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1.
Glycosphingolipids (GSLs) are important constituents of lipid rafts and caveolae, are essential for the normal development of cells, and are adhesion sites for various infectious agents. One strategy for modulating GSL composition in lipid rafts is to selectively transfer GSL to or from these putative membrane microdomains. Glycolipid transfer protein (GLTP) catalyzes selective intermembrane transfer of GSLs. To enable effective use of GLTP as a tool to modify the glycolipid content of membranes, it is imperative to understand how the membrane regulates GLTP action. In this study, GLTP partitioning to membranes was analyzed by monitoring the fluorescence resonance energy transfer from tryptophans and tyrosines of GLTP to N-(5-dimethyl-aminonaphthalene-1-sulfonyl)-1,2-dihexadecanoyl-sn-glycero-3-phospho-ethanolamine present in bilayer vesicles. GLTP partitioned to POPC vesicles even when no GSL was present. GLTP interaction with model membranes was nonpenetrating, as assessed by protein-induced changes in lipid monolayer surface pressure, and nonperturbing in that neither membrane fluidity nor order were affected, as monitored by anisotropy of 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene and 6-dodecanoyl-N,N-dimethyl-2-naphthylamine, even though the tryptophan anisotropy of GLTP increased in the presence of vesicles. Ionic strength, vesicle packing, and vesicle lipid composition affected GLTP partitioning to the membrane and led to the following conclusion: Conditions that increase the ratio of bound/unbound GLTP do not guarantee increased transfer activity, but conditions that decrease the ratio of bound/unbound GLTP always diminish transfer. A model of GLTP interaction with the membrane, based on the partitioning equilibrium data and consistent with the kinetics of GSL transfer, is presented and solved mathematically.  相似文献   

2.
Glycosphingolipids (GSLs) play major roles in cellular growth and development. Mammalian glycolipid transfer proteins (GLTPs) are potential regulators of cell processes mediated by GSLs and display a unique architecture among lipid binding/transfer proteins. The GLTP fold represents a novel membrane targeting/interaction domain among peripheral proteins. Here we report crystal structures of human GLTP bound to GSLs of diverse acyl chain length, unsaturation, and sugar composition. Structural comparisons show a highly conserved anchoring of galactosyl- and lactosyl-amide headgroups by the GLTP recognition center. By contrast, acyl chain chemical structure and occupancy of the hydrophobic tunnel dictate partitioning between sphingosine-in and newly-observed sphingosine-out ligand-binding modes. The structural insights, combined with computed interaction propensity distributions, suggest a concerted sequence of events mediated by GLTP conformational changes during GSL transfer to and/or from membranes, as well as during GSL presentation and/or transfer to other proteins.  相似文献   

3.
Supported lipid bilayers (SLBs) are popular models of cell membranes. Owing to the importance of glycosphingolipids (GSLs) in modulating structure and function of membranes and membrane proteins, methods to tune the GSL content in SLBs would be desirable. Glycolipid transfer protein (GLTP) can selectively transfer GSLs between membrane compartments. Using the ganglioside GM1 as a model GSL, and two mass-sensitive and label-free characterization techniques—quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring and ellipsometry—we demonstrate that GLTP is an efficient and robust biochemical tool to dynamically modulate the GSL content of SLBs up to 10 mol % GM1, and to quantitatively control the GSL content in the bulk-facing SLB leaflet. By exploiting what we believe to be a novel tool, we provide evidence that GM1 distributes highly asymmetrically in silica-supported lipid bilayers, with ∼85% of the ganglioside being present in the bulk-facing membrane leaflet. We report also that the pentameric B-subunit of cholera toxin binds with close-to-maximal stoichiometry to GM1 in SLBs over a large range of GM1 concentrations. Furthermore, we quantify the liganding affinity of GLTP for GM1 in an SLB context to be 1.5 μM.  相似文献   

