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1.
Synaptotagmin 1 (syt1) functions as the Ca(2+) sensor in neuronal exocytosis, and it has been proposed to act by modulating lipid bilayer curvature. Here we examine the effect of the two C2 domains (C2A and C2B) of syt1 on membrane lipid order and lateral organization. In mixtures of phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylserine (PS), attenuated total internal reflection Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy indicates that a fragment containing both domains (C2AB) or C2B alone disorders the lipid acyl chains, whereas the C2A domain has little effect upon chain order. Two observations suggest that these changes reflect a demixing of PS. First, the changes in acyl chain order are reversed at higher protein concentration; second, selective lipid deuteration demonstrates that the changes in lipid order are associated only with the PS component of the bilayer. Independent evidence for lipid demixing is obtained from fluorescence self-quenching of labeled lipid and from natural abundance (13)C NMR, where heteronuclear single quantum correlation spectra reveal Ca(2+)-dependent chemical shift changes for PS, but not for phosphatidylcholine, in the presence of the syt1 C2 domains. The ability of syt1 to demix PS is observed in a range of lipid mixtures that includes cholesterol, phosphatidylethanolamine, and varied PS content. These data suggest that syt1 might facilitate SNARE (soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor attachment protein receptors)-mediated membrane fusion by phase separating PS, a process that is expected to locally buckle bilayers and disorder lipids due to the curvature tendencies of PS.  相似文献   

2.
3.
We have developed a rapid method for isolation of the Photosystem I (PS1) complex from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii using epitope tagging. Six histidine residues were genetically added to the N-terminus of the PsaA core subunit of PS1. The His6-tagged PS1 could be purified with a yield of 80–90% from detergent-solubilized thylakoid membranes within 3 h in a single step using a Ni-nitrilotriacetic acid (Ni-NTA) column. Immunoblots and low-temperature fluorescence analysis indicated that the His6-tagged PS1 preparation was highly pure and extremely low in uncoupled pigments. Moreover, the introduced tag appeared to have no adverse effect upon PS1 structure/function, as judged by photochemical assays and EPR spectroscopy of isolated particles, as well as photosynthetic growth tests of the tagged strain. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.  相似文献   

4.
A recently developed technique for dilution of the naturally high protein packing density in isolated grana membranes was applied to study the dependence of the light harvesting efficiency of photosystem (PS) II on macromolecular crowding. Slight dilution of the protein packing from 80% area fraction to the value found in intact grana thylakoids (70%) leads to an improved functionality of PSII (increased antenna size, enhanced connectivity between reaction centers). Further dilution induces a functional disconnection of light-harvesting complex (LHC) II from PSII. It is concluded that efficient light harvesting by PSII requires an optimal protein packing density in grana membranes that is close to 70%. We hypothesize that the decreased efficiency in overcrowded isolated grana thylakoids is caused by excited state quenching in LHCII, which has previously been correlated with neoxanthin distortion. Resonance Raman spectroscopy confirms this increase in neoxanthin distortion in overcrowded grana as compared with intact thylakoids. Furthermore, analysis of the changes in the antenna size in highly diluted membranes indicates a lipid-induced dissociation of up to two trimeric LHCII from PSII, leaving one trimer connected. This observation supports a hierarchy of LHCII-binding sites on PSII.  相似文献   

