2020
DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.aba5130
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Mapping bilayer thickness in the ER membrane

Abstract: In the plasma membrane and in synthetic membranes, resident lipids may laterally unmix to form domains of distinct biophysical properties. Whether lipids also drive the lateral organization of intracellular membranes is largely unknown. Here, we describe genetically encoded fluorescent reporters visualizing local variations in bilayer thickness. Using them, we demonstrate that long-chained ceramides promote the formation of discrete domains of increased bilayer thickness in the yeast ER, particularly in the fu… Show more

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Cited by 39 publications
(42 citation statements)
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“…To put this difference into some biological context, in the case of hexadecane this corresponds to roughly one entire a-helical turn (3.6 residues, 0.54 nm), a very common secondary structure conformation of transmembrane (TM) proteins. Interestingly, this difference is within the range of the observed difference between Golgi and Plasma Membrane proteins for vertebrates 39 or in the range of what is sufficient to alter the localization of synthetic TM peptides in the yeast ER 40 .…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 54%
“…To put this difference into some biological context, in the case of hexadecane this corresponds to roughly one entire a-helical turn (3.6 residues, 0.54 nm), a very common secondary structure conformation of transmembrane (TM) proteins. Interestingly, this difference is within the range of the observed difference between Golgi and Plasma Membrane proteins for vertebrates 39 or in the range of what is sufficient to alter the localization of synthetic TM peptides in the yeast ER 40 .…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 54%
“…The amino acid sequences of TM17 and TM27 were designed based on synthetic peptides previously used in GUV studies of membrane thickness (Kaiser et al, 2011). Similar WALP-GFP fusion proteins were successfully used for measurements of ER lipid heterogeneity in yeast cells (Prasad, Sliwa-Gonzalez, & Barral, 2020). The hydrophobic length of MBP-TM17, calculated using 1.5 Å rise per residue (Hildebrand, Preissner, & Frommel, 2004), matches well with the hydrophobic thickness of a DOPC bilayer (25.5 Å, and 26.8 Å, respectively) (Kucerka et al, 2005).…”
Section: S1r Forms Clusters In Giant Unilamellar Vesicles In Vitromentioning
confidence: 74%
“…The amino acid sequences of TM17 and TM27 were designed based on the synthetic peptides previously used in GUV studies of membrane thickness ( Kaiser et al, 2011 ). Similar WALP-GFP fusion proteins were successfully used for measurements of the ER lipid heterogeneity in yeast cells ( Prasad et al, 2020 ). The hydrophobic length of MBP-TM17, calculated using 1.5 Å rise per residue ( Hildebrand et al, 2004 ), matches well with the hydrophobic thickness of the DOPC bilayer (25.5 Å and 26.8 Å, respectively) ( Kučerka et al, 2006 ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%