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1.
Lipid rafts are cholesterol (Chol)-rich microdomains floating in a sea of lipid bilayers. Chol is thought to interact preferentially with sphingolipids such as sphingomyelin (SM) rather than with glycerophospholipids, and this putative SM–Chol interaction is generally recognized as a requirement for raft formation. However, the presence of the specific interaction is still controversial, primarily because of the lack of useful molecular probes for scrutinizing this interaction. Recently, we reported that the dynamic properties of 6-F-Chol in DMPC bilayers are similar to those of unmodified Chol. Hence, in the present study, we first compared the roles of 6-F-Chol and Chol in SM bilayers through detergent insolubility, fluorescence polarization, and 2H NMR experiments. The results demonstrated that 6-F-Chol and Chol behave similarly in SM bilayers, whereas, in SM–DOPC membranes, 6-F-Chol is less effective in domain formation. Then, we analyzed the molecular orientation of 6-F-Chol in SM bilayers using solid-state NMR, and found that the dynamics and orientation of 6-F-Chol in SM bilayers are almost identical to those in DMPC bilayers. This supports the notion of the lack of a putative specific interaction between SM and Chol. Thus, this study demonstrates the utility of 6-F-Chol as a molecular probe for understanding molecular recognition in lipid rafts.  相似文献   

2.
Equinatoxin II (EqtII) is a pore-forming protein from Actinia equina that lyses red blood cell and model membranes. Lysis is dependent on the presence of sphingomyelin (SM) and is greatest for vesicles composed of equimolar SM and phosphatidylcholine (PC). Since SM and cholesterol (Chol) interact strongly, forming domains or “rafts” in PC membranes, 31P and 2H solid-state NMR were used to investigate changes in the lipid order and bilayer morphology of multilamellar vesicles comprised of different ratios of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC), SM and Chol following addition of EqtII. The toxin affects the phase transition temperature of the lipid acyl chains, causes formation of small vesicle type structures with increasing temperature, and changes the T2 relaxation time of the phospholipid headgroup, with a tendency to order the liquid disordered phases and disorder the more ordered lipid phases. The solid-state NMR results indicate that Chol stabilizes the DMPC bilayer in the presence of EqtII but leads to greater disruption when SM is in the bilayer. This supports the proposal that EqtII is more lytic when both SM and Chol are present as a consequence of the formation of domain boundaries between liquid ordered and disordered phases in lipid bilayers leading to membrane disruption.  相似文献   

3.
Biomembranes are not homogeneous, they present a lateral segregation of lipids and proteins which leads to the formation of detergent-resistant domains, also called “rafts”. These rafts are particularly enriched in sphingolipids and cholesterol. Despite the huge body of literature on raft insolubility in non-ionic detergents, the mechanisms governing their resistance at the nanometer scale still remain poorly documented. Herein, we report a real-time atomic force microscopy (AFM) study of model lipid bilayers exposed to Triton X-100 (TX-100) at different concentrations. Different kinds of supported bilayers were prepared with dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC), sphingomyelin (SM) and cholesterol (Chol). The DOPC/SM 1:1 (mol/mol) membrane served as the non-resistant control, and DOPC/SM/Chol 2:1:1 (mol/mol/mol) corresponded to the raft-mimicking composition. For all the lipid compositions tested, AFM imaging revealed that TX-100 immediately solubilized the DOPC fluid phase leaving resistant patches of membrane. For the DOPC/SM bilayers, the remaining SM-enriched patches were slowly perforated leaving crumbled features reminiscent of the initial domains. For the raft model mixture, no holes appeared in the remaining SM/Chol patches and some erosion occurred. This work provides new, nanoscale information on the biomembranes' resistance to the TX-100-mediated solubilization, and especially about the influence of Chol.  相似文献   

