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1.
Components of caveolae and lipid rafts are characterized by their buoyancy after detergent extraction. Using flotations in density gradients, we now show that non-raft membrane molecules are also associated with detergent-insoluble, buoyant assemblies. When Triton X-100 cellular extracts were spun to equilibrium in Nycodenz, only components of classical rafts floated. In contrast, with the zwitterionic detergent CHAPS, non-raft residents such as calnexin and APP also buoyed. When CHAPS extracts were spun in non-equilibrium (velocity) conditions, some raft components rapidly exited the input fractions while other raft markers and non-raft molecules remained relatively immobile. This pointed to size heterogeneities of CHAPS-insoluble complexes. Combined velocity/equilibrium gradients broadly divided CHAPS-insoluble membrane complexes into three size categories, which all contained cholesterol and the glycosphingolipid GM1. Large complexes were enriched in caveolin and ESA. Medium size complexes were enriched in PrP, whereas small complexes contained non-raft proteins, PrP, and some ESA. While Alzheimer's APP was primarily confined to small assemblies, a portion of its glycosylated form did buoy with large complexes. Large CHAPS-insoluble complexes resemble, but are not equal to, classical rafts. These findings extend considerably the range of detergent-insoluble membranal domains.  相似文献   

2.
The TCR signal transduction is initiated by the activation of Src-family kinases (SFK) which phosphorylate Immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motifs (ITAM) present in the intracellular parts of the T-cell receptor (TCR) signaling subunits. Numerous data suggest that after stimulation TCR interacts with membrane rafts and thus it gains access to SFK and other important molecules involved in signal transduction. However, the precise mechanism of this process is unclear. One of the key questions is how SFK access TCR and what is the importance of non-raft and membrane raft-associated SFK for the initiation and maintenance of the TCR signaling. To answer this question we targeted a negative regulator of SFK, C-terminal Src kinase (Csk) to membrane rafts, recently described “heavy rafts” or non-raft membrane. Our data show that only Csk targeted into “classical” raft but not to “heavy raft” or non-raft membrane effectively inhibits TCR signaling, demonstrating the critical role of membrane raft-associated SFK in this process.  相似文献   

3.
We examined the mechanisms involved in protein kinase C (PKC)-dependent down-regulation of dopamine transporter (DAT) activity and cell surface expression by treating heterologously expressing cells with the clathrin-mediated endocytosis inhibitor concanavalin A (Con A) or the cholesterol depleter/membrane raft disrupter methyl-β-cyclodextrin (MβC) prior to treatment with the PKC activator phorbol 12-myristate, 13-acetate (PMA). Con A blocked PMA-induced surface reductions of DAT but only partially inhibited down-regulation, while MβC partially blocked down-regulation but did not inhibit loss of cell surface DAT, demonstrating that PKC-induced DAT down-regulation occurs by a combination of trafficking and non-trafficking processes. Using density-gradient centrifugation, we found that DATs are distributed approximately equally between Triton-insoluble, cholesterol-rich membrane rafts and Triton-soluble non-raft membranes. DATs in both populations are present at the cell surface and are active for dopamine and cocaine binding. PMA-induced loss of cell surface DAT occurred only from non-raft populations, demonstrating that non-raft DATs are regulated by trafficking events and indicating the likelihood that the cholesterol-dependent non-trafficking regulatory mechanism occurs in rafts. PMA did not affect the DAT raft-non-raft distribution but stimulated the phosphorylation of DAT to a substantially greater level in rafts than non-rafts. These findings reveal a previously unknown role for cholesterol in DAT function and demonstrate the presence of distinct subcellular DAT populations that possess multiple regulatory differences that may impact dopaminergic neurotransmission.  相似文献   