5.
Majumder R  Weinreb G  Lentz BR 《Biochemistry》2005,44(51):16998-17006
Activation of prothrombin to thrombin is catalyzed by a "prothrombinase" complex, traditionally viewed as factor X(a) (FX(a)) in complex with factor V(a) (FV(a)) on a phosphatidylserine (PS)-containing membrane surface, which is widely regarded as required for efficient activation. Activation involves cleavage of two peptide bonds and proceeds via one of two released intermediates or through "channeling" (activation without the release of an intermediate). We ask here whether the PS molecule itself and not the membrane surface is sufficient to produce the fully active human "prothrombinase" complex in solution. Both FX(a) and FV(a) bind soluble dicaproyl-phosphatidylserine (C6PS). In the presence of sufficient C6PS to saturate both FX(a) and FV(a2) (light isoform of FV(a)), these proteins form a tight (Kd = 0.6 +/- 0.09 nM at 37 degrees C) soluble complex. Complex assembly occurs well below the critical micelle concentration of C6PS, as established in the presence of the proteins by quasi-elastic light scattering and pyrene fluorescence. Ferguson analysis of native gels shows that the complex migrates with an apparent molecular mass only slightly larger than that expected for one FX(a) and one FV(a2), further ruling out complex assembly on C6PS micelles. Human prothrombin activation by this complex occurs at nearly the same overall rate (2.2 x 10(8) M(-1) s(-1)) and via the same reaction pathway (50-60% channeling, with the rest via the meizothrombin intermediate) as the activation catalyzed by a complex assembled on PS-containing membranes (4.4 x 10(8) M(-1) s(-1)). These results question the accepted role of PS membranes as providing "dimensionality reduction" and favor a regulatory role for platelet-membrane-exposed PS.  相似文献   

6.
Photosystem I (PS I) is a multisubunit membrane protein complex that functions as a light-driven plastocyanin-ferredoxin oxidoreductase. The PsbP domain protein 1 (PPD1; At4g15510) is located in the thylakoid lumen of plant chloroplasts and is essential for photoautotrophy, functioning as a PS I assembly factor. In this work, RNAi was used to suppress PPD1 expression, yielding mutants displaying a range of phenotypes with respect to PS I accumulation and function. These PPD1 RNAi mutants showed a loss of assembled PS I that was correlated with loss of the PPD1 protein. In the most severely affected PPD1 RNAi lines, the accumulated PS I complexes exhibited defects in electron transfer from plastocyanin to the oxidized reaction center P700+. The defects in PS I assembly in the PPD1 RNAi mutants also had secondary effects with respect to the association of light-harvesting antenna complexes to PS I. Because of the imbalance in photosystem function in the PPD1 RNAi mutants, light-harvesting complex II associated with and acted as an antenna for the PS I complexes. These results provide new evidence for the role of PPD1 in PS I biogenesis, particularly as a factor essential for proper assembly of the lumenal portion of the complex.  相似文献   

7.
Chloride is an essential cofactor for the oxidation of water to oxygen. Anion substitution (Br(-), I(-), NO(2)(-), F(-)) in Cl(-)-depleted PS II membranes brings out significant changes in the EPR signals arising from the S(2) state and from the iron-quinone complex of PS II. On the basis of the changes observed in the S(2) state multiline signal and the Q(A)Fe(3+) EPR signal in Cl(-)-depleted PS II membranes after substituting with various anions, we report a possible binding site of anions such as chloride and bromide at the PS II donor side as well as at the acceptor side.  相似文献   

8.
《The Journal of cell biology》1983,97(5):1327-1337
A chlorophyll-protein complex of chloroplast membranes, which simultaneously serves as light-harvesting antenna and membrane adhesion factor, undergoes reversible, lateral diffusion between appressed and nonappressed membrane regions under the control of a protein kinase. The phosphorylation-dependent migration process regulates the amount of light energy that is delivered to the reaction centers of photosystems I and II (PS I and PS II), and thereby regulates their rate of turnover. This regulatory mechanism provides a rationale for the finding that the two photosystems are physically separated in chloroplast membranes (PS II in appressed, grana membranes, and PS I in nonappressed, stroma membranes). The feedback system involves the following steps: a membrane-bound kinase senses the rate of PS II vs. PS I turnover via the oxidation-reduction state of the plastoquinone pool, which shuttles electrons from PS II via cytochrome f to PS I. If activated, the kinase adds negative charge (phosphate) to a grana- localized pigment-protein complex. The change in its surface charge at a site critical for promoting membrane adhesion results in increased electrostatic repulsion between the membranes, unstacking, the lateral movement of the complex to adjacent stroma membranes, which differ in their functional composition. The general significance of this type of membrane regulatory mechanism is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
D. J. Kyle  P. Haworth  C. J. Arntzen 《BBA》1982,680(3):336-342
The room-temperature fluorescence induction transients from stroma-free chloroplast membranes (in the presence of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea) have been analyzed to determine the effects of membrane protein phosphorylation on the connectivity between Photosystem (PS) II centers. Chloroplast membranes which have been incubated in the light with ATP exhibit: (1) a decrease in the variable fluorescence as a function of the initial fluorescence, (2) a shift from a sigmoidal to an exponential fluorescence induction curve, and (3) a reduced amount of the fast () component of the induction transient. These phenomenona are completely reversible by dark incubation of the samples (leading to protein dephosphorylation). We conclude that connectivity between PS II centers is reduced as a function of thylakoid membrane protein phosphorylation. This may in turn be the mechanism which increases the amount of absorbed excitation energy available to PS I.  相似文献   