4.
The mutual interactions between lipids in bilayers are reviewed, including mixtures of phospholipids, and mixtures of phospholipids and cholesterol (Chol). Binary mixtures and ternary mixtures are considered, with special emphasis on membranes containing Chol, an ordered phospholipid, and a disordered phospholipid. Typically the ordered phospholipid is a sphingomyelin (SM) or a long-chain saturated phosphatidylcholine (PC), both of which have high phase transitions temperatures; the disordered phospholipid is 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine (POPC) or dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC). The unlike nearest-neighbor interaction free energies (ωAB) between lipids (including Chol), obtained by an variety of unrelated methods, are typically in the range of 0-400 cal/mol in absolute value. Most are positive, meaning that the interaction is unfavorable, but some are negative, meaning it is favorable. It is of special interest that favorable interactions occur mainly between ordered phospholipids and Chol. The interpretation of domain formation in complex mixtures of Chol and phospholipids in terms of phase separation or condensed complexes is discussed in the light of the values of lipid mutual interactions.  相似文献   

5.
Multilamellar liposomes containing pure phosphatidylcholine (PC) or mixtures of PC with cholesterol, cholesteryl palmitate, beta-carotene, cardiolipin, phosphatidylethanolamine or gramicidin A have been treated with the detergent Triton X-100. Solubilization has been monitored as a decrease in turbidity of the liposome suspension, and also by determination of bilayer components in the solubilized fraction. The same solubilization pattern is found for unsaturated (egg yolk) or saturated (dimyristoyl) PC. Similar results are also found when dimyristoyl PC is solubilized above or below its gel-to-fluid transition temperature. Cholesterol solubilizes in parallel with PC; gramicidin A is solubilized preferentially to this phospholipid and the non-polar lipids cholesteryl palmitate or beta-carotene remain insoluble at detergent concentrations producing complete PC solubilization. Addition of cardiolipin or phosphatidylethanolamine does not seem to alter the general pattern of PC solubilization. Phosphatidylethanolamine is less soluble than PC, while cardiolipin solubilizes at the same detergent concentrations than PC. These results are considered in relation to previous studies with natural membranes.  相似文献   

6.
1H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra at 500 MHz have been obtained for taurocholate/egg phosphatidylcholine mixtures of varying composition. The excellent chemical shift dispersion permits identification of most resonances for each component. This high-resolution character of the NMR spectra is retained until the phosphatidylcholine (PC) mole fraction exceeds 60–70% (the exact limit depends on ionic strength). 1H linewidths have been monitored as a function of solute composition in order to evaluate trends in local molecular mobility of each component as the distribution of aggregate particles is varied, and to examine the effects of added NaCl in altering micellar size and shape. Although prior light scattering studies (Mazer, N.A., Benedek, G.B. and Carey, M.C. (1980) Biochemistry 19, 601–615) and our own work indicate a 6-fold increase in particle hydrodynamic radius from pure taurocholate micelles to 1 : 1 taurocholate/PC mixtures containing 150 mM NaCl, both lipid components retain substantial motional freedom and exhibit narrow NMR signals in this compositional region. As the solubilization limit for PC is approached (approx. 2:1 PC:taurocholate), differential behavior is observed for the two components: the motion of taurocholate becomes preferentially restricted, while polar portions of the PC remain mobile until large multilayers predominate.  相似文献   

7.
Sot J  Ibarguren M  Busto JV  Montes LR  Goñi FM  Alonso A 《FEBS letters》2008,582(21-22):3230-3236
Fluorescence confocal microscopy and differential scanning calorimetry are used in combination to study the phase behaviour of bilayers composed of PC:PE:SM:Chol equimolecular mixtures, in the presence or absence of 10mol% egg ceramide. In the absence of ceramide, separate liquid-ordered and liquid-disordered domains are observed in giant unilamellar vesicles. In the presence of ceramide, gel-like domains appear within the liquid-ordered regions. The melting properties of these gel-like domains resemble those of SM:ceramide binary mixtures, suggesting Chol displacement by ceramide from SM:Chol-rich liquid-ordered regions. Thus three kinds of domains coexist within a single vesicle in the presence of ceramide: gel, liquid-ordered, and liquid-disordered. In contrast, when 10mol% egg diacylglycerol is added instead of ceramide, homogeneous vesicles, consisting only of liquid-disordered bilayers, are observed.  相似文献   

