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School of Biological Sciences, University of Southampton, Southampton, United Kingdom
Correspondence: Address reprint requests to Prof. A. G. Lee, School of Biological Sciences, University of Southampton, Southampton, SO16 7PX, UK. Tel.: 44-0-2380-594331; Fax: 44-0-2380-594459; E-mail: agl{at}soton.ac.uk.
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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-helices, like those in KcsA (1
Studies of the solvation of water soluble proteins by water have emphasized the importance of solvation in defining the structure and function of such proteins (13
). Although some water molecules are bound in cavities on the protein surface, others interact less specifically with rather featureless regions of the surface. Water molecules in the hydration shell around a protein have properties that differ significantly from those of the bulk water, the effects of the protein extending only to one or two shells of water molecules around the protein (13
,14
). Effects of water on the structure and function of water soluble proteins have generally been interpreted in terms of the interactions between the protein and its surrounding hydration shell, rather than in terms of the material properties of bulk water (13
). In contrast, a wide range of experiments with membrane proteins have been interpreted in terms of models in which changes in membrane protein structure and function are related to changes in the material properties of the bulk lipid bilayer (for reviews see Lee (2
) and McIntosh and Simon (15
)). For example, effects of hydrophobic mismatch between a lipid bilayer and a membrane protein have been considered in terms of models of this general type (16
19
).
The simplest model for a membrane protein in a lipid bilayer is one where the membrane protein has a smooth, featureless surface and the lipid bilayer is an elastic continuum extending right up to the surface. When the hydrophobic thickness of the protein is less than that of the undistorted lipid bilayer, hydrophobic matching can be achieved by stretching the lipid bilayer around the protein and, conversely, when the hydrophobic thickness of the protein is greater than that of the undistorted lipid bilayer, hydrophobic matching can be achieved by compressing the lipid bilayer around the protein (Fig. 1). The work required to stretch or compress the lipid bilayer can be calculated in terms of mechanical properties of the undistorted lipid bilayer such as the isothermal area expansion/compression modulus, the bilayer bending modulus, and the spontaneous radius of curvature of the bilayer (16
19
). Of course, real membrane proteins do not have smooth featureless surfaces; the transmembrane surface of a multihelix membrane protein is rough, containing cavities of various shapes and sizes, ranging from small gaps to large crevices. As described above, the lipid molecules in contact with the protein surface, commonly referred to as the boundary or annular lipids, are perturbed by the protein, and so will have material properties different from those of the lipid molecules not in contact with the protein surface, referred to as the bulk lipids. The question then arises as to the relative importance of the lipid annulus and the bulk lipid for membrane protein structure and function. In particular, are the physical properties of the bulk lipid bilayer transmitted via the annular lipids to a membrane protein or is a membrane protein responsive only to the properties of the annular lipids?
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Fluorescence quenching studies with phospholipids containing brominated fatty acyl chains provide a powerful technique for probing lipid-protein interactions (21
25
). Quenching of Trp fluorescence by brominated phospholipids is short range so that only a brominated lipid molecule bound close to a Trp residue can quench its fluorescence (26
). This means that the level of quenching of the Trp fluorescence of a membrane protein reconstituted into a mixture of brominated and nonbrominated lipids depends on the binding constant of the protein for the brominated lipid relative to that of the nonbrominated lipid (26
). The technique has been applied to the mechanosensitive channel of large conductance (MscL) from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (25
,26
). The wild-type protein contains no Trp residues, allowing the introduction of single Trp residues into areas of interest on the protein. In the mutant F80W a Trp residue is located in the middle of the lipid bilayer where its fluorescence will be quenched by brominated lipid molecules in either monolayer of the lipid bilayer (Fig. 2). In mutants L69W and Y87W, Trp residues are located on the periplasmic and cytoplasmic sides of MscL, respectively, and fluorescence will only be quenched by brominated lipid molecules on the corresponding sides of the lipid bilayer (Fig. 2).
