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1.
Gram‐negative bacteria can survive in harsh environments in part because the asymmetric outer membrane (OM) hinders the entry of toxic compounds. Lipid asymmetry is established by having phospholipids (PLs) confined to the inner leaflet of the membrane and lipopolysaccharides (LPS) to the outer leaflet. Perturbation of OM lipid asymmetry, characterized by PL accumulation in the outer leaflet, disrupts proper LPS packing and increases membrane permeability. The multi‐component Mla system prevents PL accumulation in the outer leaflet of the OM via an unknown mechanism. Here, we demonstrate that in Escherichia coli, the Mla system maintains OM lipid asymmetry with the help of osmoporin OmpC. We show that the OM lipoprotein MlaA interacts specifically with OmpC and OmpF. This interaction is sufficient to localize MlaA lacking its lipid anchor to the OM. Removing OmpC, but not OmpF, causes accumulation of PLs in the outer leaflet of the OM in stationary phase, as was previously observed for MlaA. We establish that OmpC is an additional component of the Mla system; the OmpC‐MlaA complex may function to remove PLs directly from the outer leaflet to maintain OM lipid asymmetry. Our work reveals a novel function for the general diffusion channel OmpC in lipid transport.  相似文献   

2.
The cell envelope of Gram-negative bacteria is composed of an inner membrane, outer membane, and an intervening periplasmic space. How the outer membrane lipids are trafficked and assembled there, and how the asymmetry of the outer membrane is maintained is an area of intense research. The Mla system has been implicated in the maintenance of lipid asymmetry in the outer membrane, and is generally thought to drive the removal of mislocalized phospholipids from the outer membrane and their retrograde transport to the inner membrane. At the heart of the Mla pathway is a structurally unique ABC transporter complex in the inner membrane, called MlaFEDB. Recently, an explosion of cryo-EM studies has begun to shed light on the structure and lipid translocation mechanism of MlaFEDB, with many parallels to other ABC transporter families, including human ABCA and ABCG, as well as bacterial lipopolysaccharide and O-antigen transporters. Here we synthesize information from all available structures, and propose a model for lipid trafficking across the cell envelope by MlaFEDB.  相似文献   

3.
Biogenesis of the outer membrane (OM) in Gram‐negative bacteria, which is essential for viability, requires the coordinated transport and assembly of proteins and lipids, including lipopolysaccharides (LPS) and phospholipids (PLs), into the membrane. While pathways for LPS and OM protein assembly are well‐studied, how PLs are transported to and from the OM is not clear. Mechanisms that ensure OM stability and homeostasis are also unknown. The trans‐envelope Tol‐Pal complex, whose physiological role has remained elusive, is important for OM stability. Here, we establish that the Tol‐Pal complex is required for PL transport and OM lipid homeostasis in Escherichia coli. Cells lacking the complex exhibit defects in lipid asymmetry and accumulate excess PLs in the OM. This imbalance in OM lipids is due to defective retrograde PL transport in the absence of a functional Tol‐Pal complex. Thus, cells ensure the assembly of a stable OM by maintaining an excess flux of PLs to the OM only to return the surplus to the inner membrane. Our findings also provide insights into the mechanism by which the Tol‐Pal complex may promote OM invagination during cell division.  相似文献   

4.
A model is presented to simulate transverse lipid movement in the human erythrocyte membrane. The model is based on a system of differential equations describing the time-dependence of phospholipid redistribution and the steady state distribution between the inner and outer membrane monolayer. It takes into account several mechanisms of translocation: (i) ATP-dependent transport via the aminophospholipid translocase; (ii) protein-mediated facilitated and (iii) carrier independent transbilayer diffusion. A reasonable modelling of the known lipid asymmetry could only be achieved by introducing mechanism (iii). We have called this pathway the compensatory flux, which is proportional to the gradient of phospholipids between both membrane leaflets. Using realistic model parameters, the model allows the calculation of the transbilayer motion and distribution of endogenous phospholipids of the human erythrocyte membrane for several biologically relevant conditions. Moreover, the model can also be applied to experiments usually performed to assess phospholipid redistribution in biological membranes. Thus, it is possible to simulate transbilayer motion of exogenously added phospholipid analogues in erythrocyte membranes. Those experiments have been carried out here in parallel using spin labeled lipid analogues. The general application of this model to other membrane systems is outlined.Abbreviations PBS phosphate buffered saline - DFP diisopropyl fluorophosphate - ESR electron spin resonance - RBC red blood cells - PC phosphatidylcholine - PE phosphatidylethanolamine - PS phosphatidylserine - SM sphingomyelin - (0,2)PC 1-palmitoyl-2(4doxylpentanoyl)-PC - (0,2)PE 1-palmitoyl-2(4-doxylpentanoyl)-PE - (0,2) PS 1-palmitoyl-2(4-doxylpentanoyl)-PS  相似文献   