8.
Biomembranes are not homogeneous, they present a lateral segregation of lipids and proteins which leads to the formation of detergent-resistant domains, also called "rafts". These rafts are particularly enriched in sphingolipids and cholesterol. Despite the huge body of literature on raft insolubility in non-ionic detergents, the mechanisms governing their resistance at the nanometer scale still remain poorly documented. Herein, we report a real-time atomic force microscopy (AFM) study of model lipid bilayers exposed to Triton X-100 (TX-100) at different concentrations. Different kinds of supported bilayers were prepared with dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC), sphingomyelin (SM) and cholesterol (Chol). The DOPC/SM 1:1 (mol/mol) membrane served as the non-resistant control, and DOPC/SM/Chol 2:1:1 (mol/mol/mol) corresponded to the raft-mimicking composition. For all the lipid compositions tested, AFM imaging revealed that TX-100 immediately solubilized the DOPC fluid phase leaving resistant patches of membrane. For the DOPC/SM bilayers, the remaining SM-enriched patches were slowly perforated leaving crumbled features reminiscent of the initial domains. For the raft model mixture, no holes appeared in the remaining SM/Chol patches and some erosion occurred. This work provides new, nanoscale information on the biomembranes' resistance to the TX-100-mediated solubilization, and especially about the influence of Chol.  相似文献   

9.
A comparative analysis of the interaction of cholesterol (Chol) with palmitoyl-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine (POPC) and sphingomyelins (SM) was performed in largely homogeneous, fluid-phase membranes at 50 degrees C. To this end, three independent assays for isothermal titration calorimetry were applied to POPC/SM/Chol mixtures. Cholesterol is solubilized by randomly methylated-beta-cyclodextrin and the uptake of Chol into (or release from) large unilamellar vesicles is measured. The affinity of Chol to a POPC/SM (1:1) membrane with 30 mol % Chol is approximately two times higher than to POPC alone; extrapolation to pure SM yields an affinity ratio of R(K) approximately 5. Bringing Chol in contact with SM is highly exothermic (-7 kJ/mol for POPC/SM (1:1), and -13 kJ/mol extrapolated to pure SM, both compared to POPC). No pronounced differences were observed between egg, bovine brain, and palmitoyl SM. With decreasing Chol content, R(K) increases and deltaH becomes more exothermic, suggesting a trend toward superlattice formation. That SM/Chol-interactions are enthalpically favorable implies that the preference of Chol for SM increases upon cooling and can induce domain formation below a certain temperature. The enthalpy gain is partially compensated by a loss in entropy in accordance with the concept of Chol-induced chain ordering, which improves intermolecular interactions (van der Waals, H-bond) but reduces conformational and motional freedom. The ability of cyclodextrin to extract sphingomyelin from membranes is twofold-weaker than for POPC.  相似文献   

10.
We have examined the effects of cholesterol (Chol) on the thermotropic phase behavior and organization of aqueous dispersions of a homologous series of linear disaturated phosphatidylglycerols (PGs) by high-sensitivity differential scanning calorimetry and Fourier transform infrared and 31P NMR spectroscopy. We find that the incorporation of increasing quantities of Chol alters the temperature and progressively reduces the enthalpy and cooperativity of the gel-to-liquid-crystalline phase transition of the host PG bilayer. With dimyristoyl-PG:Chol mixtures, cooperative chain-melting phase transitions are completely or almost completely abolished at Chol concentrations near 50 mol%, whereas with the dipalmitoyl- and distearoyl-PG:Chol mixtures, cooperative hydrocarbon chain-melting phase transitions are still discernable at Chol concentrations near 50 mol%. We are also unable to detect the presence of significant populations of separate domains of the anhydrous or monohydrate forms of Chol in our binary mixtures, in contrast to previous reports. We ascribe the previously reported large scale formation of Chol crystallites to the fractional crystallization of the Chol and phospholipid phases during the removal of organic solvent from the binary mixture before the hydration of the sample. We further show that the direction and magnitude of the change in the phase transition temperature induced by Chol addition is dependent on the hydrocarbon chain length of the PG studied. This finding agrees with our previous results with phosphatidylcholine bilayers, where we found that Chol increases or decreases the phase transition temperature in a hydrophobic mismatch-dependent manner (Biochemistry 1993, 32:516-522), but is in contrast to our previous results for phosphatidylethanolamine (Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1999, 1416:119-234) and phosphatidylserine (Biophys. J. 2000, 79:2056-2065) bilayers, where no such hydrophobic mismatch-dependent effects were observed. We also show that the addition of Chol facilitates the formation of the lamellar crystalline phase in PG bilayers, as it does in phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylserine bilayers, whereas the formation of such phases in phosphatidylcholine bilayers is inhibited by the presence of Chol. Moreover, the formation of the lamellar crystalline phase in PG bilayers at lower temperatures excludes Chol, resulting in an apparent Chol immiscibility in gel-state PG bilayers. We suggest that the magnitude of the effect of Chol on the thermotropic phase behavior of the host phospholipid bilayer, and its miscibility in phospholipids dispersions generally, depend on the strength of the attractive interactions between the polar headgroups and the hydrocarbon chains of the phospholipid molecule, and not on the charge of the polar headgroups per se.  相似文献   