4.
The glycolipid transfer protein (GLTP)-mediated movement of galactosylceramide from model membrane donor vesicles to acceptor vesicles is sensitive to the membrane environment surrounding the glycolipid. GLTP can catalyze the transfer of a fluorescently labeled GSL, anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide (AV-GalCer), from vesicles composed of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine and dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine matrices, but not from vesicles prepared from N-palmitoylsphingomyelin, regardless of the cholesterol content of the vesicles. In this study, we have examined the structural features of sphingomyelin (SM) that are responsible for its inhibition of the rate of GLTP-catalyzed transfer of AV-GalCer. The rate of glycolipid transfer was enhanced when the N-palmitoyl chain of SM was replaced with an N-oleoyl chain. Analogs of N-palmitoyl-SM in which the 4,5-double bond of the long-chain base is reduced or the 3-hydroxy group is removed did not inhibit GLTP-catalyzed transfer of AV-GalCer. When the donor vesicles were prepared with phosphatidylcholines or ether-linked phosphatidylcholine analogs, the transfer rates of AV-GalCer increased with increasing degree of unsaturation. The rate of AV-GalCer transfer was strongly dependent on the unsaturation degree of the acyl and/or alkyl chains. For ester-linked PCs, the transfer rate increased in the order DPPC相似文献   

5.
The glycolipid transfer protein (GLTP)-mediated movement of galactosylceramide from model membrane donor vesicles to acceptor vesicles is sensitive to the membrane environment surrounding the glycolipid. GLTP can catalyze the transfer of a fluorescently labeled GSL, anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide (AV-GalCer), from vesicles composed of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine and dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine matrices, but not from vesicles prepared from N-palmitoylsphingomyelin, regardless of the cholesterol content of the vesicles. In this study, we have examined the structural features of sphingomyelin (SM) that are responsible for its inhibition of the rate of GLTP-catalyzed transfer of AV-GalCer. The rate of glycolipid transfer was enhanced when the N-palmitoyl chain of SM was replaced with an N-oleoyl chain. Analogs of N-palmitoyl-SM in which the 4,5-double bond of the long-chain base is reduced or the 3-hydroxy group is removed did not inhibit GLTP-catalyzed transfer of AV-GalCer. When the donor vesicles were prepared with phosphatidylcholines or ether-linked phosphatidylcholine analogs, the transfer rates of AV-GalCer increased with increasing degree of unsaturation. The rate of AV-GalCer transfer was strongly dependent on the unsaturation degree of the acyl and/or alkyl chains. For ester-linked PCs, the transfer rate increased in the order DPPC < POPC < DOPC, which have 0, 1, and 2 cis double bonds, respectively.  相似文献   

6.
Mammalian glycolipid transfer proteins (GLTPs) facilitate the selective transfer of glycolipids between lipid vesicles in vitro. Recent structural determinations of the apo- and glycolipid-liganded forms of human GLTP have provided the first insights into the molecular architecture of the protein and its glycolipid binding site (Malinina, L., Malakhova, M. L., Brown, R. E., and Patel, D. J. (2004) Nature 430, 1048-1053). In the present study, we have evaluated the functional consequences of point mutation of the glycolipid liganding site of human GLTP within the context of a carrier-based mechanism of glycolipid intermembrane transfer. Different approaches were developed to rapidly and efficiently assess the uptake and release of glycolipid by GLTP. They included the use of glass-immobilized, glycolipid films to load GLTP with glycolipid and separation of GLTP/glycolipid complexes from vesicles containing glycolipid (galactosylceramide or lactosylceramide) or from monosialoganglioside dispersions by employing nickel-nitrilotriacetic acid-based affinity or gel filtration strategies. Point mutants of the sugar headgroup recognition center (Trp-96, Asp-48, Asn-52) and of the ceramide-accommodating hydrophobic tunnel (Phe-148, Phe-183, Leu-136) were analyzed for their ability to acquire and release glycolipid ligand. Two manifestations of point mutation within the liganding site were apparent: (i) impaired formation of the GLTP/glycolipid complex; (ii) impaired acquisition and release of bound glycolipid by GLTP. The results are consistent with a carrier-based mode of GLTP action to accomplish the intermembrane transfer of glycolipid. Also noteworthy was the inefficient release of glycolipid by wtGLTP into phosphatidylcholine acceptor vesicles, raising the possibility of a function other than intermembrane glycolipid transfer in vivo.  相似文献   