5.
《Biophysical journal》2022,121(18):3486-3498
Polymyxins are increasingly used as the last-line therapeutic option for the treatment of infections caused by multidrug-resistant Gram-negative bacteria. However, efforts to address the resistance in superbugs are compromised by a poor understanding of the bactericidal modes because high-resolution detection of the cell structure is still lacking. By performing molecular dynamics simulations at a coarse-grained level, here we show that polymyxin B (PmB) disrupts Gram-negative bacterial membranes by altering lipid homeostasis and asymmetry. We found that the binding of PmBs onto the asymmetric outer membrane (OM) loosens the packing of lipopolysaccharides (LPS) and induces unbalanced bending torque between the inner and outer leaflets, which in turn triggers phospholipids to flip from the inner leaflet to the outer leaflet to compensate for the stress deformation. Meanwhile, some LPSs may be detained on the inner membrane (IM). Then, the lipid-scrambled OM undergoes phase separation. Defects are created at the boundaries between LPS-rich domains and phospholipid-rich domains, which consequently facilitate the uptake of PmB across the OM. Finally, PmBs target LPSs detained on the IM and similarly perturb the IM. This lipid Scramble, membrane phase Separation, and peptide Translocation model depicts a novel mechanism by which polymyxins kill bacteria and sheds light on developing a new generation of polymyxins or antibiotic adjuvants with improved killing activities and higher therapeutic indices.  相似文献   

6.
The outer membrane (OM) of Gram-negative bacteria is an asymmetric bilayer having phospholipids in the inner leaflet and lipopolysaccharides in the outer leaflet. This unique asymmetry and the complex carbohydrates in lipopolysaccharides make it a daunting task to study the asymmetrical OM structure and dynamics, its interactions with OM proteins, and its roles in translocation of substrates, including antibiotics. In this study, we combine neutron reflectometry and molecular simulation to explore the physical properties of OM mimetics. There is excellent agreement between experiment and simulation, allowing experimental testing of the conclusions from simulations studies and also atomistic interpretation of the behavior of experimental model systems, such as the degree of lipid asymmetry, the lipid component (tail, head, and sugar) profiles along the bilayer normal, and lateral packing (i.e., average surface area per lipid). Therefore, the combination of both approaches provides a powerful new means to explore the biological and biophysical behavior of the bacterial OM.  相似文献   

7.
Three different bilayer lipid membrane systems were studied under visible and ultraviolet illumination. The first system consisted of a bilayer lipid membrane formed with a mixture of phospholipids and cholesterol, to one side of which purple membrane fragments from Halobacterium halobium were added. The second system consisted of a membrane formed from spinach chloroplast extract. When either of these membrane systems was illuminated with ultraviolet and visible radiation, photopotentials were observed and photoelectric action spectra were recorded (the technique is termed photoelectrospectrometry). Each spectrum had a definite structure which was characteristic of each of the modified membranes. The third system studied consisted of an otherwise photoinactive membrane formed with a mixture of phospholipids and cholesterol, to one side of which chymotrypsin was added. When the membrane was illuminated with visible light no photoresponse was observed. On the other hand, a photopotential which increased with incubation time was observed when the membrane was illuminated with ultraviolet light. Since, in our systems, the photoresponses have been observed to be due to certain species incorporated into the membrane, it appears that photoelectrospectrometry is a useful tool for studying lipid-protein interactions, constituent organization and energy transfer in membranes.  相似文献   

8.
The outer surface of intact synaptosomes was covalently labelled with trinitrobenzenesulfonic acid prior to isolation of the synaptic plasma membrane. Analysis of the membrane lipid demonstrated an asymmetric distribution of phospholipids across the synaptosomal plasma membrane. In addition, the fatty acyl composition of phosphatidylethanolamine from this neuronal membrane fraction was also distributed asymmetrically. The data are consistent with a de novo generation of phospholipid asymmetry independent of serum lipid exchange processes. This structural asymmetry may have important consequences for neurotransmission.  相似文献   