11.
Sphingomyelin (SM) and cholesterol (Chol) are considered essential for the formation of lipid rafts; however, the types of molecular interactions involved in this process, such as intermolecular hydrogen bonding, are not well understood. Since, unlike other phospholipids, SM is characterized by the presence of an amide group, it is essential to determine the orientation of the amide and its order in the lipid bilayers to understand the nature of the hydrogen bonds in lipid rafts. For this study, 1′-13C-2-15N-labeled and 2′-13C-2-15N-labeled SMs were prepared, and the rotational-axis direction and order parameters of the SM amide in bilayers were determined based on 13C and 15N chemical-shift anisotropies and intramolecular 13C-15N dipole coupling constants. Results revealed that the amide orientation was minimally affected by Chol, whereas the order was enhanced significantly in its presence. Thus, Chol likely promotes the formation of an intermolecular hydrogen-bond network involving the SM amide without significantly changing its orientation, providing a higher order to the SM amide. To our knowledge, this study offers new insight into the significance of the SM amide orientation with regard to molecular recognition in lipid rafts, and therefore provides a deeper understanding of the mechanism of their formation.  相似文献   

12.
When cell membranes are treated with Triton X-100 or other detergents at 4 degrees C, a nonsolubilized fraction can often be recovered, the "detergent-resistant membranes", that is not found when detergent treatment takes place at 37 degrees C. Detergent-resistant membranes may be related in some cases to membrane "rafts". However, several basic aspects of the formation of detergent-resistant membranes are poorly understood. To answer some of the relevant questions, a simple bilayer composition that would mimic detergent-resistant membranes was required. The screening of multiple lipid compositions has shown that the binary mixture egg sphingomyelin/egg ceramide (SM/Cer) exhibits the required detergent resistance. In detergent-free membranes composed of different mixtures of SM and Cer (5-30 mol % of Cer) differential scanning calorimetry, fluorescence spectroscopy, and fluorescence microscopy experiments reveal the presence of discrete, Cer-enriched gel domains in a broad temperature range. In particular, at temperatures below SM phase transition ( approximately 40 degrees C) two gel (respectively Cer-rich and SM-rich) phases are directly observed using fluorescence microscopy. Although pure SM membranes are fully solubilized by Triton X-100 at room temperature, 5 mol % Cer is also enough to induce detergent resistance, even with a large detergent excess and lengthy equilibration times. Short-chain Cers do not give rise to detergent resistance. SM/Cer mixtures containing up to 30 mol % Cer become fully soluble at approximately 50 degrees C, i.e., well above the gel-fluid transition temperature of SM. The combined results of temperature-dependent solubilization and differential scanning calorimetry reveal that SM-rich domains are preferentially solubilized over the Cer-rich ones as soon as the former melt (i.e., at approximately 40 degrees C). As a consequence, at temperatures allowing only partial solubilization, the nonsolubilized residue is enriched in Cer with respect to the original bilayer composition. Fluorescence microscopy of giant unilamellar vesicles at room temperature clearly shows that SM-rich domains are preferentially solubilized over the Cer-rich ones and that the latter become more rigid and extensive as a consequence of the detergent effects. These observations may be relevant to the phenomena of sphingomyelinase-dependent signaling, generation of "raft platforms", and detergent-resistant cell membranes.  相似文献   

