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1.
Membrane proteins perform many essential cellular functions. Over the last years, substantial advances have been made in our understanding of the structure and function of isolated membrane proteins. However, like soluble proteins, many membrane proteins assemble into supramolecular complexes that perform specific functions in specialized membrane domains. Since supramolecular complexes of membrane proteins are difficult to study by conventional approaches, little is known about their composition, organization and assembly. The high signal-to-noise ratio of the images that can be obtained with an atomic force microscope (AFM) makes this instrument a powerful tool to image membrane protein complexes within native membranes. Recently, we have reported high-resolution topographs of junctional microdomains in native eye lens membranes containing two-dimensional (2D) arrays of aquaporin-0 (AQP0) surrounded by connexons. While both proteins are involved in cell adhesion, AQP0 is a specific water channel whereas connexons form cell–cell communication channels with broad substrate specificity. Here, we have performed a detailed analysis of the supramolecular organization of AQP0 tetramers and connexon hexamers in junctional microdomains in the native lens membrane. We present first structural models of these junctional microdomains, which we generated by docking atomic models of AQP0 and connexons into the AFM topographs. The AQP0 2D arrays in the native membrane show the same molecular packing of tetramers seen in highly ordered double-layered 2D crystals obtained through reconstitution of purified AQP0. In contrast, the connexons that surround the AQP0 arrays are only loosely packed. Based on our AFM observations, we propose a mechanism that may explain the supramolecular organization of AQP0 and connexons in junctional domains in native lens membranes.  相似文献   

2.
Junctional microdomains, paradigm for membrane protein segregation in functional assemblies, in eye lens fiber cell membranes are constituted of lens-specific aquaporin-0 tetramers (AQP0(4)) and connexin (Cx) hexamers, termed connexons. Both proteins have double function to assure nutrition and mediate adhesion of lens cells. Here we use high-speed atomic force microscopy to examine microdomain protein dynamics at the single-molecule level. We found that the adhesion function of head-to-head associated AQP0(4) and Cx is cooperative. This finding provides first experimental evidence for the mechanistic importance for junctional microdomain formation. From the observation of lateral association-dissociation events of AQP0(4), we determine that the enthalpic energy gain of a single AQP0(4)-AQP0(4) interaction in the membrane plane is -2.7 k(B)T, sufficient to drive formation of microdomains. Connexon association is stronger as dynamics are rarely observed, explaining their rim localization in junctional microdomains.  相似文献   

3.
The three-dimensional structure of the lambda repressor C-terminal domain (CTD) has been determined at atomic resolution. In the crystal, the CTD forms a 2-fold symmetric tetramer that mediates cooperative binding of two repressor dimers to pairs of operator sites. Based upon this structure, a model was proposed for the structure of an octameric repressor that forms both in the presence and absence of DNA. Here, we have determined the structure of the lambda repressor CTD in three new crystal forms, under a wide variety of conditions. All crystals have essentially the same tetramer, confirming the results of the earlier study. One crystal form has two tetramers bound to form an octamer, which has the same overall architecture as the previously proposed model. An unexpected feature of the octamer in the crystal structure is a unique interaction at the tetramer-tetramer interface, formed by residues Gln209, Tyr210 and Pro211, which contact symmetry-equivalent residues from other subunits of the octamer. Interestingly, these residues are also located at the dimer-dimer interface, where the specific interactions are different. The structures thus indicate specific amino acid residues that, at least in principle, when altered could result in repressors that form tetramers but not octamers.  相似文献   

