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Exploring the interactions of gliadins with model membranes: Effect of confined geometry and interfaces
Authors:Amélie Banc  Bernard Desbat  Denis Renard  Yves Popineau  Cécile Mangavel  Laurence Navailles
Institution:1. Université Bordeaux‐1 CNRS, Centre de Recherche Paul‐Pascal, 115 avenue A. Schweitzer, F‐33600 Pessac, France;2. Université Bordeaux‐1, Laboratoire de Chimie et Biologie des Membranes et Nanoobjets, UMR 5248‐CNRS, ENITAB, 2 rue Robert Escarpit, F‐33607 Pessac, France;3. UR1268 Biopolymères Interactions Assemblages, INRA, F‐44300 Nantes, France
Abstract:Mechanisms leading to the assembly of wheat storage proteins into proteins bodies within the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) of endosperm cells are unresolved today. In this work, physical chemistry parameters which could be involved in these processes were explored. To model the confined environment of proteins within the ER, the dynamic behavior of γ‐gliadins inserted inside lyotropic lamellar phases was studied using FRAP experiments. The evolution of the diffusion coefficient as a function of the lamellar periodicity enabled to propose the hypothesis of an interaction between γ‐gliadins and membranes. This interaction was further studied with the help of phospholipid Langmuir monolayers. γ‐ and ω‐gliadins were injected under DMPC and DMPG monolayers and the two‐dimensional (2D) systems were studied by Brewster angle microscopy (BAM), polarization modulation infrared reflection‐absorption spectroscopy (PM‐IRRAS), and surface tension measurements. Results showed that both gliadins adsorbed under phospholipid monolayers, considered as biological membrane models, and formed micrometer‐sized domains at equilibrium. However, their thicknesses, probed by reflectance measurements, were different: ω‐gliadins aggregates displayed a constant thickness, consistent with a monolayer, while the thickness of γ‐gliadins aggregates increased with the quantity of protein injected. These different behaviors could find some explanations in the difference of aminoacid sequence distribution: an alternate repeated ‐ unrepeated domain within γ‐gliadin sequence, while one unique repeated domain was present within ω‐gliadin sequence. All these findings enabled to propose a model of gliadins self‐assembly via a membrane interface and to highlight the predominant role of wheat prolamin repeated domain in the membrane interaction. In the biological context, these results would mean that the repeated domain could be considered as an anchor for the interaction with the ER membrane and a nucleus point for the formation and growth of protein bodies within endosperm cells. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 91: 610–622, 2009. This article was originally published online as an accepted preprint. The “Published Online” date corresponds to the preprint version. You can request a copy of the preprint by emailing the Biopolymers editorial office at biopolymers@wiley.com
Keywords:wheat prolamins  protein bodies  lamellar phase  langmuir film  self‐assembly
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