The cell cytosol is crowded with macromolecules such as proteins, nucleic acids, and membranes. The consequences of such crowding remain unclear. How is the rate of a typical enzymatic reaction, involving a freely diffusing enzyme and substrate, affected by the presence of macromolecules of different sizes, shapes, and concentrations? Here, we mimic the cytosolic crowding in vitro, using dextrans and Ficolls, for the first time in a variety of sizes ranging from 15 to 500 kDa, in a concentration range 0-30% w/w. Alkaline phosphatase-catalyzed hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl phosphate (PNPP) was chosen as the model reaction. A pronounced decrease in the rate with increase in fractional volume occupancy of dextran is observed for larger dextrans (200 and 500 kDa) in contrast to smaller dextrans (15-70 kDa). Our results indicate that, at 20% w/w, smaller dextrans (15-70 kDa) reduce the initial rate moderately (1.4- to 2.4-fold slowing), while larger dextrans (>200 kDa) slow the reaction considerably (>5-fold). Ficolls (70 and 400 kDa) slow the reaction moderately (1.3- to 2.3-fold). The influence of smaller dextrans was accounted by a combination of increase in viscosity as sensed by PNPP and a minor offsetting increase in enzyme activity due to crowding. Larger dextrans apparently reduce the frequency of enzyme substrate encounter. The reduced influence of Ficolls is attributed to their compact and quasispherical shape, much unlike the dextrans.
The 18.5-kDa classic myelin basic protein (MBP) is an intrinsically disordered protein arising from the Golli (Genes of Oligodendrocyte Lineage) gene complex and is responsible for compaction of the myelin sheath in the central nervous system. This MBP splice isoform also has a plethora of post-translational modifications including phosphorylation, deimination, methylation, and deamidation, that reduce its overall net charge and alter its protein and lipid associations within oligodendrocytes (OLGs). It was originally thought that MBP was simply a structural component of myelin; however, additional investigations have demonstrated that MBP is multifunctional, having numerous protein-protein interactions with Ca 2+ -calmodulin, actin, tubulin, and proteins with SH3-domains, and it can tether these proteins to a lipid membrane in vitro. Here, we have examined cytoskeletal interactions of classic 18.5-kDa MBP, in vivo, using early developmental N19-OLGs transfected with fluorescently-tagged MBP, actin, tubulin, and zonula occludens 1 (ZO-1). We show that MBP redistributes to distinct 'membrane-ruffled' regions of the plasma membrane where it co-localizes with actin and tubulin, and with the SH3-domaincontaining proteins cortactin and ZO-1, when stimulated with PMA, a potent activator of the protein kinase C pathway. Moreover, using phospho-specific antibody staining, we show an increase in phosphorylated Thr98 MBP (human sequence numbering) in membrane-ruffled OLGs. CIHR Author ManuscriptCIHR Author Manuscript CIHR Author ManuscriptPreviously, Thr98 phosphorylation of MBP has been shown to affect its conformation, interactions with other proteins, and tethering of other proteins to the membrane in vitro. Here, MBP and actin were also co-localized in new focal adhesion contacts induced by IGF-1 stimulation in cells grown on laminin-2. This study supports a role for classic MBP isoforms in cytoskeletal and other protein-protein interactions during membrane and cytoskeletal remodeling in OLGs.
The 18.5 kDa isoform of myelin basic protein (MBP) is multifunctional and has previously been shown to have structural and phenomenological similarities with domains of other membrane- and cytoskeleton-associated proteins such as MARCKS (myristoylated alanine-rich C kinase substrate). Here, we have investigated whether 18.5 kDa MBP can sequester phosphatidylinositol-(4,5)-bis-phosphate (PI(4,5)P 2) in membranes, like MARCKS and other "PIPmodulins" do. Using fluorescence-quenching and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy, and model membranes containing BODIPY-FL- or proxyl-labeled PI(4,5)P 2, respectively, we have demonstrated that MBP laterally sequesters PI(4,5)P 2. The MBP-PI(4,5)P 2 interactions are electrostatic, partially cholesterol-dependent, and sensitive to phosphorylation, deimination, and Ca (2+)-CaM binding. Confocal microscopy of cultured oligodendrocytes also revealed patched colocalization of MBP and PI(4,5)P 2, indicating the spatial clustering of PI(4,5)P 2 in the plasma membrane. On the basis of these findings as well as the overwhelming convergence of functional properties, modifying enzymes, and interaction partners, we propose that MBP is mechanistically related to GAP-43, MARCKS, and CAP-23. During myelinogenesis, it may mediate calcium and phosphorylation-sensitive plasma membrane availability of PI(4,5)P 2. This regulation of PI(4,5)P 2 availability at the cell cortex may be coupled to the elaboration and outgrowth of the membranous cellular processes by oligodendrocytes.
L-Lysine displays new absorption and fluorescence features at high concentrations (~ 0.5 M) in aqueous medium. A new absorption peak was detected around ~ 270 nm (ε = 0.34 M-1 cm-1). Blue fluorescence (~ 435 nm) was visible on excitation at 355 nm. The above features which were concentration dependent are attributed to likely aggregates of L-lysine.