9.
G. Wanner  H. Formanek  R. R. Theimer 《Planta》1981,151(2):109-123
Maturing embryos of 16 oil plants, anise suspension culture cells, and Neurospora crassa cells were prepared for electron microscopy at different stages during massive lipid accumulation. Lipid-rich structures of certain species were best preserved by dehydration of fixed tissues in ethanol without propylene oxide, embedding in Spurr's Medium, and polymerization at room temperature. In all cells examined, spherical lipid bodies (spherosomes) showed a moderately osmiophilic, amorphous matrix and displayed a delimiting half-unit membrane when sectioned medially. Associations with the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) were viewed at any stage during lipid body development but with different frequency in the different plant species. Plastids of fat-storing cells exhibited conspicuously undulate outer and inner envelope membranes that formed multiple contact sites with each other and protuberances into both cytoplasm and stroma. Some species, e.g., Linum, have plastids with tubular structures that connect the inner membrane to the thylakoid system; in addition, in the stroma vesicles fusing with or apparently passing through the envelope were observed. The outer envelope membrane may be associated with ER-like cytoplasmic membrane structures. In addition, lipid bodies of various sizes were found in contact with the plastid envelope. The ultrastructural observations are interpreted to match the published biochemical evidence, indicating that both plastids and ER may be involved in the synthesis of storage lipids and lipid body production.  相似文献   

10.
The outer membrane (OM) of Gram-negative bacteria is positioned at the frontline of the cell's interaction with its environment and provides a barrier against influx of external toxins while still allowing import of nutrients and excretion of wastes. It is a remarkable asymmetric bilayer with a glycolipid surface-exposed leaflet and a glycerophospholipid inner leaflet. Lipid asymmetry is key to OM barrier function and several different systems actively maintain this lipid asymmetry. All OM components are synthesized in the cytosol before being secreted and assembled into a contiguous membrane on the other side of the cell wall. Work in recent years has uncovered the pathways that transport and assemble most of the OM components. However, our understanding of how phospholipids are delivered to the OM remains notably limited. Here we will review seminal works in phospholipid transfer performed some 40 years ago and place more recent insights in their context. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Bacterial Lipids edited by Russell E. Bishop.  相似文献   

11.
Lipid asymmetry is a ubiquitous property of the lipid bilayers in cellular membranes and its maintenance and loss play important roles in cell physiology, such as blood coagulation and apoptosis. The resulting exposure of phosphatidylserine on the outer surface of the plasma membrane has been suggested to be caused by a specific membrane enzyme, scramblase, which catalyzes phospholipid flip-flop. Despite extensive research the role of scramblase(s) in apoptosis has remained elusive. Here, we show that phospholipid flip-flop is efficiently enhanced in liposomes by oxidatively modified phosphatidylcholines. A combination of fluorescence spectroscopy and molecular dynamics simulations reveal that the mechanistic basis for this property of oxidized phosphatidylcholines is due to major changes imposed by the oxidized phospholipids on the biophysical properties of lipid bilayers, resulting in a fast cross bilayer diffusion of membrane phospholipids and loss of lipid asymmetry, requiring no scramblase protein.  相似文献   

12.
When incubated for 14 h at 37°C in the absence of energy supply, brush-border membrane vesicles from rabbit kidney cortex maintain, as judged by the use of sphingomyelinase and trinitrobenzene sulfonate as membrane probes, their highly asymmetrical phospholipid distribution. In particular, sphingomyelin still accounts for 75% of the phospholipids present on the outer membrane leaflet. Pretreatment of the vesicles with 5 mM diamide resulted in extensive crosslinking of membranous and cytoskeletal proteins. Although it had no immediate effect on the topology of phospholipids, this crosslinking resulted in a limited but significant increase in the amount of aminophospholipids present on the outer membrane leaflet after 14-h incubations. Degradation of aminophospholipids, upon incubation with hog pancreas and bee venom phospholipases A2, was also enhanced by diamide. However, this enhanced hydrolysis was observed immediately after the diamide treatment. A similar increase in degradation of aminophospholipids was obtained when vesicles were incubated with dihydrocytochalasin B. Our results strongly suggest that cytoskeletal proteins, via interactions with aminophospholipids, stabilize the lipid bilayer of the brush-border membrane. It is also suggested that, due to a low transbilayer migration rate, sphingomyelin may play an important role in the maintenance of the lipid asymmetry in these membranes.  相似文献   