4.
Aquaporin-0 (AQP0) is a lens-specific water channel that also forms membrane junctions. Reconstitution of AQP0 with dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and E. coli polar lipids (EPL) yielded well-ordered, double-layered two-dimensional (2D) crystals that allowed electron crystallographic structure determination of the AQP0-mediated membrane junction. The interacting tetramers in the two crystalline layers are exactly in register, resulting in crystals with p422 symmetry. The high-resolution density maps also allowed modeling of the annular lipids surrounding the tetramers. Comparison of the DMPC and EPL bilayers suggested that the lipid head groups do not play an important role in the interaction of annular lipids with AQP0. We now reconstituted AQP0 with the anionic lipid dimyristoyl phosphatidylglycerol (DMPG), which yielded a mixture of 2D crystals with different symmetries. The different crystal symmetries result from shifts between the two crystalline layers, suggesting that the negatively charged PG head group destabilizes the interaction between the extracellular AQP0 surfaces. Reconstitution of AQP0 with dimyristoyl phosphatidylserine (DMPS), another anionic lipid, yielded crystals that had the usual p422 symmetry, but the crystals showed a pH-dependent tendency to stack through their cytoplasmic surfaces. Finally, AQP0 failed to reconstitute into membranes that were composed of more than 40% dimyristoyl phosphatidic acid (DMPA). Hence, although DMPG, DMPS, and DMPA are all negatively charged lipids, they have very different effects on AQP0 2D crystals, illustrating the importance of the specific lipid head group chemistry beyond its mere charge.  相似文献   

5.
Human pathologies often originate from molecular disorders. Therefore, imaging technology as one of the bases for the identification and understanding of pathologies must provide views of single molecules at subnanometer resolution. Membrane proteins mediate many of life's most important processes, and their malfunction is often lethal or leads to severe disease. The membrane proteins aquaporin-0 (AQP0) and connexons form junctional microdomains between healthy lens core cells in which AQP0 form square arrays surrounded by connexons. Malfunction of both proteins results in the formation of cataract. We have used high-resolution atomic force microscopy (AFM) to image junctional microdomains in membranes from an individual human eye lens with senile cataract. Images at subnanometer resolution report individual helix-connecting loops of four amino acid residues on the AQP0 surface. We describe the supramolecular assembly and the conformational state of AQP0 in junctional microdomains, where a mixture of truncated junctional and full-length water channel AQP0 form square arrays. Imaging of microdomain borders revealed individual AQP0 tetramers and no associated connexon, indicating a lack of metabolite transport, waste accumulation, and enlarged regions of non-adhering membranes, causing cataract in this individual. This first high-resolution view of the membrane of this pathological human tissue provides insights into cataract pathology at the single membrane protein level, and indicates the power of the AFM as a future tool in medical imaging at subnanometer resolution.  相似文献   

6.
Aquaporin-0 (AQP0), previously known as major intrinsic protein (MIP), is the only water pore protein expressed in lens fiber cells. AQP0 is highly specific to lens fiber cells and constitutes the most abundant intrinsic membrane protein in these cells. The protein is initially expressed as a full-length protein in young fiber cells in the lens cortex, but becomes increasingly cleaved in the lens core region. Reconstitution of AQP0 isolated from the core of sheep lenses containing a proportion of truncated protein, produced double-layered two-dimensional (2D) crystals, which displayed the same dimensions as the thin 11 nm lens fiber cell junctions, which are prominent in the lens core. In contrast reconstitution of full-length AQP0 isolated from the lens cortex reproducibly yielded single-layered 2D crystals. We present electron diffraction patterns and projection maps of both crystal types. We show that cleavage of the intracellular C terminus enhances the adhesive properties of the extracellular surface of AQP0, indicating a conformational change in the molecule. This change of function of AQP0 from a water pore in the cortex to an adhesion molecule in the lens core constitutes another manifestation of the gene sharing concept originally proposed on the basis of the dual function of crystallins.  相似文献   

7.
The eye lens is dependent upon a network of gap junction-mediated intercellular communication to facilitate its homeostasis and development. Three gap junction-forming proteins are expressed in the lens of which two are in lens fibers, namely connexin (Cx) 45.6 and 56. Major intrinsic protein (MIP), also known as aquaporin-0 (AQP0), is the most abundant membrane protein in lens fibers. However, its role in the lens is not clear. Our previous studies show that MIP(AQP0) associates with gap junction plaques formed by Cx45.6 and Cx56 during the early stages of embryonic chick lens development but not in late embryonic and adult lenses. We report here that MIP(AQP0) directly interacts with Cx45.6 but not with Cx56. We further identified the intracellular loop of Cx45.6 as the interacting domain for the MIP(AQP0) C terminus. Surface plasmon resonance experiments indicated that the C-terminal domain of MIP(AQP0) interacts with two binding sites within the intracellular loop region of Cx45.6 with a K(D(app)) of 7.5 and 10.3 microm, respectively. The K(D(app)) for the full-length loop region is 7.7 microm. The cleavage at the intracellular loop of Cx45.6 was observed during lens development, and the C terminus of MIP(AQP0) did not interact with the loop-cleaved form of Cx45.6. Thus, the dissociation between these two proteins that occurs in the mature fibers of late lens development is likely caused by this cleavage. Finally this interaction had no impact on Cx45.6-mediated intercellular communication, suggesting that the Cx45.6-MIP(AQP0) interaction plays a novel unidentified role in lens fibers.  相似文献   