Myelin basic protein (MBP) is a highly post-translationally modified, multifunctional structural component of central nervous system myelin, adhering to phospholipid membranes and assembling cytoskeletal proteins, and has previously been shown to bind SH3 domains in vitro and tether them to a membrane surface [Polverini, E., et al. (2008) Biochemistry 47, 267-282]. Since molecular modeling shows that the Fyn-SH3 domain has a negative surface charge density even after binding the MBP ligand, we have investigated the influence of negative membrane surface charge and the effects of post-translational modifications to MBP on the interaction of the Fyn-SH3 domain with membrane-associated MBP. Using a sedimentation assay with multilamellar vesicles consisting of neutral phosphatidylcholine (PC) and negatively charged phosphatidylinositol (PI), we demonstrate that increasing the negative surface charge of the membrane by increasing the proportion of PI reduces the amount of Fyn-SH3 domain that binds to membrane-associated MBP, due to electrostatic repulsion. When one of the phosphoinositides, PI(4)P or PI(4,5)P(2) was substituted for PI in equal proportion, none of the Fyn-SH3 domain bound to MBP under the conditions that were used. Post-translational modifications of MBP which reduced its net positive charge, i.e., phosphorylation or arginine deimination, increased the degree of repulsion of Fyn-SH3 from the membrane surface, an effect further modulated by the lipid charge. This study suggests that changes in membrane negative surface charge due to protein or lipid modifications, which could occur during cell signaling, can regulate the binding of the Fyn-SH3 domain to membrane-associated MBP and thus could regulate the activity of Fyn at the oligodendrocyte membrane surface.
The onset of hen egg white lysozyme aggregation on exposure to alkaline pH of 12.2 and subsequent slow growth of soluble lysozyme aggregates (at 298 K) was directly monitored by steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy of covalently attached dansyl probe over a period of 24 h. The rotational correlation time accounting for tumbling of lysozyme in solution (40 lM) increased from $3.6 ns (in pH 7) to $40 ns on exposure to pH 12.2 over a period of 6 h and remained stable thereafter. The growth of aggregates was strongly concentration dependent, irreversible after 60 min and inhibited by the presence of 0.9 M L L-arginine in the medium. The day old aggregates were resistant to denaturation by 6 M guanidine AE HCl. Our results reveal slow segmental motion of the dansyl probe in day old aggregates in the absence of L L-arginine (0.9 M), but a much faster motion in its presence, when growth of aggregates is halted.
Myelin basic protein (MBP), specifically the 18.5 kDa isoform, is a peripheral membrane protein and a major component of mammalian central nervous system myelin. It is an intrinsically disordered and multifunctional protein that binds cytoskeletal and other cytosolic proteins to a membrane surface and thereby acquires ordered structure. These associations are modulated by post-translational modifications of MBP, as well as by interactions of MBP with Ca(2+)-calmodulin (CaM). Enzymatic deimination of usually six arginine residues to citrulline results in a decrease in the net positive charge of the protein from 19 to ≤13. This deiminated form is found in greater amounts in normal children and in adult patients with the demyelinating disease multiple sclerosis. In this paper, we examine the secondary structure of a calmodulin-binding domain, residues A141-L154, when associated with a lipid bilayer in recombinant murine 18.5 kDa forms rmC1 (unmodified) and rmC8 (pseudodeiminated). We demonstrate here by site-directed spin labeling and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy that the Y142-L154 segment in membrane-associated rmC1 forms an amphipathic α-helix, with high accessibility to O(2) and low accessibility to NiEDDA. In membrane-associated rmC8, this segment assumed a structure distorted from an α-helix. Spin-labeled residues in rmC1 in solution were more immobilized on binding Ca(2+)-CaM than those in rmC8. Furthermore, rmC8 was dissociated more readily from a lipid bilayer by Ca(2+)-CaM than was rmC1. These results confirm both a predicted induced ordering upon membrane association in a specific segment of 18.5 kDa MBP, and that this segment is a CaM-binding site, with both interactions weakened by deimination of residues outside of this segment. The deiminated form would be more susceptible to regulation of its membrane binding functions by Ca(2+)-CaM than the unmodified form.
There is a need for an intrinsic spectral probe to monitor key events like protein unfolding and aggregation in a rapid and unambiguous manner. Protein aggregation is an important issue, but ironically there is a dearth of simple techniques to directly detect the presence of aggregates in solution. We report here the hitherto undiscovered electronic absorption around 300-350 nm in aqueous solutions (pH 7) of human serum albumin (HA), calf thymus histone, and poly-L-lysine. The above spectra were significantly absent in controls like subtilisin carlsberg, mutant barstar, and lysozyme. The possibilities that Rayleigh scattering or impurities could account for the above spectra were checked and ruled out. Based on the analysis of available three-dimensional structures from PDB and our earlier work on the lysine amino acid, an intramolecular interaction between lysine side chains in close spatial proximity was deduced to be the origin for the above spectra. The utility of Lys-Lys interaction in detecting protein unfolding and aggregation in a lysine-rich protein like calf thymus histone using near-ultraviolet absorption is demonstrated.
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