13.
An equilibrium transmembrane asymmetry in charged lipids is shown to arise as a result of oriented, bipolar proteins in the membrane. The basic interaction giving rise to the asymmetry is between a lipid molecule and a transbilayer potential generated by the asymmetric charge distribution in the protein. Thus, a protein can generate a lipid asymmetry without a direct binding interaction between lipid and protein. The generation of an asymmetry in charged lipid by this mechanism can also lead to a concomitant asymmetry in neutral lipids if deviations from ideality in the lipid mixture are taken into account. It is shown that regular solution theory applied to the lipid phase predicts an asymmetry in all components of a ternary mixture as long as one component is electrostatically oriented according to the mechanism mentioned above. The resulting asymmetry is not strongly salt dependent. The mechanism quantitatively accounts for the experimentally determined phospholipid asymmetry in the rod outer segment disc membrane of the vertebrate photoreceptor.  相似文献   

14.
A fundamental attribute of cell membranes is transmembrane asymmetry, specifically the formation of ordered phase domains in one leaflet that are compositionally different from the opposing leaflet of the bilayer. Using model membrane systems, many previous studies have demonstrated the formation of ordered phase domains that display complete transmembrane symmetry; but there have been few reports on the more biologically relevant asymmetric membrane structures. Here we report on a combined atomic force microscopy and fluorescence microscopy study whereby we observe three different states of transmembrane symmetry in phase-separated supported lipid bilayers formed by vesicle fusion. We find that if the leaflets differ in gel-phase area fraction, then the smaller domains in one leaflet are in registry with the larger domains in the other leaflet and the system is dynamic. In a presumed lipid flip-flop process similar to Ostwald ripening, the smaller domains in one leaflet erode away whereas the large domains in the other leaflet grow until complete compositional asymmetry is reached and remains stable. We have quantified this evolution and determined that the lipid flip-flop event happens most frequently at the interface between symmetric and asymmetric DSPC domains. If both leaflets have identical area fraction of gel-phase, gel-phase domains are in registry and are static in comparison to the first state. The stability of these three DSPC domain distributions, the degree of registry observed, and the domain immobility have biological significance with regards to maintenance of lipid asymmetry in living cell membranes, communication between inner leaflet and outer leaflet, membrane adhesion, and raft mobility.  相似文献   

15.
Membrane proteins that bind and transport lipids face special challenges. Since lipids typically have low water solubility, both accessibility of the substrate to the protein and delivery to the desired destination are problematical. The amphipathic nature of membrane lipids, and their relatively large molecular size, also means that these proteins must possess substrate-binding sites of a different nature than those designed to handle small polar molecules. This review considers two integral proteins whose function is to bind and transfer membrane lipids within or across a membrane. The first protein, MsbA, is a putative lipid flippase that is a member of the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) superfamily. The protein is found in the inner (cytoplasmic) membrane (IM) of Gram-negative bacteria such as E. coli, where it is proposed to move lipid A from the inner to the outer membrane (OM) leaflet, an important step in the lipopolysaccharide biosynthetic pathway. Cholesterol is a major component of the plasma membrane in eukaryotic cells, where it regulates bilayer fluidity. The other lipid-binding protein discussed here, mammalian NPC1 (Niemann-Pick disease, Type C1), binds cholesterol inside late endosomes/lysosomes (LE/LY) and is involved in its transfer to the cytosol as part of a key intracellular sterol-trafficking pathway. Mutations in NPC1 lead to a devastating neurodegenerative condition, Niemann-Pick Type C disease, which is characterized by massive cholesterol accumulation in LE/LY. The accelerating pace of membrane protein structure determination over the past decade has allowed us a glimpse of how lipid binding and transfer by membrane proteins such as MsbA and NPC1 might be achieved.  相似文献   