7.
R E Brown  K J Hyland 《Biochemistry》1992,31(43):10602-10609
The spontaneous incorporation of II3-N-acetylneuraminosylgangliotetraosylceramide (GM1) from its micelles into phospholipid bilayer vesicles has been investigated to determine whether curvature-induced changes in membrane lipid packing influence ganglioside uptake. Use of conventional liquid chromatography in conjunction with technically-improved molecular sieve gels permits ganglioside micelles to be separated from phospholipid vesicles of different average size including vesicles with diameters smaller than 40 nm and, thus, allows detailed study of native ganglioside GM1 incorporation into model membranes under conditions where complicating processes like fusion are readily detected if present. At 45 degrees C, the spontaneous transfer rate of GM1 from its micelles to small unilamellar vesicles (SUVs) comprised of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC) is at least 3-fold faster than that to similar composition large unilamellar vesicles (LUVs) prepared by octyl glucoside dialysis. Careful analysis of ganglioside GM1 distribution among vesicle populations of differing average size reveals that GM1 preferentially incorporates into the smaller vesicles of certain populations. This behavior is observed in SUVs as well as in LUV-SUV mixtures and actually serves as a sensitive indicator for the presence of trace quantities of SUVs in various LUV preparations. Analysis of the results shows that both differences in the diffusional collision frequency between GM1 monomers and either SUVs or LUVs and curvature-induced changes in the interfacial lipid packing in either SUVs or LUVs can dramatically influence spontaneous ganglioside uptake.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Glycolipid transfer proteins (GLTPs) are small, soluble proteins that selectively accelerate the intermembrane transfer of glycolipids. The GLTP fold is conformationally unique among lipid binding/transfer proteins and serves as the prototype and founding member of the new GLTP superfamily. In the present study, changes in human GLTP tryptophan fluorescence, induced by membrane vesicles containing glycolipid, are shown to reflect glycolipid binding when vesicle concentrations are low. Characterization of the glycolipid-induced “signature response,” i.e. ∼40% decrease in Trp intensity and ∼12-nm blue shift in emission wavelength maximum, involved various modes of glycolipid presentation, i.e. microinjection/dilution of lipid-ethanol solutions or phosphatidylcholine vesicles, prepared by sonication or extrusion and containing embedded glycolipids. High resolution x-ray structures of apo- and holo-GLTP indicate that major conformational alterations are not responsible for the glycolipid-induced GLTP signature response. Instead, glycolipid binding alters the local environment of Trp-96, which accounts for ∼70% of total emission intensity of three Trp residues in GLTP and provides a stacking platform that aids formation of a hydrogen bond network with the ceramide-linked sugar of the glycolipid headgroup. The changes in Trp signal were used to quantitatively assess human GLTP binding affinity for various lipids including glycolipids containing different sugar headgroups and homogenous acyl chains. The presence of the glycolipid acyl chain and at least one sugar were essential for achieving a low-to-submicromolar dissociation constant that was only slightly altered by increased sugar headgroup complexity.Glycolipid transfer protein (GLTP)4 is a soluble (∼24-kDa) protein that selectively transfers glycosphingolipids (GSLs) between membranes. GSLs play key roles in cell recognition, adhesion, differentiation, proliferation, and programmed death in normal and disease states (18). Phylogenetic/evolutionary analyses show GLTP to be highly conserved among vertebrates (911). The conformational uniqueness of the GLTP fold when compared with other lipid binding/transfer proteins (1214) has resulted in GLTP being designated the prototype and founding member of the GLTP superfamily (15, 16). GLTP employs a novel two-layer “sandwich motif,” dominated by α-helices and achieved without intramolecular disulfide bridges, to accommodate glycolipid within a single lipid binding site and to form a membrane-interaction domain that differs from other known membrane targeting/translocation domains, i.e. C1, C2, PH, PX, and FYVE (9, 13, 1721). The glycolipid binding site of GLTP consists of a sugar headgroup recognition center that anchors the ceramide-linked sugar to the protein surface via multiple hydrogen bonds and a hydrophobic tunnel that accommodates the hydrocarbon chains of ceramide. The crystal structures of glycolipid-free GLTP and of GLTP complexed with a half-dozen glycolipids differing in sugar headgroup and/or lipid acyl composition reveal the basis for specific recognition and adaptive accommodation of various GSLs. A conserved, concerted sequence of events, initiated by anchoring of the GSL headgroup to the sugar headgroup recognition center, seems to facilitate entry and exit of the lipid chains in the membrane-associated state (13). Glycolipid uptake occurs via a cleft-like gating mechanism involving conformational changes to one α-helix and two interhelical loops (12). The selectivity of GLTP for glycolipids makes this protein a prime candidate for molecular manipulation of GSL-enriched microdomains in membranes as well as a potential vehicle for selectively delivering glycolipids to cells. However, the binding affinity of various glycolipids for GLTP and the time frame of GSL uptake by GLTP remain unclear. In the present study, these issues are investigated using fluorescence approaches.GLTP is intrinsically fluorescent by virtue of having 3 Trp and 10 Tyr residues among its 209 amino acids. All 3 Trp residues reside on or near the surface of GLTP (1214, 17, 22, 23), where they could help form a membrane-interaction site. Only one, Trp-96, is directly involved in glycolipid binding (1214). Given the likely roles in membrane interaction and GSL binding, our goal was to define the relative contributions of the Trp fluorescence changes caused by membrane interaction versus glycolipid binding. A signature Trp emission response, indicative of GSL binding by WT-GLTP, has been identified and characterized using select GLTP point mutants and different modes of glycolipid presentation, i.e. ethanol injection of pure GSLs and titration with membrane vesicles (LUVs and SUVs) containing GSLs as minor components. The signature Trp emission response has been used to comprehensively assess the glycolipid binding affinity of the novel GLTP fold for the first time, focusing on the impact of compositional variation of the sugar headgroup and nonpolar acyl chain moieties of the glycolipid.  相似文献   