13.
Detergents are amphiphilic molecules widely used to solubilize biological membranes and/or extract their components. Nevertheless, because of the complex composition of biomembranes, their solubilization by detergents has not been systematically studied. In this review, we address the solubilization of erythrocytes, which provide a relatively simple, robust and easy to handle biomembrane, and of biomimetic models, to stress the role of the lipid composition on the solubilization process. First, results of a systematic study on the solubilization of human erythrocyte membranes by different series of non-ionic (Triton, CxEy, Brij, Renex, Tween), anionic (bile salts) and zwitterionic (ASB, CHAPS) detergents are shown. Such quantitative approach allowed us to propose Re sat—the effective detergent/lipid molar ratio in the membrane for the onset of hemolysis as a new parameter to classify the solubilization efficiency of detergents. Second, detergent-resistant membranes (DRMs) obtained as a result of the partial solubilization of erythrocytes by TX-100, C12E8 and Brij detergents are examined. DRMs were characterized by their cholesterol, sphingolipid and specific proteins content, as well as lipid packing. Finally, lipid bilayers of tuned lipid composition forming liposomes were used to investigate the solubilization process of membranes of different compositions/phases induced by Triton X-100. Optical microscopy of giant unilamellar vesicles revealed that pure phospholipid membranes are fully solubilized, whereas the presence of cholesterol renders the mixture partially or even fully insoluble, depending on the composition. Additionally, Triton X-100 induced phase separation in raft-like mixtures, and selective solubilization of the fluid phase only.  相似文献   

14.
The interaction with model membranes of a peptide, EqtII1–32, corresponding to the N‐terminal region of the pore‐forming toxin equinatoxin II (EqtII) has been studied using solid‐state NMR and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. The distances between specifically labeled nuclei in [19F‐para]Phe16‐[1‐13C]Leu19 and [19F‐para]Phe16‐[15N]Leu23 analogs of EqtII1–32 measured by REDOR in lyophilized peptide were in agreement with published crystal and solution structures. However, in both DMPC and mixed DMPC:SM membrane environments, significant changes in the distances between the labeled amino acid pairs were observed, suggesting changes in helical content around the experimentally studied region, 16–23, in the presence of bilayers. 19F‐31P REDOR experiments indicated that the aromatic ring of Phe16 is in contact with lipid headgroups in both membrane environments. For the DMPC:SM mixed bilayers, a closer interaction between Phe16 side chains and lipid headgroups was observed, but an increase in distances was observed for both labeled amino acid pairs compared with those measured for EqtII1–32 in pure DMPC bilayers. The observed differences between DMPC and DMPC:SM bilayers may be due to the greater affinity of EqtII for the latter. MD simulations of EqtII1–32 in water, on a pure DMPC bilayer, and on a mixed DMPC:SM bilayer indicate significant peptide secondary structural differences in the different environments, with the DMPC‐bound peptide adopting helical formations at residues 16–24, whereas the DMPC:SM‐bound peptide exhibits a longer helical stretch, which may contribute to its enhanced activity against PC:SM compared with pure PC bilayers. Proteins 2010. © 2009 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

15.
The origin of resistance to detergent solubilization in certain membranes, or membrane components, is not clearly understood. We have studied the solubilization by Triton X-100 of binary mixtures composed of egg sphingomyelin (SM) and either ceramide, diacylglycerol, or cholesterol. Solubilization has been assayed in the 4–50°C range, and the results are summarized in a novel, to our knowledge, form of plots, that we have called temperature-solubilization diagrams. Despite using a large detergent excess (lipid/detergent 1:20 mol ratio) and extended solubilization times (24–48 h) certain mixtures were not amenable to Triton X-100 solubilization at one or more temperatures. DSC of all the lipid mixtures, and of all the lipid + detergent mixtures revealed that detergent resistance was associated with the presence of gel domains at the assay temperature. Once the system melted down, solubilization could occur. In general adding high-melting lipids limited the solubilization, whereas the addition of low-melting lipids promoted it. Lipidomic analysis of Madin-Darby canine kidney cell membranes and of the corresponding detergent-resistant fraction indicated a large enrichment of the nonsolubilized components in saturated diacylglycerol and ceramide. SM-cholesterol mixtures were special in that detergent solubilization was accompanied, for certain temperatures and compositions, by an independent phenomenon of reassembly of the partially solubilized lipid bilayers. The temperature at which lysis and reassembly prevailed was ∼25°C, thus for some SM-cholesterol mixtures solubilization occurred both above and below 25°C, but not at that temperature. These observations can be at the origin of the detergent resistance effects observed with cell membranes, and they also mean that cholesterol-containing detergent-resistant membrane remnants cannot correspond to structures existing in the native membrane before detergent addition.  相似文献   

