The effect of physiologically relevant ceramide concentrations (< or = 4 mol %) in raft model membranes with a lipid composition resembling that of cell membranes, i.e., composed of different molar ratios of an unsaturated glycerophospholipid, sphingomyelin, and cholesterol (Chol) along a liquid-disordered-liquid-ordered tie line was explored. The application of a fluorescence multiprobe and multiparameter approach, together with multiple fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) pairs, in the well-characterized palmitoyl-oleoyl-phosphocholine (POPC)/palmitoyl-sphingomyelin (PSM)/Chol ternary mixture, revealed that low palmitoyl-ceramide (PCer) concentrations strongly changed both the biophysical properties and lipid lateral organization of the ternary mixtures in the low-to-intermediate Chol/PSM-, small raft size range (<25 mol % Chol). For these mixtures, PCer recruited up to three PSM molecules for the formation of very small ( approximately 4 nm) and highly ordered gel domains, which became surrounded by rafts (liquid-ordered phase) when Chol/PSM content increased. However, the size of these rafts did not change, showing that PCer did not induce the formation of large platforms or the coalescence of small rafts. In the high Chol/PSM-, large raft domains range (>33 mol % Chol), Chol completely abolished the effect of PCer by competing for PSM association. Lipid rafts govern the biophysical properties and lateral organization in these last mixtures.
To better understand how ceramide modulates the biophysical properties of the membrane, the interactions between palmitoyl-ceramide (PCer) and palmitoyl-sphingomyelin (PSM) were studied in the presence of the fluid phospholipid palmitoyl-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine (POPC) in membrane model systems. The use of two fluorescent membrane probes distinctly sensitive to lipid phases allowed a thorough biophysical characterization of the ternary system. In these mixtures, PCer recruits POPC and PSM in the fluid phase to form extremely ordered and compact gel domains. Gel domain formation by low PCer mol fraction (up to 12 mol %) is enhanced by physiological PSM levels (approximately 20-30 mol % total lipid). For higher PSM content, a three-phase situation, consisting of fluid (POPC-rich)/gel (PSM-rich)/gel (PCer-rich) coexistence, is clearly shown. To determine the fraction of each phase a quantitative method was developed. This allowed establishing the complete ternary phase diagram, which helps to predict PCer-rich gel domain formation and explains its enhancement through PSM/PCer interactions.
Glycan-protein interactions are emerging as important modulators of membrane protein organization and dynamics, regulating multiple cellular functions. In particular, it has been postulated that glycan-mediated interactions regulate surface residence time of glycoproteins and endocytosis. How this precisely occurs is poorly understood. Here we applied single-molecule-based approaches to directly visualize the impact of glycan-based interactions on the spatiotemporal organization and interaction with clathrin of the glycosylated pathogen recognition receptor dendritic cell-specific intercellular adhesion molecule-3-grabbing nonintegrin (DC-SIGN). We find that cell surface glycan-mediated interactions do not influence the nanoscale lateral organization of DC-SIGN but restrict the mobility of the receptor to distinct micrometer-size membrane regions. Remarkably, these regions are enriched in clathrin, thereby increasing the probability of DC-SIGN-clathrin interactions beyond random encountering. N-glycan removal or neutralization leads to larger membrane exploration and reduced interaction with clathrin, compromising clathrin-dependent internalization of virus-like particles by DC-SIGN. Therefore, our data reveal that cell surface glycan-mediated interactions add another organization layer to the cell membrane at the microscale and establish a novel mechanism of extracellular membrane organization based on the compartments of the membrane that a receptor is able to explore. Our work underscores the important and complex role of surface glycans regulating cell membrane organization and interaction with downstream partners.pathogen receptor DC-SIGN | clathrin-dependent endocytosis | STED nanoscopy | cell membrane compartmentalization | protein glycosylation