16.
The time-dependent accumulation of phosphatidyldimethylethanolamine in formaldehyde-induced vesicles obtained from a somatic cell hybrid line was investigated. From a number of considerations including a two-fold enrichment of cholesterol and sphingomyelin it was concluded that these vesicles were derived from the cell plasma membrane.A progressive depletion of phosphatidylcholine, the major vesicle phospholipid, was observed in cells supplemented for various time periods with dimethylethanolamine. This depletion was accompanied by a concomitant increase in the amount of lipid analog.The time-dependent alteration of the phospholipid polar head group in intact cells was almost identical to that observed in isolated plasma membrane vesicles, suggesting a rapid equilibration of the de novo synthesized phospholipid with the cell surface compartment. From the initial velocity rate, the time required for the phosphatidylcholine pool to double was about 12 h.Agarose-linked phospholipase A2 was used to measure the relative composition of choline- and dimethylethanolamine-phosphoglycerides in the outer surface of vesicles prepared from cells with different degrees of polar head group substitution. The gradual appearance of lysodimethylethanolamine lipid analog in vesicles treated with phospholipase A2 suggested an asymmetric distribution of the phospholipid between the interior and the exterior part of the vesicle. This asymmetry was maximal up to about 4 h following the addition of dimethylethanolamine to the culture medium and was of a transient nature as the lipid analog accumulated on both sides of the plasma membrane. Based on these measurements a fast followed by a slow translocation component could be distinguished with apparent doubling times of 7 and 43 h for the lipid analog, respectively. As the analog becomes the predominant cellular phospholipid a significant increase in the vesicle lipid fluidity was measured.  相似文献   

17.
Pressure is found to destabilize the non-bilayer phase with respect to the bilayer in a model lipid system. The lamellar to inverted hexagonal (H11) phase transition of aqueous egg phosphatidylethanolamine is shifted to higher temperatures by hydrostatic pressure. The slope of the increase in transition temperature is constant to beyond 300 bar, and is greater than that seen for other lipid phase transitions. This behavior is consistent with the hypothesis that increasing chain disorder drives the conversion from the bilayer into the hexagonal phase. If this non-bilayer lipid phase is an intermediate in membrane fusion, then pressure should inhibit the process. This may explain the inhibition of chemical transmission at neural synapses by pressure.  相似文献   

18.
Complexes of the B-protein of fd phage with the model lipid dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) were made by sonication of the fd phage in the presence of dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine. Both laser Raman spectra and circular dichroism show the protein in the membrane to be almost entirely in the β-sheet conformation. This β-sheet conformation is found to be independent of the temperature between 10° C and 50° C. On the other hand, the protein has a very dramatic effect on the organization of the lipid bilayer. An aqueous dispersion of 1 : 1 lipid/protein mixture gives a broad conformational transition of DPPC which occurs between 10° C and 30° C. This contrasts markedly with simple aqueous DPPC dispersions which show a sharp transition at 41°C. This appears to be the first reported example of the lowering of the conformational transition of a membrane bilayer by an intrinsic membrane protein.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
The outer membrane (OM) of Gram-negative bacteria is an evolving antibiotic barrier composed of a glycerophospholipid (GP) inner leaflet and a lipopolysaccharide (LPS) outer leaflet. The two-component regulatory system CrrAB has only recently been reported to confer high-level polymyxin resistance and virulence in Klebsiella pneumoniae. Mutations in crrB have been shown to lead to the modification of the lipid A moiety of LPS through CrrAB activation. However, functions of CrrAB activation in the regulation of other lipids are unclear. Work here demonstrates that CrrAB activation not only stimulates LPS modification but also regulates synthesis of acyl-glycerophosphoglycerols (acyl-PGs), a lipid species with undefined functions and biosynthesis. Among all possible modulators of acyl-PG identified from proteomic data, we found expression of lipid A palmitoyltransferase (PagP) was significantly upregulated in the crrB mutant. Furthermore, comparative lipidomics showed that most of the increasing acyl-PG activated by CrrAB was decreased after pagP knockout with CRISPR-Cas9. These results suggest that PagP also transfers a palmitate chain from GPs to PGs, generating acyl-PGs. Further investigation revealed that PagP mainly regulates the GP contents within the OM, leading to an increased ratio of acyl-PG to PG species and improving OM hydrophobicity, which may contribute to resistance against certain cationic antimicrobial peptides resistance upon LPS modification. Taken together, this work suggests that CrrAB regulates the palmitoylation of PGs and lipid A within the OM through upregulated PagP, which functions together to form an outer membrane barrier critical for bacterial survival.  相似文献   

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