10.
Experiments directed to measure the interaction of lysozyme with liposomes consisting of phosphatidylcholine (PC) and phosphatidylserine (PS) have been conducted by monitoring both protein and lipid fluorescence and fluorescence anisotropy of the protein. The binding of lysozyme to the unilamellar vesicles was quantified using a novel method of analysis in which the fractional contribution at moderate binding conditions is determined from either total fluorescence decay or anisotropy decay curves of tryptophan at limiting binding conditions. In the energy transfer experiments PC and PS lipids labelled with two pyrene acyl chains served as energy acceptors of the excited tryptophan residues in lysozyme. The binding was strongly dependent on the molar fraction of negatively charged PS in neutral PC membranes and on the ionic strength. Changes in the tryptophan fluorescence decay characteristics were found to be connected with long correlation times, indicating conformational rearrangements induced by binding of the protein to these lipid membranes. The dynamics of membrane bound protein appeared to be dependent on the physical state of the membrane. Independent of protein fluorescence studies, formation of a protein-membrane complex can also be observed from the lipid properties of the system. The interaction of lysozyme with di-pyrenyl-labelled phosphatidylserine in anionic PS/PC membranes resulted in a substantial decrease of the intramolecular excimer formation, while the excimer formation of dipyrenyl-labelled phosphatidylcholine in neutral PC membranes barely changed in the presence of lysozyme.Abbreviations dipyr4 sn-1,2-(pyrenylbutyl) - dipyr10 sn-1,2-(pyrenyldecanoyl). - DMPC dimyristoyl-phosphatidylcholine - DOPC dioleoyl-phosphatidylcholine - DPPC dipalmitoyl-phosphatidylcholine - DPPC dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine - PC phosphatidylcholine - PS phosphatidylserine Correspondence to: A. J. W. G. Visser  相似文献   

11.
The protein composition and architecture of the photosynthetic membranes from the cyanobacterium, Synechococcus cedrorum, were analyzed with the aid of site-specific labels. Using membranes labeled with 35S, about 50 membrane proteins can be detected by sodium dodecyl sulfate acrylamide gel electrophoresis. Approximately half of the proteins are accessible to modification by the impermeant probe, lactoperoxidase, indicating that they have surface-exposed domains. At least six of these external proteins can be removed by EDTA washing; the correspondence in molecular weights between five of these EDTA-extractable proteins and those of typical chloroplast coupling factor preparations may indicate that they are subunits of a membrane-bound ATPase. The photoactive, lipophilic compound, [125I]iodonaphthyl azide, was used to label protein domains in contact with the lipid bilayer. Iodonaphthyl azide modification led to a labeling pattern significantly different from that seen with lactoperoxidase. In particular, proteins in the 13 000–20 000 dalton range that were labeled poorly or not at all by lactoperoxidase were heavily modified by iodonaphthyl azide.Photosystem I and II particles, extracted from the membrane by digitonin treatment, were iodinated by lactoperoxidase after isolation. The PS I particles acted as a relatively tight complex, with most of the proteins remaining inaccessible to surface modification. The PS II particles, on the other hand, responded as a more open structure, with most of the subunits yielding to lactoperoxidase iodination. Similar studies on a highly fluorescent, temperature-sensitive mutant of S. cedrorum revealed a different organization of the PS II complex. This mutant, when grown at 40°C, inserts a 51 kdalton polypeptide in place of a 53 kdalton protein. This protein also replaces the 53 kdalton species in the PS II complex of the mutant after 40°C growth. The structure of this complex is altered in that more sites become accessible to lactoperoxidase. This is particularly true of the 51 kdalton protein, which is barely labeled in wild-type PS II complexes.  相似文献   