A uniquely sensitive method for ceramide domain detection allowed us to study in detail cholesterol-ceramide interactions in lipid bilayers with low (physiological) ceramide concentrations, ranging from low or no cholesterol (a situation similar to intracellular membranes, such as endoplasmic reticulum) to high cholesterol (similar to mammalian plasma membrane). Diverse fluorescence spectroscopy and microscopy experiments were conducted showing that for low cholesterol amounts ceramide segregates into gel domains that disappear upon increasing cholesterol levels. This was observed in different raft (sphingomyelin/cholesterol-containing) and non-raft (sphingomyelin-absent) membranes, i.e. mimicking different types of cell membranes. Cholesterol-ceramide interactions have been described mainly as raft sphingomyelin-dependent. Here sphingomyelin independence is demonstrated. In addition, ceramide-rich domains re-appear when either cholesterol is converted by cholesterol oxidase to cholestenone or the temperature is decreased. Ceramide is more soluble in cholesterol-rich fluid membranes than in cholesterol-poor ones, thereby increasing the chemical potential of cholesterol. Ceramide solubility depends on the average gel-fluid transition temperature of the remaining membrane lipids. The inability of cholestenone-rich membranes to dissolve ceramide gel domains shows that the cholesterol ordering and packing properties are fundamental to the mixing process. We also show that the solubility of cholesterol in ceramide domains is low. The results are rationalized by a ternary phospholipid/ceramide/cholesterol phase diagram, providing the framework for the better understanding of biochemical phenomena modulated by cholesterol-ceramide interactions such as cholesterol oxidase activity, lipoprotein metabolism, and lipid targeting in cancer therapy. It also suggests that the lipid compositions of different organelles are such that ceramide gel domains are not formed unless a stress or pathological situation occurs.Cholesterol (Chol) 3 is the most abundant sterol in mammalian plasma membrane and has unique biophysical properties (1, 2). Chol interacts with the high melting temperature (T m ) sphingolipids (SL) in the membrane, leading to the formation of SL/Chol-enriched microdomains (so-called lipid rafts). These domains are in a more ordered state (usually referred to as liquid-ordered (l o ) phase) than the bulk membrane (liquid-disordered phase (l d )) (3, 4). Ceramide (Cer) is an SL formed in stress situations either from sphingomyelin (SM) in rafts or synthesized de novo by serine palmitoyltransferase and ceramide synthase. Both of these processes can be induced by diverse stimuli (5). Cer-induced membrane alterations (e.g. raft fusion into large signaling platforms (6)) were proposed to be the mechanism by which this lipid mediates diverse cellular processes, namely apoptosis (7-10). Cer presents an unusually small polar headgroup and in general very high gel-fluid T m (e.g. for palmitoyl-Cer (PCer) it is ϳ90°C) (11)....
Edelfosine (1-O-octadecyl-2-O-methyl-sn-glycero-phosphocholine) and miltefosine (hexadecylphosphocholine) are synthetic alkylphospholipids (ALPs) that are reported to selectively accumulate in tumor cell membranes, inducing Fas clustering and activation on lipid rafts, triggering apoptosis. However, the exact mechanism by which these lipids elicit these events is still not fully understood. Recent studies propose that their mode of action might be related with alterations of lipid rafts biophysical properties caused by these lipid drugs. To achieve a clear understanding of this mechanism, we studied the effects of pharmacologically relevant amounts of edelfosine and miltefosine in the properties of model and cellular membranes. The influence of these molecules on membrane order, lateral organization, and lipid rafts molar fraction and size were studied by steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence methods, Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET), confocal and fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM). We found that the global membrane and lipid rafts biophysical properties of both model and cellular membranes were not significantly affected by both the ALPs. Nonetheless, in model membranes, a mild increase in membrane fluidity induced by both alkyl lipids was detected, although this effect was more noticeable for edelfosine than miltefosine. This absence of drastic alterations shows for the first time that ALPs mode of action is unlikely to be directly linked to alterations of lipid rafts biophysical properties caused by these drugs. The biological implications of this result are discussed in the context of ALPs effects on lipid metabolism, mitochondria homeostasis modulation, and their relationship with tumor cell death.
The proto‐oncogene tyrosine‐protein kinase Src is a key element of signaling cascades involved in the invasive and metastasis‐forming capacity of cancer cells. While membrane tyrosine‐kinase receptors are known to dimerize, Src is classified as a non‐receptor kinase and assumed to remain always monomeric. Here we demonstrate the formation of stable dimers by the first domains of myristoylated Src previously shown to be sufficient for Src trafficking. Src dimers fused to green fluorescent protein (GFP) on supported lipid bilayers were identified using single‐molecule photobleaching experiments. Competition with a protein containing only native Src domains without GFP confirms that dimerization is a previously overlooked intrinsic property of Src. Dimerization is concomitant to membrane binding by the myristoylated forms of Src and may constitute a new regulation layer for the Src oncogene.
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