8.
Using immunohistochemistry and mass spectrometry, differentiation-dependent changes in the subcellular distribution and processing of aquaporin-0 (AQP0) have been mapped in the rat lens. Sections labelled with C-terminal tail AQP0 antibodies yielded two concentric rings of labelling with minimal signal in the lens core. The rings were separated by a transient zone of decreased labelling located prior to the transition of differentiating fiber (DF) cells into mature denucleated fiber (MF) cells. Mass spectrometry showed that the loss of core labelling was due to AQP0 cleavage, while the transient loss of labelling was more likely caused by masking of the antibody epitope. AQP0 subcellular distribution changed with radial distance into the lens. In peripheral DF cells, AQP0 was found throughout both broad and narrow side membranes. In deeper-lying DF cells, AQP0 aggregated into plaque-like structures located on the broad sides. This shift occurred prior to the transient loss of AQP0 signal, and coincided with formation of broad-side membrane invaginations between adjacent fiber cells to which filensin, a known binding partner of AQP0, was also localized. After nuclei loss, AQP0 was once again distributed throughout MF cell membranes. In the absence of protein synthesis, the observed subcellular redistribution of AQP0 in DF and subsequent cleavage of AQP0 in MF are suggestive of a switch in the function of AQP0 from a water channel to a junctional protein.  相似文献   

9.
Hitherto, the packing arrangement of the aquaporin-1 (AQP1) tetramer in 2-dimensional (2-D) crystals (two-sided plane group p42(1)2) was observed to be largely similar (canonical crystal form) despite the difference in the source of the protein, the glycosylation state of the protein, the type of lipids, and the ratio of lipid to protein in the crystallization mixture. We report here our observation that the packing of AQP1 tetramers shows polymorphism in 2-D crystals generated in dioleoyl phosphatidylcholine bilayers. Apart from the canonical form, three additional allomorphs were identified. One was observed when small (0.25) lipid to protein ratio was used in the crystallization mixture while the other two were observed when the divalent cation content in the canonical crystals was modified. The various allomorphs were distinguished by different relative orientations of the AQP1 tetramer viewed in projection. The same, two-sided plane group p42(1)2 and similar unit cell dimensions were maintained in the different allomorphs as established by analysis of images of frozen-hydrated, nominally untilted crystals. Our results indicate that the interaction between the AQP1 monomers at the interface of the tetramers is flexible and is also strongly influenced by Mg(2+) ions with the cation effect materializing because of the intrinsic fluidity of the membrane.  相似文献   

10.
Atomic force microscopy (AFM) is a unique tool for imaging membrane proteins in near‐native environment (embedded in a membrane and in buffer solution) at ~1 nm spatial resolution. It has been most successful on membrane proteins reconstituted in 2D crystals and on some specialized and densely packed native membranes. Here, we report on AFM imaging of purified plasma membranes from Xenopus laevis oocytes, a commonly used system for the heterologous expression of membrane proteins. Isoform M23 of human aquaporin 4 (AQP4‐M23) was expressed in the X. laevis oocytes following their injection with AQP4‐M23 cRNA. AQP4‐M23 expression and incorporation in the plasma membrane were confirmed by the changes in oocyte volume in response to applied osmotic gradients. Oocyte plasma membranes were then purified by ultracentrifugation on a discontinuous sucrose gradient, and the presence of AQP4‐M23 proteins in the purified membranes was established by Western blotting analysis. Compared with membranes without over‐expressed AQP4‐M23, the membranes from AQP4‐M23 cRNA injected oocytes showed clusters of structures with lateral size of about 10 nm in the AFM topography images, with a tendency to a fourfold symmetry as may be expected for higher‐order arrays of AQP4‐M23. In addition, but only infrequently, AQP4‐M23 tetramers could be resolved in 2D arrays on top of the plasma membrane, in good quantitative agreement with transmission electron microscopy analysis and the current model of AQP4. Our results show the potential and the difficulties of AFM studies on cloned membrane proteins in native eukaryotic membranes. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