16.
The kinetics of carboxyfluorescein efflux induced by the amphipathic peptide delta-lysin from vesicles of porcine brain sphingomyelin (BSM), 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine (POPC), and cholesterol (Chol) were investigated as a function of temperature and composition. Sphingomyelin (SM)/Chol mixtures form a liquid-ordered (L(o)) phase whereas POPC exists in the liquid-disordered (L(d)) phase at ambient temperature. delta-Lysin binds strongly to L(d) and poorly to L(o) phase. In BSM/Chol/POPC vesicles the rate of carboxyfluorescein efflux induced by delta-lysin increases as the POPC content decreases. This is explained by the increase of delta-lysin concentration in L(d) domains, which enhances membrane perturbation by the peptide. Phase separations in the micrometer scale have been observed by fluorescence microscopy in SM/Chol/POPC mixtures for some SM, though not for BSM. Thus, delta-lysin must detect heterogeneities (domains) in BSM/Chol/POPC on a much smaller scale. Advantage was taken of the inverse variation of the efflux rate with the L(d) content of BSM/Chol/POPC vesicles to estimate the L(d) fraction in those mixtures. These results were combined with differential scanning calorimetry to obtain the BSM/Chol/POPC phase diagram as a function of temperature.  相似文献   

17.
《Biophysical journal》2021,120(20):4525-4535
We performed a series of molecular dynamics simulations of cholesterol (Chol) in nonoxidized 1-palmitoyl-2-linoleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine (PLPC) bilayer and in binary mixtures of PLPC-oxidized-lipid-bilayers with 0–50% Chol concentration and oxidized lipids with hydroperoxide and aldehyde oxidized functional groups. From the 60 unbiased molecular dynamics simulations (total of 161 μs), we found that Chol inhibited pore formation in the aldehyde-containing oxidized lipid bilayers at concentrations greater than 11%. For both pure PLPC bilayer and bilayers with hydroperoxide lipids, no pores were observed at any Chol concentration. Furthermore, increasing cholesterol concentration led to a change of phase state from the liquid-disordered to the liquid-ordered phase. This condensing effect of Chol was observed in all systems. Data analysis shows that the addition of Chol results in an increase in bilayer thickness. Interestingly, we observed Chol flip-flop only in the aldehyde-containing lipid bilayer but neither in the PLPC nor the hydroperoxide bilayers. Umbrella-sampling simulations were performed to calculate the translocation free energies and the Chol flip-flop rates. The results show that Chol’s flip-flop rate depends on the lipid bilayer type, and the highest rate are found in aldehyde bilayers. As the main finding, we shown that Chol stabilizes the oxidized lipid bilayer by confining the distribution of the oxidized functional groups.  相似文献   

18.
A mixture of sphingomyelin (SM) and cholesterol (Chol) exhibits a characteristic lipid raft domain of the cell membranes that provides a platform to which various signal molecules as well as virus and bacterial proteins are recruited. Several proteins capable of specifically binding either SM or Chol have been reported. However, proteins that selectively bind to SM/Chol mixtures are less well characterized. In our screening for proteins specifically binding to SM/Chol liposomes, we identified a novel ortholog of Pleurotus ostreatus, pleurotolysin (Ply)A, from the extract of edible mushroom Pleurotus eryngii, named PlyA2. Enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP)-conjugated PlyA2 bound to SM/Chol but not to phosphatidylcholine/Chol liposomes. Cell surface labeling of PlyA2-EGFP was abolished after sphingomyelinase as well as methyl-β-cyclodextrin treatment, removing SM and Chol, respectively, indicating that PlyA2-EGFP specifically binds cell surface SM/Chol rafts. Tryptophan to alanine point mutation of PlyA2 revealed the importance of C-terminal tryptophan residues for SM/Chol binding. Our results indicate that PlyA2-EGFP is a novel protein probe to label SM/Chol lipid domains both in cell and model membranes.  相似文献   

