| Calibrated Measurement of Gating-Charge Arginine Displacement in the KvAP Voltage-Dependent K Channel Cell, Volume 123, Issue 3, 4 November 2005, Pages 463-475 Vanessa Ruta, Jiayun Chen and Roderick MacKinnon Summary Voltage-dependent ion channels open and conduct ions in response to changes in cell-membrane voltage. The voltage sensitivity of these channels arises from the motion of charged arginine residues located on the S4 helices of the channel’s voltage sensors. In KvAP, a prokaryotic voltage-dependent K channel, the S4 helix forms part of a helical hairpin structure, the voltage-sensor paddle. We have measured the membrane depth of residues throughout the KvAP channel using avidin accessibility to different-length tethered biotin reagents. From these measurements, we have calibrated the tether lengths and derived the thickness of the membrane that forms a barrier to avidin penetration, allowing us to determine the magnitude of displacement of the voltage-sensor paddles during channel gating. Here we show that the voltage-sensor paddles are highly mobile compared to other regions of the channel and transfer the gating-charge arginines 15–20 Å through the membrane to open the pore. Summary | Full Text | PDF (747 kb) |
| Force Sensing by Mechanical Extension of the Src Family Kinase Substrate p130Cas Cell, Volume 127, Issue 5, 1 December 2006, Pages 1015-1026 Yasuhiro Sawada, Masako Tamada, Benjamin J. Dubin-Thaler, Oksana Cherniavskaya, Ryuichi Sakai, Sakae Tanaka and Michael P. Sheetz Summary How physical force is sensed by cells and transduced into cellular signaling pathways is poorly understood. Previously, we showed that tyrosine phosphorylation of p130Cas (Cas) in a cytoskeletal complex is involved in force-dependent activation of the small GTPase Rap1. Here, we mechanically extended bacterially expressed Cas substrate domain protein (CasSD) in vitro and found a remarkable enhancement of phosphorylation by Src family kinases with no apparent change in kinase activity. Using an antibody that recognized extended CasSD in vitro, we observed Cas extension in intact cells in the peripheral regions of spreading cells, where higher traction forces are expected and where phosphorylated Cas was detected, suggesting that the in vitro extension and phosphorylation of CasSD are relevant to physiological force transduction. Thus, we propose that Cas acts as a primary force sensor, transducing force into mechanical extension and thereby priming phosphorylation and activation of downstream signaling. Summary | Full Text | PDF (1193 kb) |
| Sorting of Streptavidin Protein Coats on Phase-Separating Model Membranes Biophysical Journal, Volume 95, Issue 5, 1 September 2008, Pages 2301-2307 Suliana Manley, Margaret R. Horton, Szymon Lecszynski and Alice P. Gast Abstract Heterogeneities in cell membranes due to the ordering of lipids and proteins are thought to play an important role in enabling protein and lipid trafficking throughout the secretory pathway and in maintaining cell polarization. Protein-coated vesicles provide a major mechanism for intracellular transport of select cargo, which may be sorted into lipid microdomains; however, the mechanisms and physical constraints for lipid sorting by protein coats are relatively unexplored. We studied the influence of membrane-tethered protein coats on the sorting, morphology, and phase behavior of liquid-ordered lipid domains in a model system of giant unilamellar vesicles composed of dioleoylphosphatidylcholine, sphingomyelin, and cholesterol. We created protein-coated membranes by forming giant unilamellar vesicles containing a small amount of biotinylated lipid, thereby creating binding sites for streptavidin and avidin proteins in solution. We found that individual tethered proteins colocalize with the liquid-disordered phase, whereas ordered protein domains on the membrane surface colocalize with the liquid-ordered phase. These observations may be explained by considering the thermodynamics of this coupled system, which maximizes its entropy by cosegregating ordered protein and lipid domains. In addition, protein ordering inhibits lipid domain rearrangement and modifies the morphology and miscibility transition temperature of the membrane, most dramatically near the critical point in the membrane phase diagram. This observation suggests that liquid-ordered domains are stabilized by contact with ordered protein domains; it also hints at an approach to the stabilization of lipid microdomains by cross-linked protein clusters or ordered protein coats. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (402 kb) |
Copyright © 1996 The Biophysical Society. All rights reserved.
Biophysical Journal, Volume 70, Issue 3, 1391-1401, 1 March 1996
doi:10.1016/S0006-3495(96)79697-2
Research Article
D.A. Noppl-Simson and D. Needham
Densely packed domains of membrane proteins are important structures in cellular processes that involve ligand-receptor binding, receptor-mediated adhesion, and macromolecule aggregation. We have used the biotin-avidin interaction at lipid vesicle surfaces to mimic these processes, including the influence of a surface grafted polymer, polyethyleneglycol (PEG). Single vesicles were manipulated by micropipette in solutions of fluorescently labeled avidin to measure the rate and give an estimate of the amount of avidin binding to a biotinylated vesicle as a function of surface biotin concentration and surface-grafted PEG as PEG-lipid. The rate of avidin adsorption was found to be four times less with 2 mol% PEG750 than for the unmodified surface, and 10 mol% PEG completely inhibited binding of avidin to biotin for a 2-min incubation. Using two micropipettes, an avidin-coated vesicle was presented to a biotinylated vesicle. In this vesicle-vesicle adhesion test, the accumulation of avidin in the contact zone was observed, again by using fluorescent avidin. More importantly, by controlling the vesicle membrane tension, this adhesion test provided a direct measure of the spreading pressure of the biotin-avidin-biotin cross-bridges confined in the contact zone. Assuming ideality, this spreading pressure gives the concentration of avidin cross-bridges in the contact zone. The rate of cross-bridge accumulation was consistent with the diffusion of the lipid-linked "receptors" into the contact zone. Once adherent, the membranes failed in tension before they could be peeled apart. PEG750 did not influence the mechanical equilibrium because it was not compressed in the contact zone, but it did perform an important function by eliminating all nonspecific adhesion. This vesicle-vesicle adhesion experiment, with a lower tension limit of 0.01 dyn/cm, now provides a new and useful method with which to measure the spreading pressures and therefore colligative properties of a range of membrane-bound macromolecules.