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1.
Recent studies have demonstrated that actin filaments are not crucial for the short-term stability of tubular membrane protrusions originating from the cell surface. It has also been demonstrated that prominin nanodomains and curvature inducing I-BAR proteins could account for the stability of the membrane protrusion. Here we constructed an axisymmetric model of a membrane protrusion that excludes actin filaments in order to investigate the contributions of prominin nanodomains (rafts) and I-BAR proteins to the membrane protrusion stability. It was demonstrated that prominin nanodomains and I-BAR proteins can stabilize the membrane protrusion only over a specific range of spontaneous curvature. On the other hand, high spontaneous curvature and/or high density of I-BAR proteins could lead to system instability and to non-uniform contraction in the radial direction of the membrane protrusion. In agreement with previous studies, it was also shown that the isotropic bending energy of lipids is not sufficient to explain the stability of the observed tubular membrane protrusion without actin filaments.  相似文献   

2.
A recent publication in the April 4 issue of Cell advances our understanding of stimulus response coupling leading to actin remodeling. It describes the identification of a novel membrane component Mig-2 that engages filamin A through a new intermediary, migfilin, to stimulate actin assembly and cell spreading on a substrate of extracellular matrix.  相似文献   

3.
We propose a mechanism for the formation of membrane oscillations and traveling waves, which arise due to the coupling between the actin cytoskeleton and the calcium flux through the membrane. In our model, the fluid cell membrane has a mobile but constant population of proteins with a convex spontaneous curvature, which act as nucleators of actin polymerization and adhesion. Such a continuum model couples the forces of cell-substrate adhesion, actin polymerization, membrane curvature, and the flux of calcium through the membrane. Linear stability analysis shows that sufficiently strong coupling among the calcium, membrane, and protein dynamics may induce robust traveling waves on the membrane. This result was checked for a reduced feedback scheme and is compared to the results without the effects of calcium, where permanent phase separation without waves or oscillations is obtained. The model results are compared to the published observations of calcium waves in cell membranes, and a number of testable predictions are proposed.  相似文献   

4.
Cell migration and wound contraction requires assembly of actin into a functional myosin motor unit capable of generating force. However, cell migration also involves formation of actin-containing membrane ruffles. Evidence is provided that actin-myosin assembly and membrane ruffling are regulated by distinct signaling pathways in the migratory cell. Interaction of cells with extracellular matrix proteins or cytokines promote cell migration through activation of the MAP kinases ERK1 and ERK2 as well as the molecular coupling of the adaptor proteins p130CAS and c-CrkII. ERK signaling is independent of CAS/Crk coupling and regulates myosin light chain phosphorylation leading to actin-myosin assembly during cell migration and cell-mediated contraction of a collagen matrix. In contrast, membrane ruffling, but not cell contraction, requires Rac GTPase activity and the formation of a CAS/Crk complex that functions in the context of the Rac activating protein DOCK180. Thus, during cell migration ERK and CAS/Crk coupling operate as components of distinct signaling pathways that control actin assembly into myosin motors and membrane ruffles, respectively.  相似文献   

5.
G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) comprise the largest and most pharmacologically targeted membrane protein family. Here, we used the visual receptor rhodopsin as an archetype for understanding membrane lipid influences on conformational changes involved in GPCR activation. Visual rhodopsin was recombined with lipids varying in their degree of acyl chain unsaturation and polar headgroup size using 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero- and 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycerophospholipids with phosphocholine (PC) or phosphoethanolamine (PE) substituents. The receptor activation profile after light excitation was measured using time-resolved ultraviolet-visible spectroscopy. We discovered that more saturated POPC lipids back shifted the equilibrium to the inactive state, whereas the small-headgroup, highly unsaturated DOPE lipids favored the active state. Increasing unsaturation and decreasing headgroup size have similar effects that combine to yield control of rhodopsin activation, and necessitate factors beyond proteolipid solvation energy and bilayer surface electrostatics. Hence, we consider a balance of curvature free energy with hydrophobic matching and demonstrate how our data support a flexible surface model (FSM) for the coupling between proteins and lipids. The FSM is based on the Helfrich formulation of membrane bending energy as we previously first applied to lipid-protein interactions. Membrane elasticity and curvature strain are induced by lateral pressure imbalances between the constituent lipids and drive key physiological processes at the membrane level. Spontaneous negative monolayer curvature toward water is mediated by unsaturated, small-headgroup lipids and couples directly to GPCR activation upon light absorption by rhodopsin. For the first time to our knowledge, we demonstrate this modulation in both the equilibrium and pre-equilibrium evolving states using a time-resolved approach.  相似文献   

