The lipid distribution of plasma membranes of eukaryotic cells is asymmetric and phospholipid scramblases disrupt this asymmetry by mediating the rapid, nonselective transport of lipids down their concentration gradients. As a result, phosphatidylserine is exposed to the outer leaflet of membrane, an important step in extracellular signaling networks controlling processes such as apoptosis, blood coagulation, membrane fusion and repair. Several TMEM16 family members have been identified as Ca2+-activated scramblases, but the mechanisms underlying their Ca2+-dependent gating and their effects on the surrounding lipid bilayer remain poorly understood. Here, we describe three high-resolution cryo-electron microscopy structures of a fungal scramblase from Aspergillus fumigatus, afTMEM16, reconstituted in lipid nanodiscs. These structures reveal that Ca2+-dependent activation of the scramblase entails global rearrangement of the transmembrane and cytosolic domains. These structures, together with functional experiments, suggest that activation of the protein thins the membrane near the transport pathway to facilitate rapid transbilayer lipid movement.
The two major classes of antidepressants, tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), inhibit neurotransmitter reuptake at synapses. They also have off-target effects on proteins other than neurotransmitter transporters, which may contribute to both desired changes in brain function and the development of side effects. Many proteins modulated by antidepressants are bilayer spanning and coupled to the bilayer through hydrophobic interactions such that the conformational changes underlying their function will perturb the surrounding lipid bilayer, with an energetic cost (ΔGdef) that varies with changes in bilayer properties. Here, we test whether changes in ΔGdef caused by amphiphilic antidepressants partitioning into the bilayer are sufficient to alter membrane protein function. Using gramicidin A (gA) channels to probe whether TCAs and SSRIs alter the bilayer contribution to the free energy difference for the gramicidin monomer⇔dimer equilibrium (representing a well-defined conformational transition), we find that antidepressants alter gA channel activity with varying potency and no stereospecificity but with different effects on bilayer elasticity and intrinsic curvature. Measuring the antidepressant partition coefficients using isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) or cLogP shows that the bilayer-modifying potency is predicted quite well by the ITC-determined partition coefficients, and channel activity is doubled at an antidepressant/lipid mole ratio of 0.02–0.07. These results suggest a mechanism by which antidepressants could alter the function of diverse membrane proteins by partitioning into cell membranes and thereby altering the bilayer contribution to the energetics of membrane protein conformational changes.
Because this spontaneous lipid translocation (flip-flop) tends to be very slow, cells facilitate the process with enzymes that catalyze the transmembrane movement and thereby regulate the transbilayer lipid distribution. Nonenzymatic membrane-spanning proteins with unrelated primary functions have also been found to accelerate lipid flip-flop in a nonspecific manner and by various hypothesized mechanisms. Using deuterated phospholipids, we examined the acceleration of flip-flop by gramicidin channels, which have well-defined structures and known functions, features that make them ideal candidates for probing the protein-membrane interactions underlying lipid flip-flop. To study compositionally and isotopically asymmetric proteoliposomes containing gramicidin, we expanded a recently developed protocol for the preparation and characterization of lipid-only asymmetric vesicles. Channel incorporation, conformation, and function were examined with small angle x-ray scattering, circular dichroism, and a stopped-flow spectrofluorometric assay, respectively. As a measure of lipid scrambling, we used differential scanning calorimetry to monitor the effect of gramicidin on the melting transition temperatures of the two bilayer leaflets. The two calorimetric peaks of the individual leaflets merged into a single peak over time, suggestive of scrambling, and the effect of the channel on the transbilayer lipid distribution in both symmetric 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine and asymmetric 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine/1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine vesicles was quantified from proton NMR measurements. Our results show that gramicidin increases lipid flip-flop in a complex, concentration-dependent manner. To determine the molecular mechanism of the process, we used molecular dynamics simulations and further computational analysis of the trajectories to estimate the extent of membrane deformation. Together, the experimental and computational approaches were found to constitute an effective means for studying the effects of transmembrane proteins on lipid distribution in both symmetric and asymmetric model membranes.
Fluorinated alcohols (fluoroalcohols) have physicochemical properties that make them excellent solvents of peptides, proteins, and other compounds. Like other alcohols, fluoroalcohols also alter membrane protein function and lipid bilayer properties and stability. Thus, the questions arise: how potent are fluoroalcohols as lipid-bilayer-perturbing compounds, could small residual amounts that remain after adding compounds dissolved in fluoroalcohols alter lipid bilayer properties sufficiently to affect membranes and membrane protein function, and do they behave like other alcohols? To address these questions, we used a gramicidin-based fluorescence assay to determine the bilayer-modifying potency of selected fluoroalcohols: trifluoroethanol (TFE), HFIP, and perfluoro-tert-butanol (PFTB). These fluoroalcohols alter bilayer properties in the low (PFTB) to high (TFE) mM range. Using the same assay, we determined the bilayer partitioning of the alcohols. When referenced to the aqueous concentrations, the fluoroalcohols are more bilayer perturbing than their nonfluorinated counterparts, with the largest fluoroalcohol, PFTB, being the most potent and the smallest, TFE, the least. When referenced to the mole fractions in the membrane, however, the fluoroalcohols have equal or lesser bilayer-perturbing potency than their nonfluorinated counterparts, with TFE being more bilayer perturbing than PFTB. We compared the fluoroalcohols' molecular level bilayer interactions using atomistic molecular dynamics simulations and showed how, at higher concentrations, they can cause bilayer breakdown using absorbance measurements and P nuclear magnetic resonance.
Membrane protein functions can be altered by subtle changes in the host lipid bilayer physical properties. Gramicidin channels have emerged as a powerful system for elucidating the underlying mechanisms of membrane protein function regulation through changes in bilayer properties, which are reflected in the thermodynamic equilibrium distribution between nonconducting gramicidin monomers and conducting bilayer-spanning dimers. To improve our understanding of how subtle changes in bilayer thickness alter the gramicidin monomer and dimer distributions, we performed extensive atomistic molecular dynamics simulations and fluorescence-quenching experiments on gramicidin A (gA). The free-energy calculations predicted a nonlinear coupling between the bilayer thickness and channel formation. The energetic barrier inhibiting gA channel formation was sharply increased in the thickest bilayer (1,2-dierucoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine). This prediction was corroborated by experimental results on gramicidin channel activity in bilayers of different thickness. To further explore the mechanism of channel formation, we performed extensive unbiased molecular dynamics simulations, which allowed us to observe spontaneous gA dimer formation in lipid bilayers. The simulations revealed structural rearrangements in the gA subunits and changes in lipid packing, as well as water reorganization, that occur during the dimerization process. Together, the simulations and experiments provide new, to our knowledge, insights into the process and mechanism of gramicidin channel formation, as a prototypical example of the bilayer regulation of membrane protein function.
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