9.
We have investigated the intervesicular transfer of galactosylceramide between unilamellar bilayer vesicles composed of differing sphingomyelin and phosphatidylcholine molar ratios. To monitor glycolipid transfer from donor to acceptor vesicles, we used a fluorescence resonance energy transfer assay involving anthrylvinyl-labeled galactosylceramide (AV-GalCer) and perylenoyl-labeled triglyceride. The transfer was mediated by glycolipid transfer protein (GLTP), purified from bovine brain and specific for glycolipids. The initial transfer rate and the total accessible pool of glycolipid in the donor vesicles were both measured. An increase in the sphingomyelin content of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl phosphatidylcholine (POPC) vesicles decreased the transfer rate in a nonlinear fashion. Decreased transfer rates were clearly evident at sphingomyelin mole fractions of 0.22 or higher. The pool of AV-GalCer available for GLTP-mediated transfer also was smaller in vesicles containing high sphingomyelin content. In contrast, AV-GalCer was more readily transferred from vesicles composed of POPC and different disaturated phosphatidylcholines. Our results show that GLTP acts as a sensitive probe for detecting interactions of glycosphingolipids with neighboring lipids and that the lateral mixing of glycolipids is probably affected by the matrix lipid composition. The compositionally driven changes in lipid interactions, sensed by GLTP, occur in membranes that are either macroscopically fluid-phase or gel/fluid-phase mixtures. Gaining insights into how changes in membrane sphingolipid composition alter accessibility to soluble proteins with affinity for membrane glycolipids is likely to help increase our understanding of how sphingolipid-enriched microdomains (i.e., "rafts" and caveolae) are formed and maintained in cells.  相似文献   

