0000000000012075
AUTHOR
Lydia Tome
Fluidizing the Membrane by a Local Anesthetic: Phenylethanol Affects Membrane Protein Oligomerization
The exact mechanism of action of anesthetics is still an open question. While some observations suggest specific anesthetic-protein interactions, nonspecific perturbation of the lipid bilayer has also been suggested. Perturbations of bilayer properties could subsequently affect the structure and function of membrane proteins. Addition of the local anesthetic phenylethanol (PEtOH) to model membranes and intact Escherichia coli cells not only affected membrane fluidity but also severely altered the defined helix-helix interaction within the membrane. This experimental observation suggests that certain anesthetics modulate membrane physical properties and thereby indirectly affect transmembran…
Genetic Systems for Monitoring Interactions of Transmembrane Domains in Bacterial Membranes
In recent years several systems have been developed to study interactions of TM domains within the inner membrane of the Gram-negative bacterium Escherichia coli. Mostly, a transmembrane domain of interest is fused to a soluble DNA-binding domain, which dimerizes in E. coli cytoplasm after interactions of the transmembrane domains. The dimeric DNA-binding domain subsequently binds to a promoter/operator region and thereby activates or represses a reporter gene. In 1996 the first bacterial system has been introduced to measure interactions of TM helices within a bacterial membrane, which is based on fusion of a transmembrane helix of interest to the DNA-binding domain of the Vibrio cholerae …
Fe- but not Mg-protophorphyrin IX binds to a transmembrane b-type cytochrome.
Transmembrane b-type cytochromes, which are crucially involved in electron transfer chains, bind one or more heme (Fe-protoporphyrin IX) molecules non-covalently. Similarly, chlorophylls are typically also non-covalently bound by several membrane integral polypeptides involved in photosynthesis. While both, chlorophyll and heme, are tetrapyrrole macrocycles, they have different substituents at the tetrapyrrole ring moiety. Furthermore, the central metal ion is Mg(2+) in chlorophyll and Fe(2+/3+) in heme. As heme and chlorophyll a have similar structures and might both be ligated by two histidine residues of a polypeptide chain, and as the local concentration of chlorophyll a might be up to …
A Ser residue influences the structure and stability of a Pro-kinked transmembrane helix dimer
AbstractWhen localized adjacent to a Pro-kink, Thr and Ser residues can form hydrogen bonds between their polar hydroxyl group and a backbone carbonyl oxygen and thereby modulate the actual bending angle of a distorted transmembrane α-helix. We have used the homo-dimeric transmembrane cytochrome b559′ to analyze the potential role of a highly conserved Ser residue for assembly and stabilization of transmembrane proteins. Mutation of the conserved Ser residue to Ala resulted in altered heme binding properties and in increased stability of the holo-protein, most likely by tolerating subtle structural rearrangements upon heme binding. The results suggest a crucial impact of an intrahelical Ser…
Plasmonic Nanosensors for Simultaneous Quantification of Multiple Protein–Protein Binding Affinities
Most of current techniques used for the quantification of protein-protein interactions require the analysis of one pair of binding partners at a time. Herein we present a label-free, simple, fast, and cost-effective route to characterize binding affinities between multiple macromolecular partners simultaneously, using optical dark-field spectroscopy and individual protein-functionalized gold nanorods as sensing elements. Our NanoSPR method could easily become a simple and standard tool in biological, biochemical, and medical laboratories.