6.
We used a continuum model based on the Helfrich free energy to investigate the binding dynamics of a lipid bilayer to a BAR domain surface of a crescent-like shape of positive (e.g. I-BAR shape) or negative (e.g. F-BAR shape) intrinsic curvature. According to structural data, it has been suggested that negatively charged membrane lipids are bound to positively charged amino acids at the binding interface of BAR proteins, contributing a negative binding energy to the system free energy. In addition, the cone-like shape of negatively charged lipids on the inner side of a cell membrane might contribute a positive intrinsic curvature, facilitating the initial bending towards the crescent-like shape of the BAR domain. In the present study, we hypothesize that in the limit of a rigid BAR domain shape, the negative binding energy and the coupling between the intrinsic curvature of negatively charged lipids and the membrane curvature drive the bending of the membrane. To estimate the binding energy, the electric potential at the charged surface of a BAR domain was calculated using the Langevin-Bikerman equation. Results of numerical simulations reveal that the binding energy is important for the initial instability (i.e. bending of a membrane), while the coupling between the intrinsic shapes of lipids and membrane curvature could be crucial for the curvature-dependent aggregation of negatively charged lipids near the surface of the BAR domain. In the discussion, we suggest novel experiments using patch clamp techniques to analyze the binding dynamics of BAR proteins, as well as the possible role of BAR proteins in the fusion pore stability of exovesicles.  相似文献   

7.
Rhodopsin is an important example of a G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) in which 11-cis-retinal is the ligand and acts as an inverse agonist. Photolysis of rhodopsin leads to formation of the activated meta II state from its precursor meta I. Various mechanisms have been proposed to explain how the membrane composition affects the meta I-meta II conformational equilibrium in the visual process. For rod disk membranes and recombinant membranes containing rhodopsin, the lipid properties have been discussed in terms of elastic deformation of the bilayer. Here we have investigated the relation of nonlamellar-forming lipids, such as dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine (DOPE), together with dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC), to the photochemistry of membrane-bound rhodopsin. We conducted flash photolysis experiments for bovine rhodopsin recombined with DOPE/DOPC mixtures (0:100 to 75:25) as a function of pH to explore the dependence of the photochemical activity on the monolayer curvature free energy of the membrane. It is well-known that DOPC forms bilayers, whereas DOPE has a propensity to adopt the nonlamellar, reverse hexagonal (H(II)) phase. In the case of neutral DOPE/DOPC recombinants, calculations of the membrane surface pH confirmed that an increase in DOPE favored the meta II state. Moreover, doubling the PE headgroup content versus the native rod membranes substituted for the polyunsaturated, docosahexaenoic acyl chains (22:6 omega 3), suggesting rhodopsin function is associated with a balance of forces within the bilayer. The data are interpreted by applying a flexible surface model, in which the meta II state is stabilized by lipids tending to form the H(II) phase, with a negative spontaneous curvature. A simple theory, based on principles of surface chemistry, for coupling the energetics of membrane proteins to material properties of the bilayer lipids is described. For rhodopsin, the free energy balance of the receptor and the lipids is altered by photoisomerization of retinal and involves curvature stress/strain of the membrane (frustration). A new biophysical principle is introduced: matching of the spontaneous curvature of the lipid bilayer to the mean curvature of the lipid/water interface adjacent to the protein, which balances the lipid/protein solvation energy. In this manner, the thermodynamic driving force for the meta I-meta II conformational change of rhodopsin is tightly controlled by mixtures of nonlamellar-forming lipids having distinctive material properties.  相似文献   

8.
C Zhu  SL Das  T Baumgart 《Biophysical journal》2012,102(8):1837-1845
The curvature of biological membranes is controlled by membrane-bound proteins. For example, during endocytosis, the sorting of membrane components, vesicle budding, and fission from the plasma membrane are mediated by adaptor and accessory proteins. Endophilin is a peripherally binding membrane protein that functions as an endocytic accessory protein. Endophilin's membrane tubulation capacity is well known. However, to understand the thermodynamic and mechanical aspects of endophilin function, experimental measurements need to be compared to quantitative theoretical models. We present measurements of curvature sorting and curvature generation of the endophilin A1 N-BAR domain on tubular membranes pulled from giant unilamellar vesicles. At low concentration, endophilin functions primarily as a membrane curvature sensor; at high concentrations, it also generates curvature. We determine the spontaneous curvature induced by endophilin and observe sigmoidal curvature/composition coupling isotherms that saturate at high membrane tensions and protein solution concentrations. The observation of saturation is supported by a strong dependence of lateral diffusion coefficients on protein density on the tether membrane. We develop a nonlinear curvature/composition coupling model that captures our experimental observations. Our model predicts a curvature-induced phase transition among two states with varying protein density and membrane curvature. This transition could act as a switch during endocytosis.  相似文献   

