananodomain formation for vesicles composed of various mixtures containing a high-Tm lipid (brain sphingomyelin (SM)) or dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC)), low-Tm lipid (dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC) or 1-palmitoyl 2-oleoyl phosphatidylcholine (POPC)), and a lower (28 mol %) or higher (38 mol %) cholesterol concentration. For every lipid combination tested, the thermal stabilities of the ordered domains were similar, in agreement with our prior studies. However, the range of temperatures over which ultrananodomains formed was highly lipid-type dependent. Overall, vesicles that were closest to mammalian plasma membrane in lipid composition (i.e., with brain SM, POPC, and/or higher cholesterol) formed ultrananodomains in preference to larger domains over the widest temperature range. Relative to DPPC, the favorable effect of SM on ultrananodomain formation versus larger domains was especially large. In addition, the favorable effect of a high cholesterol concentration, and of POPC versus DOPC, on the formation of ultrananodomains versus larger domains was greater in vesicles containing SM than in those containing DPPC. We speculate that it is likely that natural mammalian lipids are tuned to maximize the tendency to form ultrananodomains relative to larger domains. The observation that domain size is more sensitive than domain formation to membrane composition has implications for how membrane domain properties may be regulated in vivo.  相似文献   

18.
Semen-derived enhancer of virus infection (SEVI), a naturally occurring peptide fragment of prostatic acid phosphatase, enhances HIV infectivity by forming cationic amyloid fibrils that aid the fusion of negatively charged virion and target cell membranes. Cu(II) and Zn(II) inhibit fibrillization of SEVI in a kinetic assay using the fibril-specific dye ThT. TEM suggests that the metals do not affect fibril morphology. NMR shows that the metals bind to histidines 3 and 23 in the SEVI sequence. ITC experiments indicate that SEVI forms oligomeric complexes with the metals. Dissociation constants are micromolar for Cu(II) and millimolar for Zn(II). Because the Cu(II) and Zn(II) concentrations that inhibit fibrillization are comparable with those found in seminal fluid the metals may modulate SEVI fibrillization under physiological conditions.  相似文献   

19.
In chemotaxing ameboid cells, a complex leading-edge signaling circuit forms on the cytoplasmic leaflet of the plasma membrane and directs both actin and membrane remodeling to propel the leading edge up an attractant gradient. This leading-edge circuit includes a putative amplification module in which Ca2+-protein kinase C (Ca2+-PKC) is hypothesized to phosphorylate myristoylated alanine-rich C kinase substrate (MARCKS) and release phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2), thereby stimulating production of the signaling lipid phosphatidylinositol-3,4,5-trisphosphate (PIP3) by the lipid kinase phosphoinositide-3-kinase (PI3K). We investigated this hypothesized Ca2+-PKC-MARCKS-PIP2-PI3K-PIP3 amplification module and tested its key predictions using single-molecule fluorescence to measure the surface densities and activities of its protein components. Our findings demonstrate that together Ca2+-PKC and the PIP2-binding peptide of MARCKS modulate the level of free PIP2, which serves as both a docking target and substrate lipid for PI3K. In the off state of the amplification module, the MARCKS peptide sequesters PIP2 and thereby inhibits PI3K binding to the membrane. In the on state, Ca2+-PKC phosphorylation of the MARCKS peptide reverses the PIP2 sequestration, thereby releasing multiple PIP2 molecules that recruit multiple active PI3K molecules to the membrane surface. These findings 1) show that the Ca2+-PKC-MARCKS-PIP2-PI3K-PIP3 system functions as an activation module in vitro, 2) reveal the molecular mechanism of activation, 3) are consistent with available in vivo data, and 4) yield additional predictions that are testable in live cells. More broadly, the Ca2+-PKC-stimulated release of free PIP2 may well regulate the membrane association of other PIP2-binding proteins, and the findings illustrate the power of single-molecule analysis to elucidate key dynamic and mechanistic features of multiprotein signaling pathways on membrane surfaces.  相似文献   

20.
Sucrose density gradient centrifugation of Paracoccus denitrificans strains ATCC 13543 and ATCC 17741 cell envelopes plus poly-β-hydroxybutyrate, isolated from organisms broken using a French pressure cell, revealed three bands of densities: I, 1.16 g/ml; II, 1.19 g/ml; III, 1.24 g/ml. On the basis of chemical and enzymatic assays and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis the bands were identified as: I, cytoplasmic membrane; II, poly-β-hydroxybutyrate; III, outer membrane plus poly-β-hydroxybutyrate. Poly-β-hydroxybutyrate was removed by increased low-speed centrifugation before deposition of cell envelopes. Density gradient centrifugation of cell envelopes gave a simple pattern of two bands, cytoplasmic and outer membranes. In both strains outer membranes showed a broad protein band at Mr 70 000–83 000 upon SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of samples solubilized at 25°C, which was not present in samples solubilized at 100°C, where a single major band was present of Mr 32 000 in strain ATCC 13543 and 35 000 in strain ATCC 17741. The major outer membrane protein stained positively for lipid in both strains, as did an Mr 70 000 protein, which was the second major protein in strain ATCC 17741. The second major outer membrane protein of stain ATCC 13543 had an Mr of 20 000 in unheated samples but 23 000 in heated samples. This protein was not present in strain ATCC 17741. Quantitative data on the polar lipid compositions of cell envelope fractions are presented.  相似文献   

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