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result(s) for
"Cell Membrane"
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A new antibiotic traps lipopolysaccharide in its intermembrane transporter
2024
Gram-negative bacteria are extraordinarily difficult to kill because their cytoplasmic membrane is surrounded by an outer membrane that blocks the entry of most antibiotics. The impenetrable nature of the outer membrane is due to the presence of a large, amphipathic glycolipid called lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in its outer leaflet
1
. Assembly of the outer membrane requires transport of LPS across a protein bridge that spans from the cytoplasmic membrane to the cell surface. Maintaining outer membrane integrity is essential for bacterial cell viability, and its disruption can increase susceptibility to other antibiotics
2
–
6
. Thus, inhibitors of the seven lipopolysaccharide transport (Lpt) proteins that form this transenvelope transporter have long been sought
7
–
9
. A new class of antibiotics that targets the LPS transport machine in
Acinetobacter
was recently identified. Here, using structural, biochemical and genetic approaches, we show that these antibiotics trap a substrate-bound conformation of the LPS transporter that stalls this machine. The inhibitors accomplish this by recognizing a composite binding site made up of both the Lpt transporter and its LPS substrate. Collectively, our findings identify an unusual mechanism of lipid transport inhibition, reveal a druggable conformation of the Lpt transporter and provide the foundation for extending this class of antibiotics to other Gram-negative pathogens.
A mechanism of lipid transport inhibition has been identified for a class of peptide antibiotics effective against resistant
Acinetobacter
strains, which may have applications in the inhibition of other Gram-negative pathogens.
Journal Article
Lipid Rafts As a Membrane-Organizing Principle
by
Lingwood, Daniel
,
Simons, Kai
in
Animals
,
bioactive properties
,
Biological and medical sciences
2010
Cell membranes display a tremendous complexity of lipids and proteins designed to perform the functions cells require. To coordinate these functions, the membrane is able to laterally segregate its constituents. This capability is based on dynamic liquid-liquid immiscibility and underlies the raft concept of membrane subcompartmentalization. Lipid rafts are fluctuating nanoscale assemblies of sphingolipid, cholesterol, and proteins that can be stabilized to coalesce, forming platforms that function in membrane signaling and trafficking. Here we review the evidence for how this principle combines the potential for sphingolipid-cholesterol self-assembly with protein specificity to selectively focus membrane bioactivity.
Journal Article
Structure and function of ER membrane contact sites with other organelles
2016
Key Points
The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) forms tight membrane contact sites (MCSs) with several organelles in animal cells and yeast. The function of MCSs between the ER and mitochondria and endosomes are summarized in this Review.
Electron microscopy studies reveal that although MCSs are less than 30 nm apart, the membranes do not fuse and each organelle maintains its identity. Ribosomes are excluded from the ER membrane at MCSs, and the distance between the ER and other membranes is close enough to suggest that the two organelles are tethered together by other proteins located on apposing membranes.
Live-cell fluorescence microscopy reveals that ER-organelle MCSs can remain stable while both organelles traffic through the cell on the cytoskeleton. Recently identified factors have been shown to regulate organelle trafficking through MCS formation.
ER–organelle MCSs regulate the lipid environment of the organelle membrane apposed to the ER. Lipid-synthesis proteins on the ER can modify lipids on the membrane of another organelle or on protein complexes. ER MCS may also transfer lipids between membranes.
ER–organelle MCSs are sites of dynamic Ca
2+
crosstalk. Organelles can sequester Ca
2+
released from the ER, which can regulate processes in these organelles. Additionally, ER Ca
2+
release may regulate protein complexes at ER MCS.
Mitochondria and endosomes undergo fission and fusion to, respectively, maintain their integrity and properly sort signalling receptors in the cell. ER–organelle MCSs define the position of fission for both mitochondria and endosomes, and the ER could have a variety of roles at those specific MCSs that are destined for fission.
Endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is typically associated with protein biogenesis. However, recent studies suggest that it additionally synchronizes and regulates a plethora of intracellular events owing to its ability to form tight membrane associations, so-called membrane contact sites (MCSs), with other organelles.
The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is the largest organelle in the cell, and its functions have been studied for decades. The past several years have provided novel insights into the existence of distinct domains between the ER and other organelles, known as membrane contact sites (MCSs). At these contact sites, organelle membranes are closely apposed and tethered, but do not fuse. Here, various protein complexes can work in concert to perform specialized functions such as binding, sensing and transferring molecules, as well as engaging in organelle biogenesis and dynamics. This Review describes the structure and functions of MCSs, primarily focusing on contacts of the ER with mitochondria and endosomes.