9.
On the principles of functional ordering in biological membranes   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Integrating the available data on lipid-protein interactions and ordering in lipid mixtures allows to emanate a refined model for the dynamic organization of biomembranes. An important difference to the fluid mosaic model is that a high degree of spatiotemporal order should prevail also in liquid crystalline, "fluid" membranes and membrane domains. The interactions responsible for ordering the membrane lipids and proteins are hydrophobicity, coulombic forces, van der Waals dispersion, hydrogen bonding, hydration forces and steric elastic strain. Specific lipid-lipid and lipid-protein interactions result in a precisely controlled yet highly dynamic architecture of the membrane components, as well as in its selective modulation by the cell and its environment. Different modes of organization of the compositionally and functionally differentiated domains would correspond to different functional states of the membrane. Major regulators of membrane architecture are proposed to be membrane potential controlled by ion channels, intracellular Ca2+, pH, changes in lipid composition due to the action of phospholipase, cell-cell coupling, as well as coupling of the membrane with the cytoskeleton and the extracellular matrix. Membrane architecture is additionally modulated due to the membrane association of ions, lipo- and amphiphilic hormones, metabolites, drugs, lipid-binding peptide hormones and amphitropic proteins. Intermolecular associations in the membrane and in the membrane-cytoskeleton interface are further selectively controlled by specific phosphorylation and dephosphorylation cascades involving both proteins and lipids, and regulated by the extracellular matrix and the binding of growth factors and hormones to their specific receptor tyrosine kinases. A class of proteins coined architectins is proposed, as a notable example the pp60src kinase. The functional role of architectins would be in causing specific changes in the cytoskeleton-membrane interface, leading to specific configurational changes both in the membrane and cytoskeleton architecture and corresponding to (a) distinct metabolic/differentiation states of the cell, and (b) the formation and maintenance of proper three dimensional membrane structures such as neurites and pseudopods.  相似文献   

10.
The sorting of lipids and proteins in cellular trafficking pathways is a process of central importance in maintaining compartmentalization in eukaryotic cells. However, the mechanisms behind these sorting phenomena are currently far from being understood. Among several mechanistic suggestions, membrane curvature has been invoked as a means to segregate lipids and proteins in cellular sorting centers. To assess this hypothesis, we investigate the sorting of lipid analog dye trace components between highly curved tubular membranes and essentially flat membranes of giant unilamellar vesicles. Our experimental findings indicate that intracellular lipid sorting, contrary to frequent assumptions, is unlikely to occur by lipids fitting into membrane regions of appropriate curvature. This observation is explained in the framework of statistical mechanical lattice models that show that entropy, rather than curvature energy, dominates lipid distribution in the absence of strongly preferential lateral intermolecular interactions. Combined with previous findings of curvature induced phase segregation, we conclude that lipid cooperativity is required to enable efficient sorting. In contrast to lipid analog dyes, the peripheral membrane binding protein Cholera toxin subunit B is effectively curvature-sorted. The sorting of Cholera toxin subunit B is rationalized by statistical models. We discuss the implications of our findings for intracellular sorting mechanisms.  相似文献   

11.
Focal adhesions - the cytoskeletal connection   总被引:27,自引:0,他引:27  
Cellular contacts with the extracellular matrix are regulated by the Rho family of GTPases through their effects on both the actin and the microtubule cytoarchitecture. Recent genetic, biochemical and structural data have highlighted the role played by a subset of actin-binding proteins in coupling integrins to cytoskeletal actin and in assembling signalling complexes that are important for cell motility and cell proliferation.  相似文献   