12.
In vitro reconstitution of functions of membrane proteins is often hampered by aggregation, misfolding, or lack of post-translational modifications of the proteins attributable to overexpression. To overcome this technical obstacle, we have developed a method to express multimeric integral membrane proteins in extracellular (budded) baculovirus particles that are released from Sf9 cells co-infected with multiple transmembrane proteins. We applied this method to the reconstitution of gamma-secretase, a membrane protease complex that catalyzes the intramembrane cleavage of beta-amyloid precursor protein to release Abeta peptides, the major component of amyloid deposits in Alzheimer brains as well as of Notch. When we co-infected Sf9 cells with human presenilin 1 (PS1), nicastrin, APH-1a, and PEN-2, a high-molecular-weight membrane protein complex that contained PS1 exclusively in its fragment form associated with three other cofactor proteins was reconstituted and recovered in a highly gamma-secretase-active state in budded virus particles, whereas nonfunctional PS1 holoproteins massively contaminated the parental Sf9 cell membranes. The relative gamma-secretase activity (per molar PS1 fragments) was concentrated by approximately 2.5 fold in budded virus particles compared with that in Sf9 membranes. The budded baculovirus system will facilitate structural and functional analyses of gamma-secretase, as well as screening of its binding molecules or inhibitors, and will also provide a versatile methodology for the characterization of a variety of membrane protein complexes.  相似文献   

13.
The entry of enveloped animal viruses into their host cells always depends on membrane fusion triggered by conformational changes in viral envelope glycoproteins. Vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) infection is mediated by virus spike glycoprotein G, which induces membrane fusion between the viral envelope and the endosomal membrane at the acidic environment of this compartment. In this work, we evaluated VSV interactions with membranes of different phospholipid compositions, at neutral and acidic pH, using atomic force microscopy (AFM) operating in the force spectroscopy mode, isothermal calorimetry (ITC) and molecular dynamics simulation. We found that the binding forces differed dramatically depending on the membrane phospholipid composition, revealing a high specificity of G protein binding to membranes containing phosphatidylserine (PS). In a previous work, we showed that the sequence corresponding amino acid 164 of VSV G protein was as efficient as the virus in catalyzing membrane fusion at pH 6.0. Here, we used this sequence to explore VSV–PS interaction using ITC. We found that peptide binding to membranes was exothermic, suggesting the participation of electrostatic interactions. Peptide–membrane interaction at pH 7.5 was shown to be specific to PS and dependent on the presence of His residues in the fusion peptide. The application of the simplified continuum Gouy–Chapman theory to our system predicted a pH of 5.0 at membrane surface, suggesting that the His residues should be protonated when located close to the membrane. Molecular dynamics simulations suggested that the peptide interacts with the lipid bilayer through its N-terminal residues, especially Val145 and His148. Fabiana A.Carneiro and Pedro A. Lapido-Loureiro contributed equally to this work An erratum to this article can be found at  相似文献   

14.
We have found that treatment of the photosynthetic membranes of green plants, or thylakoids, with the nonionic detergent Triton X-114 at a 10:1 ratio has three effects: (a) photosystem I and coupling factor are solubilized, so that the membranes retain only photosystem II (PS II) and its associated light-harvesting apparatus (LHC-II); (b) LHC-II is crystallized, and so is removed from its normal association with PS II; and (c) LHC-II crystallization causes a characteristic red shift in the 77 degrees K fluorescence from LHC-II. Treatment of thylakoids with the same detergent at a 20:1 ratio results in an equivalent loss of photosystem I and coupling factor, with LHC-II and PS II being retained by the membranes. However, no LHC-II crystals are formed, nor is there a shift in fluorescence. Thus, isolation of a membrane protein is not required for its crystallization, but the conditions of detergent treatment are critical. Membranes with crystallized LHC-II retain tetrameric particles on their surface but have no recognizable stromal fracture face. We have proposed a model to explain these results: LHC-II is normally found within the stromal half of the membrane bilayer and is reoriented during the crystallization process. This reorientation causes the specific fluorescence changes associated with crystallization. Tetrameric particles, which are not changed in any way by the crystallization process, do not consist of LHC-II complexes. PS II appears to be the only other major complex retained by these membranes, which suggests that the tetramers consist of PS II.  相似文献   