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| EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES |
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DE3)pLysS transformants carrying the pET-19b plasmid (Novagen, Madison, WI) with the mscL gene were generally grown in 6 L Luria broth to mid-log phase (OD600 = 0.6) and then induced for 3 h in the presence of isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside (1.0 mM). MscL was purified as described by Powl et al. (26
Fluorescence measurements
Purified MscL was reconstituted into lipid bilayers by mixing lipid and MscL in cholate followed by dilution of 250 µl of the detergent-lipid-protein mixture into 2.75 ml buffer (20 mM Hepes, 100 mM KCl, 1 mM EGTA, at pH 7.2) to decrease the concentration of cholate below its critical micelle concentration, as described in Powl et al. (26
). The final protein concentration was 1 µM, based on a molecular weight of 93,000 for the MscL pentamer, and the molar ratio of lipid/MscL pentamer was 500:1. Fluorescence was recorded on an SLM 8000C fluorimeter (Urbana, IL) with excitation at 280 nm, at 25°C. Fluorescence emission spectra were corrected for light scatter by subtraction of a blank consisting of lipid alone in buffer. The quoted values for fluorescence emission intensity are the averages of duplicate measurements from two separate reconstitutions.
Analysis of fluorescence quenching results
Quenching of Trp fluorescence in a mixture of a brominated phospholipid with the corresponding nonbrominated phospholipid was fitted to the following equation to give the value of n, the number of lipid binding sites on MscL from which the fluorescence of the Trp residue can be quenched (21
,28
).
![]() | (1) |
Here Fo and Fmin are the fluorescence intensities for MscL in nonbrominated and in brominated lipid, respectively, and F is the fluorescence intensity in the phospholipid mixture when the mol fraction of brominated lipid is xBr. For the mutants L69W, F80W, and Y87W n was found to be independent of fatty acyl chain lengths and to have values of 2.1 ± 0.15, 2.5 ± 0.1, and 1.9 ± 0.15, respectively.
In a mixture of a nonbrominated lipid A and a brominated lipid B, an equilibrium will be established at each lattice site:
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![]() | (2) |
Fluorescence quenching in the mixture is described by the equation
![]() | (3) |
![]() | (4) |
Relative binding constants were determined from fluorescence quenching plots of the MscL mutants in mixtures of di(Br2C18:0)PC with di(C12:0)PC, di(C14:1)PC, di(C16:1)PC, di(C18:1)PC, di(C20:1)PC, di(C22:1)PC, or di(C24:1)PC and from mixtures of di(C18:1)PC with the corresponding brominated lipid. Equations 1 and 3 were fitted to the experimental data using the nonlinear least-squares routine in the SigmaPlot package (SPSS, Chicago, IL).
Gradient centrifugation
Gradient centrifugation was used to characterize the reconstituted preparation. For the sample containing a 100:1 molar ratio of lipid/MscL pentamer, di(C18:1)PC (9.12 µmols) was mixed with rhodamine-labeled phosphatidylethanolamine (0.48 µmols) in chloroform and dried onto the walls of a glass vial. The lipid mixture was resuspended in buffer (1.6 ml; 20 mM Hepes, 100 mM KCl, 1 mM EGTA, pH 7.2) containing 15 mM cholate and sonicated to clarity in a sonication bath. F80W (8.93 mg) was added and the mixture incubated at 25°C for 15 min. The sample was then dialyzed at 4°C against two lots of buffer (500 ml; 20 mM Hepes, 100 mM KCl, 1 mM EGTA, pH 7.2) for a total of 16 h. Samples of dialysate (1.5 ml) were then loaded onto sucrose gradients containing the following solutions of sucrose (w/v) in the above buffer: 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, and 60%; the 60% sucrose solution also contained 0.05% (w/v) Triton X-100. Samples were spun at 80,000 x g for 18 h at 4°C and then 1.5 ml fractions were collected from the gradients and analyzed for lipid and protein by, respectively, absorbance at 570 nm and BioRad (Hercules, CA) protein assay. Similar protocols were used for samples with a lower molar ratio of lipid/protein except that for samples at 30:1 and 20:1 molar ratios of lipid/MscL pentamer a lipid mixture containing 20 mol % of rhodamine-labeled phosphatidylethanolamine was used to allow for accurate determination of lipid amounts.