4.
An emerging alternative to the use of detergents in biochemical studies on membrane proteins is apparently the use styrene-maleic acid (SMA) amphipathic copolymers. These cut the membrane into nanodiscs (SMA-lipid particles, SMALPs), which contain membrane proteins possibly surrounded by their native lipid environment. We examined this approach for studies on several types of T cell membrane proteins, previously defined as raft or non-raft associated, to see whether the properties of the raft derived SMALPs differ from non-raft SMALPs. Our results indicate that two types of raft proteins, GPI-anchored proteins and two Src family kinases, are markedly present in membrane fragments much larger (>250?nm) than those containing non-raft proteins (<20?nm). Lipid probes sensitive to membrane fluidity (membrane order) indicate that the lipid environment in the large SMALPs is less fluid (more ordered) than in the small ones which may indicate the presence of a more ordered lipid Lo phase which is characteristic of membrane rafts. Also the lipid composition of the small vs. large SMALPs is markedly different – the large ones are enriched in cholesterol and lipids containing saturated fatty acids. In addition, we confirm that T cell membrane proteins present in SMALPs can be readily immunoisolated. Our results support the use of SMA as a potentially better (less artifact prone) alternative to detergents for studies on membrane proteins and their complexes, including membrane rafts.  相似文献   

5.
Most Src family members are diacylated and constitutively associate with membrane "lipid rafts" that coordinate signalling. Whether the monoacylated Src, frequently hyperactive in carcinomas, also localizes at "rafts" remains controversial. Using polarized MDCK cells expressing the thermosensitive v-Src/tsLA31 variant, we here addressed how Src tyrosine-kinase activation may impact on its (i) membrane recruitment, in particular to "lipid rafts"; (ii) subcellular localization; and (iii) signalling. The kinetics of Src-kinase thermoactivation correlated with its recruitment from the cytosol to sedimentable membranes where Src largely resisted solubilisation by non-ionic detergents at 4 degrees C and floated into sucrose density gradients like caveolin-1 and flotillin-2, i.e. "lipid rafts". By immunofluorescence, activated Src showed a dual localization, at apical endosomes/macropinosomes and at the apical plasma membrane. The plasma membrane Src pool did not colocalize with caveolin-1 and flotillin-2, but extensively overlapped GM1 labelling by cholera toxin. Severe ( approximately 70%) cholesterol extraction with methyl-beta-cyclodextrin (MbetaCD) did not abolish "rafts" floatation, but strongly decreased Src association with floating "rafts" and abolished its localization at the apical plasma membrane. Src activation independently activated first the MAP-kinase - ERK1/2 pathway, then the PI3-kinase - Akt pathway. MAP-kinase - ERK1/2 activation was insensitive to MbetaCD, which suppressed Akt phosphorylation and apical endocytosis induced by Src, both depending on the PI3-kinase pathway. We therefore suggest that activated Src is recruited at two membrane compartments, allowing differential signalling, first via ERK1/2 at "non-raft" domains on endosomes, then via PI3-kinase-Akt on a distinct set of "rafts" at the apical plasma membrane. Whether this model is applicable to c-Src remains to be examined.  相似文献   

6.
Cholesterol and glycosphingolipid-enriched membrane domains, termed lipid rafts, were proposed to play important roles in trafficking and signaling events. These functions are inhibited following putative disruption of rafts by cholesterol depletion, commonly induced by treatment with methyl-beta-cyclodextrin (MbetaCD). However, several studies showed that the lateral diffusion of membrane proteins is inhibited by MbetaCD, suggesting that it may have additional effects on membrane organization unrelated to cholesterol removal. Here, we investigated this possibility by comparison of the effects of cholesterol depletion by MbetaCD and by metabolic inhibition (compactin), and of treatment with alpha-CD, which does not bind cholesterol. The studies employed two series of proteins (Ras and influenza hemagglutinin), each containing as internal controls related mutants that differ in raft association. Mild MbetaCD treatment retarded the lateral diffusion of both raft and non-raft mutants, whereas similar cholesterol reduction (30-33%) by metabolic inhibition enhanced selectively the diffusion of the raft-associated mutants. Moreover, alpha-CD also inhibited the diffusion of raft and non-raft mutants, despite its lack of effect on cholesterol content. These findings suggest that the widely used treatment with CD to reduce cholesterol has additional, cholesterol-independent effects on membrane protein mobility, which do not necessarily distinguish between raft and non-raft proteins.  相似文献   