15.
Changes in composition of membrane proteins in Synechocystis PCC 6803 induced by the shift of light regime for photosynthetic growth were studied in relation to the regulation of PS I/PS II stoichiometry. Special attention was paid to the changes in abundance of proteins of PS I and PS II complexes. Composition was examined using a LDS-PAGE and a quantitative enzyme immunoassay. Abundance of PsaA/B polypeptides and the PsaC polypeptide of the PS I complex, on a per cell basis, increased under the light regime exciting preferentially PS II and decreased under the light regime exciting mainly PS I. Similar changes were observed with polypeptides of 18.5, 10 and 8.5 kDa. The abundance of other proteins associated with membranes, including PsbA polypeptide of the PS II complex, was fairly constant irrespective of light regime. These results are consistent with our previous observations with other strains of cyanophytes (Anabaena variabilis M2 and Synechocystis PCC 6714) that PS I is the variable component in changes in PS I/PS II stoichiometry in response to changing light regimes for photosynthesis.Abbreviations CBB Coomassie brilliant blue - Chl chlorophyll - EIA enzyme immunoassay - LDS lithium dodecyl sulfate - PAGE polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - PS photosystem - PVDF polyvinylidene difluoride  相似文献   

16.
Factor X(a) (FX(a)) binding to factor V(a) (FV(a)) on platelet-derived membranes containing surface-exposed phosphatidylserine (PS) forms the "prothrombinase complex" that is essential for efficient thrombin generation during blood coagulation. There are two naturally occurring isoforms of FV(a), FV(a1) and FV(a2). These two isoforms differ by a 3-kDa polysaccharide chain (at Asn(2181) in human FV(a1) (Kim, S. W., Ortel, T. L., Quinn-Allen, M. A., Yoo, L., Worfolk, L., Zhai, X., Lentz, B. R., and Kane, W. H. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 11448-11454)) and have different coagulant activities. We examined the interaction of the two bovine isoforms with active site-labeled FX(a), finding no significant difference. A soluble form of PS (C6PS) bound to FV(a1) and FV(a2) with comparable affinities (K(d) = 11-12 microm) and changes in FV(a) intrinsic fluorescence. At concentrations well below its critical micelle concentration, C6PS binding to bovine FV(a2) enhanced its affinity for FX(a) in solution by nearly 3 orders of magnitude (K(d)(eff) = 40-2 nm over a C6PS range of 30-400 microm) but had no effect on the affinity of FV(a1) for FX(a) (K(d) = 1 microm). This results in a soluble complex between FX(a) and FV(a2), whose expected molecular weight was confirmed by calibrated native gel electrophoresis. This complex behaved as a normal Michaelis-Menten enzyme in its ability to produce thrombin from meizothrombin (apparent k(cat)/K(m) congruent with 10(9) m(-1) s(-1)). The ability of soluble PS to trigger formation of a soluble prothrombinase complex suggests that exposure of PS molecules during platelet activation is likely the key event responsible for the assembly of an active membrane-bound complex.  相似文献   

17.
γ-Secretase is a multimeric membrane protein complex composed of presenilin (PS), nicastrin, Aph-1, and Pen-2, which mediates intramembrane proteolysis of a range of type I transmembrane proteins. We previously analyzed the functional roles of the N-terminal transmembrane domains (TMDs) 1–6 of PS1 in the assembly and proteolytic activity of the γ-secretase using a series of TMD-swap PS1 mutants. Here we applied the TMD-swap method to all the TMDs of PS1 for the structure-function analysis of the proteolytic mechanism of γ-secretase. We found that TMD2- or -6-swapped mutant PS1 failed to bind the helical peptide-based, substrate-mimic γ-secretase inhibitor. Cross-linking experiments revealed that both TMD2 and TMD6 of PS1 locate in proximity to the TMD9, the latter being implicated in the initial substrate binding. Taken together, our data suggest that TMD2 and the luminal side of TMD6 are involved in the formation of the initial substrate-binding site of the γ-secretase complex.  相似文献   