| RESULTS |
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Fluorescence quenching curves for L69W in mixtures of di(Br2C18:0)PC and phosphatidylcholines of chain lengths of C12, C16, C18, and C22 are shown in Fig. 3 A. The curves are all very similar, showing that all these lipids bind to the periplasmic side of MscL with a similar affinity. In contrast, for Y87W fluorescence quenching is more marked in mixtures of di(C12:0)PC and di(Br2C18:0)PC at intermediate mol fractions of di(Br2C18:0)PC than in mixtures of di(C16:1)PC and di(Br2C18:0)PC, showing that di(C12:0)PC binds to the cytoplasmic side of MscL with an affinity less than that for di(C16:1)PC (Fig. 3 B). Similarly, fluorescence quenching for Y87W is more marked in mixtures of di(C22:1)PC and di(Br2C18:0)PC at intermediate mol fractions of di(Br2C18:0)PC than in mixtures of di(C16:1)PC and di(Br2C18:0)PC, showing that di(C22:1)PC also binds to the cytoplasmic side of MscL with an affinity less than that for di(C16:1)PC. Quenching profiles for other chain-length lipids were intermediate between those shown in Fig. 3 B. Data were fitted to Eq. 3, giving the relative binding constants plotted in Fig. 4. Lipid binding constants clearly vary more with chain length on the cytoplasmic than on the periplasmic side of MscL.
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-helix (29
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F80W was reconstituted into bilayers of di(C18:1)PC at various molar ratios of di(C18:1)PC/MscL. A plot of Trp fluorescence intensity as a function of molar ratio suggests that a minimum of
4050 lipid molecules per MscL pentamer are required for complete incorporation into the bilayer (Fig. 8). A similar estimate is suggested from experiments measuring fluorescence quenching in bilayers of di(Br2C18:0)PC where incorporation of MscL into the bilayer leads to fluorescence quenching (Fig. 8).
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0.7 and does not change significantly over the molar ratio range 50:1500:1 (Table 2).
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| DISCUSSION |
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If hydrophobic matching is achieved solely by distortion of the lipid bilayer, and if the protein surface is assumed to be smooth and featureless (Fig. 1), then the effects of lipid chain length on lipid binding would be expected to be the same on the two sides of a symmetric membrane. Using the mutants L69W and Y87W (Fig. 2) it is possible to measure, separately, relative lipid binding constants on the periplasmic and cytoplasmic sides of MscL. As shown in Figs. 4 and 6, the chain-length dependencies of lipid binding detected by the mutants L69W and Y87W are distinctly different. These results suggests either that the chain-length dependence of binding at each lipid binding site on MscL is different, or that the chain-length dependence of lipid binding is different on the two sides of the membrane. Experiments changing the brominated lipid species suggest that the latter is more likely. The circumference of the transmembrane domain of the MscL pentamer can be estimated from the crystal structure (35
) to be
135 Å, which, together with a diameter for a lipid molecule of 9.4 Å, suggests that
30 lipid molecules are required to form a complete bilayer shell around the protein, giving approximately three lipid binding sites per monomer on each side of the membrane. The number of lipid binding sites from which the fluorescence of a Trp residue in MscL can be quenched (n in Eq. 1) is
2. If the relative lipid binding constants are the same at these two sites, the same binding constant for lipid X relative to di(C18:1)PC will be obtained from experiments with mixtures of di(Br2C18:1)PC and lipid X, and from experiments with mixtures of di(C18:1)PC and brominated lipid X. However, if the two sites have different relative affinities for lipid X and di(C18:1)PC, the results obtained from the two sets of experiments will be different (25
). For example, if the first site has a higher affinity for lipid X than for di(C18:1)PC and the second site has a higher affinity for di(C18:1)PC than for lipid X, experiments with brominated lipid X will be dominated by binding of lipid X with high affinity to the first site, returning a high binding constant for lipid X relative to di(C18:1)PC, whereas experiments with di(Br2C18:1)PC will be dominated by binding of di(Br2C18:1)PC with high affinity to the second site, returning a low binding constant for lipid X relative to di(C18:1)PC. In fact binding constants returned from the two sets of experiments agree within experimental error (Figs. 4 and 6) showing that the chain-length dependencies of binding at the two sites around the Trp residue in L69W are the same, as are those around the Trp residue in Y87W. A similar result was obtained previously for the sites around the Trp residue in F80W (26
). We conclude therefore that it is most likely that the different chain-length dependencies reported by L69W and Y87W reflect different chain-length dependencies of binding on the two sides of the membrane, with the chain-length dependence being more marked on the cytoplasmic than on the periplasmic side. This result suggests that a more complex model may be required to describe lipid-protein interactions than that provided by current theoretical models.