7.
In the present study, the lipid raft composition of a canine mastocytoma cell line (C2) was analyzed. Lipid rafts were well separated from non-raft plasma membranes using a detergent-free isolation technique. To study the influence of n-3 and n-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) on raft fatty acid composition in comparison to non-raft cell membrane, C2 were supplemented with one of the following: α-linolenic acid, eicosapentaenoic acid, docosahexaenoic acid, linoleic acid or arachidonic acid. Enrichment of the culture medium with a specific PUFA resulted in an increase in the content of this fatty acid both in rafts and non-raft membranes. Contents of cholesterol and protein were found not to be affected by the changes in the fatty acid profiles. In conclusion, our data provide strong evidence that PUFA modulate lipid composition and physiological properties of membrane micro domains of mast cells which in turn may have effects on mast cell function.  相似文献   

8.
One type of membrane microdomain, enriched in glycosphingolipids and cholesterol and referred to as lipid rafts, has been implicated in the generation of activating signals triggered by a variety of stimuli. Several laboratories, including ours, have recently demonstrated that the B cell receptor (BCR) inducibly localizes to the rafts upon activation and that functional lipid rafts are important for BCR-mediated "positive" signaling. In the later phases of the immune response, coligation of the BCR and the inhibitory receptor Fc gamma RIIB1 leads to potent inhibition of BCR-induced positive signaling through the recruitment of the inositol phosphatase SHIP to Fc gamma RIIB1. One potential model is that the Fc gamma RIIB1 itself might be excluded from the rafts basally and that destabilization of raft-dependent BCR signaling might be part of the mechanism for the Fc gamma RIIB1-mediated negative regulation. We tested this hypothesis and observed that preventing BCR raft localization is not the mechanism for this inhibition. Surprisingly, a fraction of Fc gamma RIIB1 is constitutively localized in the rafts and increases further after BCR + FcR coligation. SHIP is actively recruited to lipid rafts under negative stimulation conditions, and the majority of Fc gamma RIIB1-SHIP complexes localize to lipid rafts compared with non-raft regions of the plasma membrane. This suggested that this negative feedback loop is also initiated in the lipid rafts. Despite its basal localization to the rafts, Fc gamma RIIB1 did not become phosphorylated after BCR alone cross-linking and did not colocalize with the BCR that moves to rafts upon BCR engagement alone (positive signaling conditions), perhaps suggesting the existence of different subsets of rafts. Taken together, these data suggest that lipid rafts play a role in both the positive signaling via the BCR as well as the inhibitory signaling through Fc gamma RIIB1/SHIP.  相似文献   

9.
Evidence is growing that biological membranes contain lipid microdomains or "rafts" that may be involved in processes such as cellular signaling and protein trafficking. In this study, we have used atomic force microscopy to examine the behavior of rafts in supported lipid bilayers. We show that bilayers composed of equimolar dioleoylphosphatidylcholine and sphingomyelin spontaneously form rafts, which are detectable as raised features. A comparison of the extents of protrusion of the rafts in monolayers and bilayers indicates that the rafts in the two leaflets of the bilayer coincide. The rafts were observed both in the absence and presence of cholesterol (33 mol %). Cholesterol reduced raft protrusion presumably by increasing the thickness of the non-raft bilayer. PLAP (glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored protein placental alkaline phosphatase) was purified and shown to exist as a dimer. Following its incorporation into supported lipid bilayers, PLAP was found to be targeted efficiently to rafts, both in the absence and presence of cholesterol. We suggest that atomic force microscopy provides a powerful tool for the study of raft structure and properties.  相似文献   