19.
《Biophysical journal》2019,116(12):2253-2265
Actinoporins are a group of soluble toxic proteins that bind to membranes containing sphingomyelin (SM) and oligomerize to form pores. Sticholysin II (StnII) is a member of the actinoporin family produced by Stichodactyla helianthus. Cholesterol (Chol) is known to enhance the activity of StnII. However, the molecular mechanisms behind this activation have remained obscure, although the activation is not Chol specific but rather sterol specific. To further explore how bilayer lipids affect or are affected by StnII, we have used a multiprobe approach (fluorescent analogs of both Chol and SM) in combination with a series of StnII tryptophan (Trp) mutants to study StnII/bilayer interactions. First, we compared StnII bilayer permeabilization in the presence of Chol or oleoyl-ceramide (OCer). The comparison was done because both Chol and OCer have a 1-hydroxyl, which helps to orient the molecule in the bilayer (although OCer has additional polar functional groups). Both Chol and OCer also have increased affinity for SM, which StnII may recognize. However, our results show that only Chol was able to activate StnII-induced bilayer permeabilization; OCer failed to activate it. To further examine possible Chol/StnII interactions, we measured Förster resonance energy transfer between Trp in StnII and cholestatrienol, a fluorescent analog of Chol. We could show higher Förster resonance energy transfer efficiency between cholestatrienol and Trps in position 100 and 114 of StnII when compared to three other Trp positions further away from the bilayer binding region of StnII. Taken together, our results suggest that StnII was able to attract Chol to its vicinity, maybe by showing affinity for Chol. SM interactions are known to be important for StnII binding to bilayers, and Chol is known to facilitate subsequent permeabilization of the bilayers by StnII. Our results help to better understand the role of these important membrane lipids for the bilayer properties of StnII.  相似文献   

20.
Bilayers composed of phosphatidylcholine (PC), sphingomyelin (SM), and cholesterol (CHOL) are commonly used as systems to model the raft-lipid domain structure believed to compartmentalize particular cell membrane proteins. In this work, micropipette aspiration of giant unilamellar vesicles was used to test the elasticities, water permeabilities, and rupture tensions of single-component PC, binary 1:1 PC/CHOL, and 1:1 SM/CHOL, and ternary 1:1:1 PC/SM/CHOL bilayers, one set of measurements with dioleoyl PC (DOPC; C18:1/C18:1 PC) and the other with stearoyloleoyl PC (SOPC; C18:0/C18:1 PC). Defining the elastic moduli (KA), the initial slopes of the increase in tension (σ) versus stretch in lipid surface area (αe) were determined for all systems at low (15°C) and high (32-33°C) temperatures. The moduli for the single-component PC and binary phospholipid/CHOL bilayers followed a descending hierarchy of stretch resistance with SM/CHOL > SOPC/CHOL > DOPC/CHOL > PC. Although much more resistant to stretch than the single-component PC bilayers, the elastic response of vesicle bilayers made from the ternary phospholipid/CHOL mixtures showed an abrupt softening (discontinuity in slope), when immediately subjected to a steady ramp of tension at the low temperature (15°C). However, the discontinuities in elastic stretch resistance at low temperature vanished when the bilayers were held at ∼1 mN/m prestress for long times before a tension ramp and when tested at the higher temperature 32-33°C. The elastic moduli of single-component PC and DOPC/CHOL bilayers changed very little with temperature, whereas the moduli of the binary SOPC/CHOL and SM/CHOL bilayers diminished markedly with increase in temperature, as did the ternary SOPC/SM/CHOL system. For all systems, increasing temperature increased the water permeability but decreased rupture tension. Concomitantly, the measurements of permeability exhibited a prominent correlation with the rupture tension across all the systems. Together, these micromechanical tests of binary and ternary phospholipid/CHOL bilayers demonstrate that PC hydrocarbon chain unsaturation and temperature are major determinants of the mechanical and permeation properties of membranes composed of raft microdomain-forming lipids.  相似文献   

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