The chain-length dependencies of lipid binding to a number of
-helical membrane proteins have been shown to be less marked than expected if hydrophobic matching relied solely on distortion of the lipid bilayer around a rigid protein molecule (26
). Further, it has been shown that the chain-length dependencies of lipid binding to
-helical membrane proteins are less marked than that for binding to the ß-barrel protein OmpF (21
23
,26
). Given the relative ease of tilting of an
-helix in a lipid bilayer (30
32
), these results suggest that hydrophobic matching for
-helical proteins could involve tilting of transmembrane
-helices as well as distortion of the lipid bilayer. Distortion of
-helical membrane proteins as part of the process of hydrophobic matching would be consistent with the known effect of fatty acyl chain length on membrane protein function (2
). The data in Figs. 4 and 6 would then suggest that MscL distorts more easily on the periplasmic side than on the cytoplasmic side. Different responses to hydrophobic matching on the two sides of the membrane implies that hydrophobic matching for MscL involves bending of transmembrane
-helices because a simple tilting of a rigid helix would result in the same changes in hydrophobic thickness on the two sides of the protein. A molecular dynamics simulation of MscL in thin lipid bilayers detected bending in the second transmembrane
-helix (33
) and a normal mode analysis of MscL suggested that magnitudes of motion increased from the cytoplasmic to the periplasmic end of the helix (34
).
The observation that the lipid chain length giving strongest binding to MscL is approximately C16 (Figs. 4 and 6) is consistent with the hydrophobic thickness of MscL of 26 Å estimated from Trp scanning fluorescence studies since a bilayer of di(C16:1)PC has a hydrophobic thickness of
24 Å (27
).
The relative importance of annular and bulk lipid
To determine whether lipid-protein interactions are affected by the presence of bulk lipid in the membrane, mediated via the annular lipid molecules, we studied the effect of reducing the amount of bulk lipid. As shown in Table 2, binding constants for di(C12:0)PC remained constant on decreasing the molar ratio of lipid/MscL pentamer from 500:1 to 50:1. Although, as described above, the relative dimensions of the lipid and MscL molecules suggest that
30 lipid molecules are required to form a complete bilayer shell around the protein, if the distribution of lipid molecules between annular and bulk lipid not in contact with protein is close to random, then the molar ratio of lipid/MscL pentamer required to give a complete annular shell around each MscL pentamer would be somewhat >30:1 (see East et al. (11
)). This would be consistent with the data in Fig. 8 showing that complete incorporation of MscL into a lipid bilayer requires a molar ratio of lipid/MscL pentamer of
50:1. Over the lipid/MscL pentamer molar ratio range of 500:150:1 the number of lipid shells around each MscL pentamer will decrease from
7 to
1.5. With further decreases in the molar ratio of lipid/MscL pentamer the value of the relative binding constant for di(C12:0)PC increases toward 1, as it must do, since when all the lipid in the system is annular lipid, the proportion of lipid in the annulus that is di(C12:0)PC will be equal to the proportion of the total lipid in the system that is di(C12:0)PC.
The constancy of the binding constant for di(C12:0)PC over the lipid/MscL pentamer molar ratio range of 500:150:1 suggest either that the properties of the bulk lipid bilayer do not significantly affect the strength of binding of di(C12:0)PC to MscL or that the relevant properties of the bulk and annular lipids are the same. Arguing against the latter possibility is much evidence that suggests that the annular lipid molecules have properties that differ significantly from those of the bulk lipid molecules. For example, ESR studies suggest that the rotational mobilities of annular lipid molecules are impeded by interaction with the protein surface (36
). Similarly, molecular dynamics simulations suggest that fatty acyl chain and lipid headgroup conformations and mobilities for the annular lipid molecules differ from those of bulk lipid molecules, and that the effects of a membrane protein on the properties of the lipid molecules in a membrane are largely restricted to the annular lipids, the properties of the bulk lipids being largely unaffected (reviewed in Lee (37
)). Thus the mechanical properties of a lipid molecule on the surface of a membrane protein are unlikely to be the same as those of a bulk lipid molecule. It has been shown, for example, that the presence of cholesterol has a very large effect on the elastic properties of a lipid bilayer that can be understood in terms of different elastic properties for free lipid molecules and for lipid-cholesterol complexes (38
).
These results would then suggest that the strength of the lipid-protein interaction is dominated by direct interactions with the annular lipids, any effects of the bulk lipid bilayer on the interaction being small. If these results can be extended to effects on membrane protein function then they would suggest that the lipid annulus, by playing a dominant role in the interaction between a membrane protein and the surrounding lipid bilayer, will effectively buffer the membrane protein from changes in the properties of the bulk lipid bilayer.
| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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This work was financially supported by the Wellcome Trust.
| FOOTNOTES |
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Submitted on January 23, 2007; accepted for publication February 27, 2007.
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