10.
NMDA receptors (NMDARs) activation in the hippocampus and insular cortex is necessary for spatial memory formation. Recent studies suggest that localization of NMDARs to lipid rafts enhance their signalization, since the kinases that phosphorylate its subunits are present in larger proportion in lipid raft membrane microdomains. We sought to determine the possibility that NMDAR translocation to synaptic lipid rafts occurs during plasticity processes such as memory formation. Our results show that water maze training induces a rapid recruitment of NMDAR subunits (NR1, NR2A, NR2B) and PSD-95 to synaptic lipid rafts and decrease in the post-synaptic density plus an increase of NR2B phosphorylation at tyrosine 1472 in the rat insular cortex. In the hippocampus, spatial training induces selective translocation of NR1 and NR2A subunits to lipid rafts. These results suggest that NMDARs translocate from the soluble fraction of post-synaptic membrane (non-raft PSD) to synaptic lipid raft during spatial memory formation. The recruitment of NMDA receptors and other proteins to lipid rafts could be an important mechanism for increasing the efficiency of synaptic transmission during synaptic plasticity process.  相似文献   

11.
In this study we present data supporting that most CD38 is pre-assembled in a subset of Brij 98-resistant raft vesicles, which were stable at 37 degrees C, and have relatively high levels of Lck and the CD3-zeta subunit of T cell antigen receptor-CD3 complex in contrast with a Brij 98-soluble pool, where CD38 is associated with CD3-zeta, and Lck is not detected. Our data further indicate that following CD38 engagement, LAT and Lck are tyrosine phosphorylated exclusively in Brij 98-resistant rafts, and some key signaling components translocate into rafts (i.e. Sos and p85-phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase). Moreover, N-Ras results activated within rafts immediately upon CD38 ligation, whereas activated Erk was mainly found in soluble fractions with delayed kinetics respective to Ras activation. Furthermore, full phosphorylation of CD3-zeta and CD3-epsilon only occurs in rafts, whereas partial CD3-zeta tyrosine phosphorylation occurs exclusively in the soluble pool, which correlated with increased levels of c-Cbl tyrosine phosphorylation in the non-raft fractions. Taken together, these results suggest that, unlike the non-raft pool, CD38 in rafts is able to initiate and propagate several activating signaling pathways, possibly by facilitating critical associations within other raft subsets, for example, LAT rafts via its capacity to interact with Lck and CD3-zeta. Overall, these findings provide the first evidence that CD38 operates in two functionally distinct microdomains of the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

12.
13.
The neuronal glycine transporter GLYT2 is a plasma membrane protein that removes the neurotransmitter glycine from the synaptic cleft, thereby aiding the pre-synaptic terminal reloading and the termination of the glycinergic signal. Missense mutations in the gene encoding GLYT2 (SLC6A5) cause hyperekplexia in humans. The activity of GLYT2 seems to be highly regulated. In this report, we demonstrate that GLYT2 is associated with membrane rafts in the plasma membrane of brainstem terminals and neurons. The transporter is localized to Triton X-100-insoluble light synaptosomal membranes together with flotillin-1, a marker protein for membrane rafts, in a methyl-β-cyclodextrin (MβCD)-sensitive manner. In brainstem primary neurons, the GLYT2 punctuate pattern visualized by confocal microscopy was modified by cholesterol depletion with MβCD, unlike other non-raft neuronal markers. GLYT2-associated gold particles were observed by electron microscopy on purified rafts from brainstem synaptosomes. Furthermore, either in brainstem terminals and cultured neurons, the pharmacological reduction of the levels of raft components, cholesterol and sphingomyelin, impairs both the association of GLYT2 with membrane rafts and its transport activity. Thus, GLYT2 may require membrane raft location for optimal function, and therefore the lipid environment may constitute a new mechanism to modulate GLYT2.  相似文献   