10.
Human glycolipid transfer protein (GLTP) fold represents a novel structural motif for lipid binding/transfer and reversible membrane translocation. GLTPs transfer glycosphingolipids (GSLs) that are key regulators of cell growth, division, surface adhesion, and neurodevelopment. Herein, we report structure-guided engineering of the lipid binding features of GLTP. New crystal structures of wild-type GLTP and two mutants (D48V and A47D‖D48V), each containing bound N-nervonoyl-sulfatide, reveal the molecular basis for selective anchoring of sulfatide (3-O-sulfo-galactosylceramide) by D48V-GLTP. Directed point mutations of "portal entrance" residues, A47 and D48, reversibly regulate sphingosine access to the hydrophobic pocket via a mechanism that could involve homodimerization. "Door-opening" conformational changes by phenylalanines within the hydrophobic pocket are revealed during lipid encapsulation by new crystal structures of bona fide apo-GLTP and GLTP complexed with N-oleoyl-glucosylceramide. The development of "engineered GLTPs" with enhanced specificity for select GSLs provides a potential new therapeutic approach for targeting GSL-mediated pathologies.  相似文献   

11.
The mammalian glycolipid transfer protein, GLTP, catalyzes the transfer in vitro of glycolipids between membranes. In this study we have examined on one hand the effect of the variations in the donor vesicle composition and on the other hand the effects of variations in the acceptor vesicle composition on the GLTP-catalyzed transfer kinetics of galactosylceramide between bilayer vesicles. For this purpose a resonance energy transfer assay was used, the energy donor being anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide and the energy acceptor DiO-C16. First, we show that the transfer of anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide from palmitoyl-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine donor vesicles was faster than from dipalmitoyl-phosphatidylcholine vesicles, and that there is no transfer from palmitoyl-sphingomyelin vesicles regardless of the cholesterol amount. In this setup the acceptor vesicles were always 100% palmitoyl-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine. We also showed that the transfer in general is faster from small highly curved vesicles compared to that from larger vesicles. Secondly, by varying the acceptor vesicle composition we showed that the transfer is faster to mixtures of sphingomyelin and cholesterol compared to mixtures of phosphatidylcholines and cholesterol. Based on these experiments we conclude that the GLTP mediated transfer of anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide is sensitive to the matrix lipid composition and membrane bending. We postulate that a tightly packed membrane environment is most effective in preventing GLTP from accessing its substrates, and cholesterol is not required to protect the glycosphingolipid in the membrane from being transferred by GLTP. On the other hand GLTP can more easily transfer glycolipids to ‘lipid raft’ like membranes, suggesting that the protein could be involved in raft assembly.  相似文献   

12.
The mammalian glycolipid transfer protein, GLTP, catalyzes the transfer in vitro of glycolipids between membranes. In this study we have examined on one hand the effect of the variations in the donor vesicle composition and on the other hand the effects of variations in the acceptor vesicle composition on the GLTP-catalyzed transfer kinetics of galactosylceramide between bilayer vesicles. For this purpose a resonance energy transfer assay was used, the energy donor being anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide and the energy acceptor DiO-C16. First, we show that the transfer of anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide from palmitoyl-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine donor vesicles was faster than from dipalmitoyl-phosphatidylcholine vesicles, and that there is no transfer from palmitoyl-sphingomyelin vesicles regardless of the cholesterol amount. In this setup the acceptor vesicles were always 100% palmitoyl-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine. We also showed that the transfer in general is faster from small highly curved vesicles compared to that from larger vesicles. Secondly, by varying the acceptor vesicle composition we showed that the transfer is faster to mixtures of sphingomyelin and cholesterol compared to mixtures of phosphatidylcholines and cholesterol. Based on these experiments we conclude that the GLTP mediated transfer of anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide is sensitive to the matrix lipid composition and membrane bending. We postulate that a tightly packed membrane environment is most effective in preventing GLTP from accessing its substrates, and cholesterol is not required to protect the glycosphingolipid in the membrane from being transferred by GLTP. On the other hand GLTP can more easily transfer glycolipids to 'lipid raft' like membranes, suggesting that the protein could be involved in raft assembly.  相似文献   