12.
The folding and function of membrane proteins is controlled not only by specific but also by unspecific interactions with the constituent lipids. In this review, we focus on the influence of the spontaneous lipid curvature on the folding and insertion of peptides and proteins in membranes. Amphiphilic α-helical peptides, as represented by various antimicrobial sequences, are compared with β-barrel proteins, which are found in the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria. It has been shown that cationic amphiphilic peptides are always surface-bound in lipids with a negative spontaneous curvature like POPC, i.e. they are oriented parallel to the membrane plane. On the other hand, in lipids like DMPC with a positive curvature, these peptides can get tilted or completely inserted in a transmembrane state. Remarkably, the folding and spontaneous membrane insertion of β-barrel outer membrane proteins also proceeds more easily in lipids with a positive intrinsic curvature, while it is hampered by negative curvature. We therefore propose that a positive spontaneous curvature of the lipids promotes the ability of a surface-bound molecule to insert more deeply into the bilayer core, irrespective of the conformation, size, or shape of the peptide, protein, or folding intermediate. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Lipid-protein interactions.  相似文献   

13.
《Biophysical journal》2022,121(17):3188-3199
Membrane reshaping is an essential biological process. The chemical composition of lipid membranes determines their mechanical properties and thus the energetics of their shape. Hundreds of distinct lipid species make up native bilayers, and this diversity complicates efforts to uncover what compositional factors drive membrane stability in cells. Simplifying assumptions, therefore, are used to generate quantitative predictions of bilayer dynamics based on lipid composition. One assumption commonly used is that “per lipid” mechanical properties are both additive and constant—that they are an intrinsic property of lipids independent of the surrounding composition. Related to this is the assumption that lipid bulkiness, or “shape,” determines its curvature preference, independently of context. In this study, all-atom molecular dynamics simulations on three separate multilipid systems were used to explicitly test these assumptions, applying methodology recently developed to isolate properties of single lipids or nanometer-scale patches of lipids. The curvature preference experienced by populations of lipid conformations were inferred from their redistribution on a dynamically fluctuating bilayer. Representative populations were extracted by both structural similarity and semi-automated hidden Markov model analysis. The curvature preferences of lipid dimers were then determined and compared with an additive model that combines the monomer curvature preference of both the individual lipids. In all three systems, we identified conformational subpopulations of lipid dimers that showed non-additive curvature preference, in each case mediated by a special chemical interaction (e.g., hydrogen bonding). Our study highlights the importance of specific chemical interactions between lipids in multicomponent bilayers and the impact of interactions on bilayer stiffness. We identify two mechanisms of bilayer softening: diffusional softening, driven by the dynamic coupling between lipid distributions and membrane undulations, and conformational softening, driven by the inter-conversion between distinct dimeric conformations.  相似文献   

14.
A wide spectrum of intracellular processes is dependent on the ability of cells to dynamically regulate membrane shape. Membrane bending by proteins is necessary for the generation of intracellular transport carriers and for the maintenance of otherwise intrinsically unstable regions of high membrane curvature in cell organelles. Understanding the mechanisms by which proteins curve membranes is therefore of primary importance. Here we suggest, for the first time to our knowledge, a quantitative mechanism of lipid membrane bending by hydrophobic or amphipathic rodlike inclusions which simulate amphipathic α-helices—structures shown to sculpt membranes. Considering the lipid monolayer matrix as an anisotropic elastic material, we compute the intramembrane stresses and strains generated by the embedded inclusions, determine the resulting membrane shapes, and the accumulated elastic energy. We characterize the ability of an inclusion to bend membranes by an effective spontaneous curvature, and show that shallow rodlike inclusions are more effective in membrane shaping than are lipids having a high propensity for curvature. Our computations provide experimentally testable predictions on the protein amounts needed to generate intracellular membrane shapes for various insertion depths and membrane thicknesses. We also predict that the ability of N-BAR domains to produce membrane tubules in vivo can be ascribed solely to insertion of their amphipathic helices.  相似文献   

15.
Photosynthetic membranes contain considerable regions of high surface curvature, notably at their margins, where the average radius of curvature is about 10 nm. The proportion of total membrane lipid in the outer and inner thylakoid margin monolayers is estimated at 21% and 13%, respectively. The major thylakoid lipid, monogalactosyldiacylglycerol, is roughly cone-shaped and will not form complete lamellar bilayer phases, even in combination with other thylakoid lipids. It is proposed that this galactolipid plays a role in: (a) stabilising regions of concave curvature in thylakoids; and (b) packaging hydrophobic proteins in planar bilayer regions by means of inverted micelles. This model predicts substantial asymmetries in the distribution of lipids both across and along the thylakoid bilayer plane.  相似文献   