11.
Aquaporins (AQPs) are a family of ubiquitous membrane channels that conduct water across cell membranes. AQPs form homotetramers containing four functional and independent water pores. Aquaporin-0 (AQP0) is expressed in the eye lens, where its water permeability is regulated by calmodulin (CaM). Here we use a combination of biochemical methods and NMR spectroscopy to probe the interaction between AQP0 and CaM. We show that CaM binds the AQP0 C-terminal domain in a calcium-dependent manner. We demonstrate that only two CaM molecules bind a single AQP0 tetramer in a noncanonical fashion, suggesting a form of cooperativity between AQP0 monomers. Based on these results, we derive a structural model of the AQP0/CaM complex, which suggests CaM may be inhibitory to channel permeability by capping the vestibules of two monomers within the AQP0 tetramer. Finally, phosphorylation within AQP0's CaM binding domain inhibits the AQP0/CaM interaction, suggesting a temporal regulatory mechanism for complex formation.  相似文献   

12.
Members of the tetraspanin superfamily function as transmembrane scaffold proteins that mediate the assembly of membrane proteins into specific signaling complexes. Tetraspanins also interact with each other and concentrate membrane proteins into tetraspanin-enriched microdomains (TEMs). Here we report that lens-specific tetraspanin MP20 can form multiple types of higher-order assemblies and we present crystalline arrays of MP20. When isolated in the absence of divalent cations, MP20 is solubilized predominantly in tetrameric form, whereas the presence of divalent cations during solubilization promotes the association of MP20 tetramers into higher-order species. This effect only occurs when divalent cations are present during solubilization but not when divalent cations are added to solubilized tetrameric MP20, suggesting that other factors may also be involved. When purified MP20 tetramers are reconstituted with native lens lipids in the presence of magnesium, MP20 forms two-dimensional (2D) crystals. A projection map at 18 Å resolution calculated from negatively stained 2D crystals showed that the building block of the crystal is an octamer consisting of two tetramers related to each other by 2-fold symmetry. In addition to 2D crystals, reconstitution of MP20 with native lipids also produced a variety of large protein-lipid complexes, and we present three-dimensional (3D) reconstructions of the four most abundant of these complexes in negative stain. The various complexes formed by MP20 most likely reflect the many ways in which tetraspanins can interact with each other to allow formation of TEMs.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Glutamine synthetase from ovine brain has been found to exist in vivo and in vitro as a Mn4E complex, where E is octameric enzyme [F. C. Wedler, R. B. Denman, and W. G. Roby (1982)Biochemistry24, 6389–6396]. Previously observed anomolous effects of added metal ions and protein concentration on the observed specific activity in vitro can now be explained in terms of association-dissociation of the native octamer. In the absence of glycerol, added to stabilize the enzyme for long-term storage, activity decreases sharply below 4 μg/ml (20 nm octamer) in assay mixtures due to dissociation of octamer to tetramer and thence to inactive monomer. No dimeric species were detectable under any conditions. The octameric species Mn4EMn4 could be activated further by Mn(II) to form a species Mn4EMn4Mn8 that has a specific activity of ca. 900 U/mg in the transferase assay. Enzyme with one Mn(II)/subunit, Mn4EMn4, associated to octamers more extensively than Mn4E. At the low concentrations of enzyme at which the tetramer predominates, addition of substrates alone or in pairs caused partial reassociation to octamers, the most effective combinations being ATP and glutamate, ADP and l-glutamine, or ATP and l-methionine sulfoximine. Analysis of the data by the methods of Kurganov or Thomes and co-workers indicate that the tetramer/octamer equilibrium has a Kd value of ca. 2.5 × 10?6m, comparable to values calculated for other enzyme systems. The specific activities for octamer and monomer in the Mg(II)-dependent transferase assay were calculated to be 200 ± 20 and 0 U/mg, respectively. Direct determination of the specific activity of pure tetramer is hampered by its substrate-promoted reassociation to octamer under assay conditions. Tetramers, produced by 2 m urea and then immobilized on CNBr-activated Sepharose 4B, exhibited a specific activity that was 86% of that of the identically treated octamers. This indicates a specific activity of ca. 172 (±20) for tetramers in solution. Light-scattering experiments showed that, with 1.7–2.0 Mn(II) bound per subunit, the octameric enzyme octamers can associate further to an oligomeric species (Mn4EMn4Mn8)n, where n? ? 5. This oligomerization also was promoted strongly by lanthanide ions. Mg(II), however, caused only the association of tetramer to octamer. Analysis of various stereochemical models for the interaction of subunit domains (assuming identical subunits) within tetramers, between tetramers in the octamers, and between octamers indicate that the data are most consistent with isologous, rather than heterologous, interactions to produce octamer. These analyses also predict that formation of oligomers from cubic octamers through weaker, Mn(II)-dependent interactions also are most likely to occur via isologous domains. The available electron micrographic evidence support these hypothetical models. Interactions within tetramers are stronger than those between tetramers, which are stronger than those between octamers.  相似文献   