14.
Lipid rafts are plasma membrane platforms mediating signal transduction pathways for cellular proliferation, differentiation and apoptosis. Here, we show that membrane fluidity was increased in HeLa cells following treatment with ginsenoside Rh2 (Rh2), as determined by cell staining with carboxy-laurdan (C-laurdan), a two-photon dye designed for measuring membrane hydrophobicity. In the presence of Rh2, caveolin-1 appeared in non-raft fractions after sucrose gradient ultracentrifugation. In addition, caveolin-1 and GM1, lipid raft landmarkers, were internalized within cells after exposure to Rh2, indicating that Rh2 might disrupt lipid rafts. Since cholesterol overloading, which fortifies lipid rafts, prevented an increase in Rh2-induced membrane fluidity, caveolin-1 internalization and apoptosis, lipid rafts appear to be essential for Rh2-induced apoptosis. Moreover, Rh2-induced Fas oligomerization was abolished following cholesterol overloading, and Rh2-induced apoptosis was inhibited following treatment with siRNA for Fas. This result suggests that Rh2 is a novel lipid raft disruptor leading to Fas oligomerization and apoptosis.  相似文献   

15.
We report for the first time the detection of membrane lipid rafts in mouse oocytes and cleaving preimplantation embryos. Cholera toxin β (CTβ), which binds to the raft-enriched ganglioside GM1, was selected to label rafts. In a novel application a Qdot reagent was used to detect CTβ labeling. This is the first reported use of nanocrystals in mammalian embryo imaging. Comparative membrane labeling with CTβ and lipophilic membrane dyes containing saturated or unsaturated aliphatic tails showed that the detection of GM1 in mouse oocytes and embryo membranes was consistent with the identification of cholesterol- and sphingolipid-enriched rafts in the cell membrane. Distribution of the GM1 was compared with the known distribution of non-raft membrane components, and disruption of membrane rafts with detergents confirmed the cholesterol dependence of GM1 on lipid raft labeling. Complementary functional studies showed that cholesterol depletion using methyl-β-cyclodextrin inhibited preimplantation development in culture. Our results show that the membranes of the mouse oocyte and zygote are rich in lipid rafts, with heterogeneous and stage-dependent distribution. In dividing embryos, the rafts were clearly associated with the cleavage furrow. At the morula stage, rafts were also apically enriched in each blastomere. In blastocysts, rafts were detectable in the trophectoderm layer, but could not be detected in the inner cell mass without prior fixation and permeabilization of the embryo. Lipid rafts and their associated proteins are, therefore, spatio-temporally positioned to a play a critical role in preimplantation developmental events.  相似文献   

16.
Fenestrations are transcellular pores in endothelial cells that facilitate transfer of substrates between blood and the extravascular compartment. In order to understand the regulation and formation of fenestrations, the relationship between membrane rafts and fenestrations was investigated in liver sinusoidal endothelial cells where fenestrations are grouped into sieve plates. Three dimensional structured illumination microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, internal reflectance fluorescence microscopy and two-photon fluorescence microscopy were used to study liver sinusoidal endothelial cells isolated from mice. There was an inverse distribution between sieve plates and membrane rafts visualized by structured illumination microscopy and the fluorescent raft stain, Bodipy FL C5 ganglioside GM1. 7-ketocholesterol and/or cytochalasin D increased both fenestrations and lipid-disordered membrane, while Triton X-100 decreased both fenestrations and lipid-disordered membrane. The effects of cytochalasin D on fenestrations were abrogated by co-administration of Triton X-100, suggesting that actin disruption increases fenestrations by its effects on membrane rafts. Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) depleted lipid-ordered membrane and increased fenestrations. The results are consistent with a sieve-raft interaction, where fenestrations form in non-raft lipid-disordered regions of endothelial cells once the membrane-stabilizing effects of actin cytoskeleton and membrane rafts are diminished.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Our earlier studies have shown that Kir2.x channels are suppressed by an increase in the level of cellular cholesterol, whereas cholesterol depletion enhances the activity of the channels. In this study, we show that Kir2.1 and Kir2.3 channels have double-peak distributions between cholesterol-rich (raft) and cholesterol-poor (non-raft) membrane fractions, indicating that the channels exist in two different types of lipid environment. We also show that whereas methyl--cyclodextrin-induced cholesterol depletion removes cholesterol from both raft and non-raft membrane fractions, cholesterol enrichment results in cholesterol increase exclusively in the raft fractions. Kinetics of both depletion-induced Kir2.1 enhancement and enrichment-induced Kir2.1 suppression correlate with the changes in the level of raft cholesterol. Furthermore, we show not only that cholesterol depletion shifts the distribution of the channels from cholesterol-rich to cholesterol-poor membrane fractions but also that cholesterol enrichment has the opposite effect. These observations suggest that change in the level of raft cholesterol alone is sufficient to suppress Kir2 activity and to facilitate partitioning of the channels to cholesterol-rich domains. Therefore, we suggest that partitioning to membrane rafts plays an important role in the sensitivity of Kir2 channels to cholesterol. ion channels; inward rectifiers; inwardly rectifying potassium channels  相似文献   