16.
An important role of cell matrix adhesion receptors is to mediate transmembrane coupling between extracellular matrix attachment, actin reorganization, and cell spreading. Thrombospondin (TSP)-1 is a modulatory component of matrix expressed during development, immune response, or wound repair. Cell adhesion to TSP-1 involves formation of biochemically distinct matrix contacts based on stable fascin spikes. The cell surface adhesion receptors required have not been identified. We report here that antibody clustering of syndecan-1 proteoglycan specifically transduces organization of cortical actin and fascin bundles in several cell types. Transfection of COS-7 cells with syndecan-1 is sufficient to stimulate cell spreading, fascin spike assembly, and extensive protrusive lateral ruffling on TSP-1 or on syndecan-1 antibody. The underlying molecular mechanism depends on glycosaminoglycan (GAG) modification of the syndecan-1 core protein at residues S45 or S47 for cell membrane spreading and on the VC2 region of the cytoplasmic domain for spreading and fascin spike formation. Expression of the VC2 deletion mutant or GAG-negative syndecan-1 showed that syndecan-1 is necessary in spreading and fascin spike formation by C2C12 cells on TSP-1. These results establish a novel role for syndecan-1 protein in coupling a physiological matrix ligand to formation of a specific matrix contact structure.  相似文献   

17.
Patterning of the membrane cytoskeleton by the extracellular matrix   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The extracellular matrices of different tissues contain components which affect the migration, morphology and differentiation of many types of cells. These forms of cell behavior often involve dramatic changes in cytoskeletal organization. Extracellular matrix components are recognized by specific cell surface receptors which span the membrane and interact with the actin cytoskeleton. In cultured cells, the matrix receptors are concentrated in sites of cell attachment called focal adhesions. Information that is conveyed from the extracellular matrix to the cytoskeleton may involve matrix components, cell surface receptors, as well as the proteins at the cytoplasmic face of the focal adhesion which link the receptors to the actin cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

18.
Lymphocyte signaling and activation leads to the influx of extracellular Ca(2+) via the activation of Ca(2+) release activated Ca(2+) (CRAC) channels in the plasma membrane. Activation of CRAC channels occurs following emptying of the endoplasmic reticulum intracellular Ca(2+) stores. One model to explain the coupling of store-emptying to CRAC activation is the secretion-like conformational coupling model. This model proposes that store depletion increases junctions between the endoplasmic reticulum and the plasma membrane in a manner that could be regulated by the cortical actin cytoskeleton. Here, we show that stabilization or depolymerization of the actin cytoskeleton failed to affect CRAC activation. We therefore conclude that rearrangement of the actin cytoskeleton is dispensable for store-operated Ca(2+) entry in T-cells.  相似文献   

19.
A motile cell, when stimulated, shows a dramatic increase in the activity of its membrane, manifested by the appearance of dynamic membrane structures such as lamellipodia, filopodia, and membrane ruffles. The external stimulus turns on membrane bound activators, like Cdc42 and PIP2, which cause increased branching and polymerization of the actin cytoskeleton in their vicinity leading to a local protrusive force on the membrane. The emergence of the complex membrane structures is a result of the coupling between the dynamics of the membrane, the activators, and the protrusive forces. We present a simple model that treats the dynamics of a membrane under the action of actin polymerization forces that depend on the local density of freely diffusing activators on the membrane. We show that, depending on the spontaneous membrane curvature associated with the activators, the resulting membrane motion can be wavelike, corresponding to membrane ruffling and actin waves, or unstable, indicating the tendency of filopodia to form. Our model also quantitatively explains a variety of related experimental observations and makes several testable predictions.  相似文献   

20.
During apoptosis, Bax-type proteins permeabilize the outer mitochondrial membrane to release intermembrane apoptogenic factors into the cytosol via a poorly understood mechanism. We have proposed that Bax and DeltaN76Bcl-x(L) (the Bax-like cleavage fragment of Bcl-x(L)) function by forming pores that are at least partially composed of lipids (lipidic pore formation). Since the membrane monolayer must bend during lipidic pore formation, we here explore the effect of intrinsic membrane monolayer curvature on pore formation. Nonlamellar lipids with positive intrinsic curvature such as lysophospholipids promoted membrane permeabilization, whereas nonlamellar lipids with negative intrinsic curvature such as diacylglycerol and phosphatidylethanolamine inhibited membrane permeabilization. The differential effects of nonlamellar lipids on membrane permeabilization were not correlated with lipid-induced changes in membrane binding or insertion of Bax or DeltaN76Bcl-x(L). Altogether, these results are consistent with a model whereby Bax-type proteins change the bending propensity of the membrane to form pores comprised at least in part of lipids in a structure of net positive monolayer curvature.  相似文献   

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