15.
Cataract Tohoku (Cat(Tohm)) is a dominant cataract mutation that leads to severe degeneration of lens fiber cells. Linkage analysis showed that the Cat(Tohm) mutation is located on mouse chromosome 10, close to the gene for aquaporin-0 (Aqp0), which encodes a membrane protein that is expressed specifically in lens fiber cells. Sequence analysis of Aqp0 revealed a 12-bp deletion without any change in the reading frame, which resulted in a deletion of four amino acids within the second transmembrane region of the AQP0 protein. Targeted expression of the mutated Aqp0 caused lens opacity in transgenic mice, the pathological severity of which depended on the expression level of the transgene. The mutated AQP0 protein was localized to the intracellular and perinuclear spaces rather than to the plasma membranes of the lens fiber cells. The cataract phenotype of Cat(Tohm) is caused by a gain-of-function mutation in the mutated AQP0 protein and not by a loss-of-function mutation.  相似文献   

16.
Aquaporin-0 (AQP0) is the major intrinsic protein of lens fiber cells and the founder member of the water channel gene family. Here we show that disruption of the AQP0 gene by an early transposon (ETn) element results in expression of a chimeric protein, comprised of approximately 75% AQP0 and approximately 25% ETn long terminal repeat (LTR) sequence, in the cataract Fraser (CatFr) mouse lens. Immunoblot analysis showed that mutant AQP0-LTR was similar in mass to wild-type AQP0. However, immunofluorescence microscopy revealed that AQP0-LTR was localized to intracellular membranes rather than to plasma membranes of lens fiber cells. Heterozygous CatFr lenses were similar in size to wild-type but displayed abnormal regions of translucence and light scattering. Scanning electron microscopy further revealed that mature fiber cells within the core of the heterozygous CatFr lens failed to stratify into uniform, concentric growth shells, suggesting that the AQP0 water channel facilitates the development of the unique cellular architecture of the crystalline lens.  相似文献   

17.
Gap junctions formed by connexons and thin junctions formed by lens-specific aquaporin 0 (AQP0) mediate the tight packing of fibre cells necessary for lens transparency. Gap junctions conduct water, ions and metabolites between cells, whereas junctional AQP0 seems to be involved in cell adhesion. High-resolution atomic force microscopy (AFM) showed the supramolecular organization of these proteins in native lens core membranes, in which AQP0 forms two-dimensional arrays that are surrounded by densely packed gap junction channels. These junctional microdomains simultaneously provide adhesion and communication between fibre cells. The AFM topographs also showed that the extracellular loops of AQP0 in junctional microdomains adopt a conformation that closely resembles the structure of junctional AQP0, in which the water pore is thought to be closed. Finally, time-lapse AFM imaging provided insights into AQP0 array formation. This first high-resolution view of a multicomponent eukaryotic membrane shows how membrane proteins self-assemble into functional microdomains.  相似文献   