13.
We have studied the heme oxidation kinetics of purified human hemoglobin (Hb) in the presence of lipid vesicles of dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine and bovine brain phosphatidylserine that exhibited minimal lipid peroxidation. We showed that the lipid vesicles enhanced Hb oxidation and that small unilamellar vesicles (SUVs) exerted a larger effect than large unilamellar vesicles (LUVs). We have determined pseudo first-order rate constants for the initial disappearance of oxygenated ferrous Hb (k0) and for the initial formation of several ferric Hb species (methemoglobin, hemichrome, and choleglobin) in the presence of SUVs and LUVs. k0 and other rate constants depended linearly on lipid-to-hemoglobin molar ratio (lipid/Hb), with k0SUV (h-1) = k0auto (h-1) + 3.7 x 10(-3) x lipid/Hb, and k0LUV (h-1) = k0auto (h-1) + 0.2 x 10(-3) x lipid/hb, where k0auto is the rate constant for Hb autoxidation in the absence of vesicles. Thus, in the absence of lipid peroxidation products, lipid vesicles themselves promote Hb oxidation by enhancing the rate of Hb oxidation. The enhanced oxidation was inhibited by catalase, but not by butylated hydroxytoluene. The rate constants were independent of Hb concentration, in the range of about 3.1 to 100 microM. We suggest that the lipid surface properties, including surface curvature, surface energy, and hydrophobicity, promote hemoglobin oxidation.  相似文献   

14.
Human GLTP on chromosome 12 (locus 12q24.11) encodes a 24 kD amphitropic lipid transfer protein (GLTP) that mediates glycosphingolipid (GSL) intermembrane trafficking and regulates GSL homeostatic levels within cells. Herein, we provide evidence that GLTP overexpression inhibits the growth of human colon carcinoma cells (HT-29; HCT-116), but spares normal colonic cells (CCD-18Co). Mechanistic studies reveal that GLTP overexpression arrested the cell cycle at the G1/S checkpoint via upregulation of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor-1B (Kip1/p27) and cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 1A (Cip1/p21) at the protein and mRNA levels, and downregulation of cyclin-dependent kinase-2 (CDK2), cyclin-dependent kinase-4 (CDK4), cyclin E and cyclin D1 protein levels. Assessment of the biological fate of HCT-116 cells overexpressing GLTP indicated no increase in cell death suggesting induction of quiescence. However, HT-29 cells overexpressing GLTP underwent cell death by necroptosis as revealed by phosphorylation of human mixed lineage kinase domain-like protein (pMLKL) via receptor-interacting protein kinase-3 (RIPK-3), elevated cytosolic calcium, and plasma membrane permeabilization by pMLKL oligomerization. Overexpression of W96A-GLTP, an ablated GSL binding site mutant, failed to arrest the cell cycle or induce necroptosis. Sphingolipid assessment (ceramide, monohexosylceramide, sphingomyelin, ceramide-1-phosphate, sphingosine, and sphingosine-1-phosphate) of HT-29 cells overexpressing GLTP revealed large decreases (>5-fold) in sphingosine-1-phosphate with minimal change in 16:0-ceramide, tipping the ‘sphingolipid rheostat’ (S1P/16:0-Cer ratio) towards cell death. Depletion of RIPK-3 or MLKL abrogated necroptosis induced by GLTP overexpression. Our findings establish GLTP upregulation as a previously unknown suppressor of human colon carcinoma HT-29 cells via interference with cell cycle progression and induction of necroptosis.  相似文献   

15.
The thermodynamics of binding of the antibacterial peptide magainin 2 amide (M2a) to negatively charged small (SUVs) and large (LUVs) unilamellar vesicles has been studied with isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) and CD spectroscopy at 45 degrees C. The binding isotherms as well as the ability of the peptide to permeabilize membranes were found to be qualitatively and quantitatively similar for both model membranes. The binding isotherms could be described with a surface partition equilibrium where the surface concentration of the peptide immediately above the plane of binding was calculated with the Gouy-Chapman theory. The standard free energy of binding was deltaG0 approximately -22 kJ/mol and was almost identical for LUVs and SUVs. However, the standard enthalpy and entropy of binding were distinctly higher for LUVs (deltaH0 = -15.1 kJ/mol, deltaS0 = 24.7 J/molK) than for SUVs (deltaH0 = -38.5 kJ/mol, deltaS0 = -55.3 J/molK). This enthalpy-entropy compensation mechanism is explained by differences in the lipid packing. The cohesive forces between lipid molecules are larger in well-packed LUVs and incorporation of M2a leads to a stronger disruption of cohesive forces and to a larger increase in the lipid flexibility than peptide incorporation into the more disordered SUVs. At 45 degrees C the peptide easily translocates from the outer to the inner monolayer as judged from the simulation of the ITC curves.  相似文献   