19.
Recent studies show that markers for lipid rafts are among the plasma membrane components most likely to be internalized independently of clathrin-coated pits, and there is evidence to suggest that lipid rafts may play a functional role in endocytic trafficking [1-5]. However, lipid rafts themselves are commonly defined purely in biochemical terms, by resistance to detergent extraction. The existence of rafts in live-cell membranes remains controversial [6-8], and their distribution relative to endocytic machinery has not been investigated. This study employs fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) to show that in the plasma membrane (PM) of living cells the glycosphingolipid GM1, labeled with cholera toxin B subunit (CTB) [9,10], is found at least in part within clusters that also include GPI-linked proteins. These clusters are cholesterol-dependent and exclude non-raft proteins such as transferrin receptor and so possess predicted properties of lipid rafts. This type of lipid raft is largely excluded from clathrin-positive regions of the PM. They are found within Caveolin-positive regions at the same concentration as at the rest of the cell surface. The data provide evidence for a model in which lipid rafts are distributed uniformly across most of the PM of nonpolarized cells but are prevented from entering clathrin-coated pits.  相似文献   

20.
The Src family tyrosine kinase Lck is essential for T cell development and T cell receptor (TCR) signaling. Lck is post-translationally fatty acylated at its N-terminus conferring membrane targeting and concentration in plasma membrane lipid rafts, which are lipid-based organisational platforms. Confocal fluorescence microscopy shows that Lck colocalizes in rafts with GPI-linked proteins, the adaptor protein LAT and Ras, but not with non-raft membrane proteins including the protein tyrosine phosphatase CD45. The TCR also associates with lipid rafts and its cross-linking causes coaggregation of raft-associated proteins including Lck, but not of CD45. Cross-linking of either the TCR or rafts strongly induces specific tyrosine phosphorylation of the TCR in the rafts. Remarkably, raft patching alone induces signalling events analogous to TCR stimulation, with the same dependence on expression of key TCR signalling molecules. Our results indicate a mechanism whereby TCR engagement promotes aggregation of lipid rafts, which facilitates colocalization of signaling proteins including Lck, LAT, and the TCR, while excluding CD45, thereby potentiating protein tyrosine phosphorylation and downstream signaling. We are currently testing this hypothesis as well as using imaging techniques such as fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) microscopy to study the dynamics of proteins and lipids in lipid rafts in living cells undergoing signaling events. Recent data show that the key phosphoinositide PI(4,5)P2 is concentrated in T cell lipid rafts and that on stimulation of the cells it is rapidly converted to PI(3,4,5)P3 and diacylglycerol within rafts. Thus rafts are hotspots for both protein and lipid signalling pathways.  相似文献   

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