18.
Gamma-secretase mediates the final step, which generates Alzheimer's disease Abeta amyloid protein, by cleaving the transmembrane domain of the amyloid-beta protein precursor. Four gene products, presenilin, nicastrin, APH-1, and PEN-2, are required for gamma-secretase activity that is contained within a high molecular mass complex. To further characterize gamma-secretase, we probed membranes from human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells with gamma-secretase inhibitor biotin derivatives of L-685,458, pepstatin A, and the difluoro alcohol 1-Bt. These inhibitor derivatives bound and precipitated PS1 fragments from membrane CHAPSO extracts. Analysis of PS1 complexes by blue native gel electrophoresis and western blotting indicated that the CHAPSO extracts contained complexes of approximately 900, 500, and 400 kDa. With this technique, derivatives of the three inhibitors were detected only in association with the 900 kDa species. Size-exclusion chromatography showed that 13% of PS1 immunoreactivity extracted with CHAPSO was comprised within a >or=900 kDa species with the remaining eluting in fractions of 669-250 kDa but that most enzymatic activity was associated with the 900 kDa fractions. After treatment with L-685,458 inhibitor, 49% PS1 immunoreactivity was eluted in the 900 kDa fraction, supporting evidence that the inhibitor stabilized this complex. Subcellular fractionation of SH-SY5Y cells indicated that the 900 kDa complex was formed as PS1 and NCT matured through the secretory pathway and that enzymatic activity correlated with complex maturation. From these observations, we propose a model for the structure of active gamma-secretase that would consist of dimerization of 400-500 kDa subunits and be consistent with the apparent molecular mass of the complex.  相似文献   

19.
Theoretical investigations involving the membrane-solution interface have revealed that the density of the solution varies appreciably within interfacial layers adjacent to charged membrane surfaces. The hypothesis that gravity interacts with this configuration and modifies transport rates across horizontal and vertical membranes differently was supported by initial experiments with gramicidin A channels in phosphatidylserine (PS) membranes in 0.1 M KCl. Channel conductivity was found to be about 1.6 times higher in horizontal membranes than in vertical membranes. Here we present the results of further experiments with gramicidin A channels (incorporated into charged PS- and uncharged phosphatidylcholine (PC) membranes in KCl- and CsCl-solutions) to demonstrate that the hypothesis is more generally applicable. Again, channel conductivity was found to be higher in horizontal PS membranes by a factor of between 1.20 and 1.75 in 0.1 M CsCl. No difference in channel conductivity was found for uncharged PC membranes in 0.1 M KCl and in 0.1 M CsCl. However, for PC membranes in 0.05 M KCl the channel conductivity was significantly higher in horizontal membranes by a factor of between 1.07 and 1.14. These results are consistent with the results of our model calculations of layer density and extension, which showed that the layer formation is enhanced by increasing membrane surface charge and decreasing electrolyte ion concentration. The mechanism of gravity interaction with membrane transport processes via interface reactions might be utilized by biological systems for orientational behaviour in the gravity field, which has been observed even for cellular systems. Received: 16 October 1995 / Accepted: 23 April 1996  相似文献   

20.
The three main polyamines putrescine (Put), spermidine (Spd) and spermine (Spm) were characterized by HPLC in intact spinach leaf cells, intact chloroplasts, thylakoid membranes, Photosystem II membranes, the light-harvesting complex and the PS II complex. All contain the three polyamines in various ratios; the HPLC polyamine profiles of highly resolved PS II species (a Photosystem II core and the rection center) suggest an enrichment in the polyamine Spm.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - HPLC high performance liquid chromatography - LHC light-harvesting complex - PS II Photosystem II - PS II-RC Photosystem II reaction center - Put putrescine - Spd spermidine - Spm spermine - 10%S-core D1-D2-Cyt b559-47 kD-43 kD complex  相似文献   

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