16.
In this study we have addressed the ability of the glycolipid transfer protein (GLTP) to transfer anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide at different pH and sodium chloride concentrations, and the ability of three different mutants to transfer the fluorescently labeled galactosylceramide between donor and acceptor model membranes. We constructed single tryptophan mutants with site-directed mutagenesis where two of the three tryptophan (W) of wild-type human GLTP were substituted with phenylalanine (F) and named W85 GLTP (W96F and W142F), W96 GLTP (W85F and W142F) and W142 GLTP (W85F and W96F) accordingly. Wild-type GLTP and W96 GLTP were both able to transfer anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide, but the two variants W85 GLTP and W142 GLTP did not show any glycolipid transfer activity, indicating that the tryptophan in position 96 is crucial for transfer activity. Tryptophan fluorescence emission showed a blue shift of the maximal emission wavelength upon interaction of glycolipid containing vesicle with wild-type GLTP and W96 GLTP, while no blue shift was recorded for the protein variants W85 GLTP and W142 GLTP. The quantum yield of tryptophan emission was highest for the W96 GLTP protein whereas W85 GLTP, W142 GLTP and wild-type GLTP showed a lower and almost similar quantum yield. The lifetime and anisotropy decay of the different tryptophan mutants also changed upon binding to vesicles containing galactosylceramide. Again wild-type GLTP and W96 GLTP showed similar behavior in the presence of vesicles containing glycolipids. Taken together, our data show that the W96 is involved not only in the activity of the protein but also in the interaction between the protein and glycolipid containing membranes.  相似文献   

17.
In this study we have addressed the ability of the glycolipid transfer protein (GLTP) to transfer anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide at different pH and sodium chloride concentrations, and the ability of three different mutants to transfer the fluorescently labeled galactosylceramide between donor and acceptor model membranes. We constructed single tryptophan mutants with site-directed mutagenesis where two of the three tryptophan (W) of wild-type human GLTP were substituted with phenylalanine (F) and named W85 GLTP (W96F and W142F), W96 GLTP (W85F and W142F) and W142 GLTP (W85F and W96F) accordingly. Wild-type GLTP and W96 GLTP were both able to transfer anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide, but the two variants W85 GLTP and W142 GLTP did not show any glycolipid transfer activity, indicating that the tryptophan in position 96 is crucial for transfer activity. Tryptophan fluorescence emission showed a blue shift of the maximal emission wavelength upon interaction of glycolipid containing vesicle with wild-type GLTP and W96 GLTP, while no blue shift was recorded for the protein variants W85 GLTP and W142 GLTP. The quantum yield of tryptophan emission was highest for the W96 GLTP protein whereas W85 GLTP, W142 GLTP and wild-type GLTP showed a lower and almost similar quantum yield. The lifetime and anisotropy decay of the different tryptophan mutants also changed upon binding to vesicles containing galactosylceramide. Again wild-type GLTP and W96 GLTP showed similar behavior in the presence of vesicles containing glycolipids. Taken together, our data show that the W96 is involved not only in the activity of the protein but also in the interaction between the protein and glycolipid containing membranes.  相似文献   