18.
Aquaporin-1 (AQP1) is the first functionally identified aquaporin of a growing family of membrane water channels found in all forms of life. Recently, a possible secondary function as a cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) gated ion channel was attributed to AQP1. We have reconstituted purified protein from bovine and human red blood cell membranes into highly ordered 2D crystals. The topography of both AQP1s was determined by electron microscopy from freeze-dried, unidirectionally metal-shadowed 2D crystals as well as from surface topographs of native crystals recorded in buffer solution with the atomic force microscope (AFM). In spite of the high level of sequence homology between bovine and human AQP1, the surfaces showed distinct differences. Alignment of both sequences and comparison of the acquired surface topographies with the atomic model of human AQP1 revealed the topographic changes on the surface of bovine AQP1 to be induced by a few amino acid substitutions. A striking degree of sequence homology was found between the carboxyl-terminal domains of AQP1s from different organisms and EF-hands from Ca2+-binding proteins belonging to the calmodulin superfamily, suggesting the existence of a Ca2+-binding site at the C terminus of AQP1 instead of the putative cGMP-binding site reported previously. To unveil its position on the acquired surface topographies, 2D crystals of AQP1 were digested with carboxypeptidase Y, which cleaves off the intracellular C terminus. Difference maps of AFM topographs between the native and the peptidase-treated AQP1s showed the carboxylic tail to be close to the 4-fold symmetry axis of the tetramer. SDS-PAGE and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionisation mass spectrometry of native and decarboxylated bovine and human AQP1 revealed that the EF-hand motif found at the C terminus of AQP1 was partially resistant to peptidase digestion. The importance of the C-terminal domain is implicated by structural instability of decarboxylated AQP1. A possible role of the C terminus and calcium in translocation of AQP1 in cholangiocytes from intracellular vesicles to the plasma membrane and in triggering its fusion is discussed. Functional studies are now required to identify the physiological role of the Ca2+-binding site.  相似文献   

19.
Aquaporin 0 (AQP0) is a lens-specific protein comprising more than 30% of lens membrane protein content and is a member of the aquaporin family. Water permeates through AQP0 much more slowly than other aquaporin family members, and other compounds, such as glycerol, also permeate AQP0. In the lens, ascorbic acid (AA) is found at high concentrations, protecting the lens from photochemical events such as photo-oxidation. The aim of the present study was to clarify the function of AQP0. Mouse fibroblast L-cells stably expressing AQP0 were established and incubated in medium containing AA, and intracellular AA levels were measured by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and 2,6-dichlorophenol-indophenol (DCPIP) analysis. Intracellular AA levels in AQP0-expressing cells quickly rose and reached saturation 10 min after incubation in medium containing 1000 μM AA. In contrast, AA levels in cells slowly decreased when AA was washed out from the medium. Cells overexpressing AQP0 increased the cellular uptake of AA in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. These data suggest that AA as well as water permeates AQP0.AQP0 expression on Xenopus oocyte membranes was achieved by the injection of AQP0 cRNA into oocytes that were incubated in medium containing AA. Intracellular AA levels were then measured by HPLC. AA uptake was demonstrated in the AQP0-expressing oocytes and was shown to quickly reach saturation. Intracellular AA concentration in oocytes increased in a time- and concentration-dependent manner.The data in the present study show that AA permeates AQP0, reveal the role of AQP0 in AA permeability ex vivo, and also indicate that there is a difference between the import and export of AA via AQP0. These findings suggest that AQP0 plays an important role in controlling lens AA content.  相似文献   

20.
Aquaporin 0 (AQP0), essential for lens clarity, is a tetrameric protein composed of four identical monomers, each of which has its own water pore. The water permeability of AQP0 expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes can be approximately doubled by changes in calcium concentration or pH. Although each monomer pore functions as a water channel, under certain conditions the pores act cooperatively. In other words, the tetramer is the functional unit. In this paper, we show that changes in external pH and calcium can induce an increase in water permeability that exhibits either a positive cooperativity switch-like increase in water permeability or an increase in water permeability in which each monomer acts independently and additively. Because the concentrations of calcium and hydrogen ions increase toward the center of the lens, a concentration signal could trigger a regulatory change in AQP0 water permeability. It thus seems plausible that the cooperative modes of water permeability regulation by AQP0 tetramers mediated by decreased pH and elevated calcium are the physiologically important ones in the living lens.  相似文献   

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