Fusion pores serve as an effective mechanism to connect intracellular organelles and release vesicle contents during exocytosis. A complex lipid rearrangement takes place as membranes approximate, bend, fuse, and establish a traversing water channel to define the fusion pore, linking initially isolated chambers. Thermodynamically, the process is unfavorable and thought to be mediated by specialized proteins. In this work, we have developed a reaction coordinate to induce fusion pores from initially flat and parallel lipid bilayers and we have used it to describe the effects of the synaptotagmin-1 C2B domain during the process. We have obtained free-energy profiles of the whole lipid reorganization in biologically realistic membranes, going from planar and parallel bilayers through stalk hemifusion to water channel formation. Our results point to a lysine-rich polybasic region on synaptotagmin-1 C2B as the key to lipid reorganization control through the formation of phosphatidylinositol bisphosphate clusters that stabilize the fusion pore.
Today, it is widely accepted that intrinsic disorder
is strongly
related to the cell cycle, during mitosis, differentiation, and apoptosis.
Of particular interest are hybrid proteins possessing both structured
and unstructured domains that are critical in human health and disease,
such as α-synuclein. In this work, we describe how α-synuclein
interacts with the nascent fusion pore as it evolves toward expansion.
We unveil the key role played by its intrinsically disordered region
as a thermodynamic regulator of the nucleation-expansion energy barrier.
By analyzing a truncated variant of α-synuclein that lacks the
disordered region, we find that the landscape of protein interactions
with PIP2 and POPS lipids is highly altered, ultimately
increasing the energy cost for the fusion pore to transit from nucleation
to expansion. We conclude that the intrinsically disordered region
in full-length α-synuclein recognizes and allocates pivotal
protein:lipid interactions during membrane remodeling in the first
stages of the fusion pore.
Styrene-maleic acid copolymers have become an advantageous detergent-free alternative for membrane protein isolation. Since their discovery, experimental membrane protein extraction and purification by keeping intact their lipid environment has become...
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