18.
The binding of peptides or proteins to a bilayer membrane is often coupled with a random coil-->alpha-helix transition. Knowledge of the energetics of this membrane-induced folding event is essential for the understanding of the mechanism of membrane activity. In a recent study [Wieprecht et al., J. Mol. Biol. 294 (1999) 785-794], we have developed an approach which allows an analysis of the energetics of membrane-induced folding. We have systematically varied the helix content of the amphipathic peptide magainin-2-amide by synthesizing analogs where two adjacent amino acid residues were substituted by their corresponding D-enantiomers and have measured their binding to small unilamellar vesicles (SUVs). Correlation of the binding parameters with the helicities allowed the evaluation of the thermodynamic parameters of helix formation. Since SUVs (30 nm in diameter) are characterized by a non-ideal lipid packing due to their high membrane curvature, we have now extended our studies to large unilamellar vesicles (LUVs) (100 nm in diameter) with a lipid packing close to planar membranes. While the free energy of binding was similar for SUVs and LUVs, the binding enthalpies and entropies were distinctly different for the two membrane systems. The thermodynamic parameters of the coil-helix transition were nevertheless not affected by the vesicle size. Helix formation at the membrane surface of LUVs (SUVs) was characterized by an enthalpy change of -0.8 (-0.7) kcal/mol per residue, an entropy change of-2.3 (-1.9) cal/mol K per residue, and a free energy change of -0.12 (-0.14) kcal/mol per residue. Helix formation accounted for approximately 50% of the free energy of binding underlining its major role as a driving force for membrane-binding.  相似文献   

19.
Circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy is an essential tool for determining the conformation of proteins and peptides in membranes. It can be particularly useful for measuring the free energy of partitioning of peptides into lipid vesicles. The belief is broadly held that such CD measurements can only be made using sonicated small unilamellar vesicles (SUVs) because light scattering associated with extruded large unilamellar vesicles (LUVs) is unacceptably high. We have examined this issue using several experimental approaches in which a chiral object (i.e., peptide or protein) is placed both on the membrane and outside the membrane. We show that accurate CD spectra can be collected in the presence of LUVs. This is important because SUVs, unlike LUVs, are metastable and consequently unsuitable for equilibrium thermodynamic measurements. Our data reveal that undistorted CD spectra of peptides can be measured at wavelengths above 200 nm in the presence of up to 3 mM LUVs and above 215 nm in the presence of up to 7 mM LUVs. We introduce a simple way of characterizing the effect on CD spectra of light scattering and absorption arising from suspensions of vesicles of any diameter. Using melittin as an example, we show that CD spectroscopy can be used to determine the fractional helical content of peptides in LUVs and to measure their free energy of partitioning of into LUVs.  相似文献   

20.
Asymmetry of inner and outer leaflet lipid composition is an important characteristic of eukaryotic plasma membranes. We previously described a technique in which methyl-β-cyclodextrin-induced lipid exchange is used to prepare biological membrane-like asymmetric small unilamellar vesicles (SUVs). Here, to mimic plasma membranes more closely, we used a lipid-exchange-based method to prepare asymmetric large unilamellar vesicles (LUVs), which have less membrane curvature than SUVs. Asymmetric LUVs in which sphingomyelin (SM) or SM + 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine was exchanged into the outer leaflet of vesicles composed of 1,2-dioleoyl-phosphatidylethanolamine (DOPE) and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylserine (POPS) were prepared with or without cholesterol. Approximately 80–100% replacement of outer leaflet DOPE and POPS was achieved. At room temperature, SM exchange into the outer leaflet increased the inner leaflet lipid order, suggesting significant interleaflet interaction. However, the SM-rich outer leaflet formed an ordered state, melting with a midpoint at ∼37°C. This was about the same value observed in pure SM vesicles, and was significantly higher than that observed in symmetric vesicles with the same SM content, which melted at ∼20°C. In other words, ordered state formation by outer-leaflet SM in asymmetric vesicles was not destabilized by an inner leaflet composed of DOPE and POPS. These properties suggest that the coupling between the physical states of the outer and inner leaflets in these asymmetric LUVs becomes very weak as the temperature approaches 37°C. Overall, the properties of asymmetric LUVs were very similar to those previously observed in asymmetric SUVs, indicating that they do not arise from the high membrane curvature of asymmetric SUVs.  相似文献   

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