Journal Article
Structural basis of NINJ1-mediated plasma membrane rupture in cell death
2023
Eukaryotic cells can undergo different forms of programmed cell death, many of which culminate in plasma membrane rupture as the defining terminal event
1
–
7
. Plasma membrane rupture was long thought to be driven by osmotic pressure, but it has recently been shown to be in many cases an active process, mediated by the protein ninjurin-1
8
(NINJ1). Here we resolve the structure of NINJ1 and the mechanism by which it ruptures membranes. Super-resolution microscopy reveals that NINJ1 clusters into structurally diverse assemblies in the membranes of dying cells, in particular large, filamentous assemblies with branched morphology. A cryo-electron microscopy structure of NINJ1 filaments shows a tightly packed fence-like array of transmembrane α-helices. Filament directionality and stability is defined by two amphipathic α-helices that interlink adjacent filament subunits. The NINJ1 filament features a hydrophilic side and a hydrophobic side, and molecular dynamics simulations show that it can stably cap membrane edges. The function of the resulting supramolecular arrangement was validated by site-directed mutagenesis. Our data thus suggest that, during lytic cell death, the extracellular α-helices of NINJ1 insert into the plasma membrane to polymerize NINJ1 monomers into amphipathic filaments that rupture the plasma membrane. The membrane protein NINJ1 is therefore an interactive component of the eukaryotic cell membrane that functions as an in-built breaking point in response to activation of cell death.
Structural, biochemical and mutagenesis studies indicate that, in dying cells, the membrane protein NINJ1 assembles into filaments, disrupting the cell membrane.
Journal Article
The mystery of membrane organization: composition, regulation and roles of lipid rafts
by
Mayor, Satyajit
,
Sezgin, Erdinc
,
Levental, Ilya
in
631/45/287/1192
,
631/45/612/1237
,
631/57/2270
2017
Key Points
Cellular membranes are laterally heterogeneous and consist of transient and dynamic domains with varying properties, which prominently include ordered lipid-driven domains that are referred to as lipid (or membrane) rafts.
Membrane domains can be induced and regulated by a variety of interactions, which include specific lipid–lipid and lipid–protein interactions, bulk membrane properties, and interactions between membrane components and the underlying cytoskeleton.
Advanced microscopy and biochemistry techniques facilitate the study of membrane domains; however, these domains still elude direct
in vivo
visualization. The multiplicity of possible organizational states and their context-dependent nature most likely account for experimental inconsistencies.
Membrane rafts potentially have crucial physiological roles across cell types that range from immune cells to cancer cells.
Membrane domains are conserved throughout the domains of life, which supports their functional importance in biological systems.
Lipid rafts are relatively ordered membrane domains that are enriched in cholesterol and saturated lipids, and selectively recruit other lipids and proteins. They are dynamic and heterogeneous in composition and are thus challenging to visualize
in vivo
. New technologies are providing novel insights into the formation, organization and functions of these membrane domains.
Cellular plasma membranes are laterally heterogeneous, featuring a variety of distinct subcompartments that differ in their biophysical properties and composition. A large number of studies have focused on understanding the basis for this heterogeneity and its physiological relevance. The membrane raft hypothesis formalized a physicochemical principle for a subtype of such lateral membrane heterogeneity, in which the preferential associations between cholesterol and saturated lipids drive the formation of relatively packed (or ordered) membrane domains that selectively recruit certain lipids and proteins. Recent studies have yielded new insights into this mechanism and its relevance
in vivo
, owing primarily to the development of improved biochemical and biophysical technologies.
Journal Article
How cholesterol stiffens unsaturated lipid membranes
by
Heberle, Frederick A.
,
Ashkar, Rana
,
Barrera, Francisco N.
in
Antibiotics
,
area compressibility
,
BASIC BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
2020
Cholesterol is an integral component of eukaryotic cell membranes and a key molecule in controlling membrane fluidity, organization, and other physicochemical parameters. It also plays a regulatory function in antibiotic drug resistance and the immune response of cells against viruses, by stabilizing the membrane against structural damage. While it iswell understood that, structurally, cholesterol exhibits a densification effect on fluid lipid membranes, its effects on membrane bending rigidity are assumed to be nonuniversal; i.e., cholesterol stiffens saturated lipid membranes, but has no stiffening effect on membranes populated by unsaturated lipids, such as 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DOPC). This observation presents a clear challenge to structure–property relationships and to our understanding of cholesterol-mediated biological functions. Here, using a comprehensive approach—combining neutron spin-echo (NSE) spectroscopy, solid-state deuterium NMR (²H NMR) spectroscopy, and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations—we report that cholesterol locally increases the bending rigidity of DOPC membranes, similar to saturated membranes, by increasing the bilayer’s packing density. All three techniques, inherently sensitive to mesoscale bending fluctuations, show up to a threefold increase in effective bending rigidity with increasing cholesterol content approaching a mole fraction of 50%. Our observations are in good agreement with the known effects of cholesterol on the area-compressibility modulus and membrane structure, reaffirming membrane structure–property relationships. The current findings point to a scale-dependent manifestation of membrane properties, highlighting the need to reassess cholesterol’s role in controlling membrane bending rigidity over mesoscopic length and time scales of important biological functions, such as viral budding and lipid–protein interactions.
Journal Article
Inflammasome-activated gasdermin D causes pyroptosis by forming membrane pores
Caspase-mediated cleavage of gasdermin D, previously shown to mediate pyroptosis, acts by inducing oligomerization and pore formation in cell membranes.
Gasdermin-induced cell death
Pyroptosis, an inflammatory form of programmed cell death that is part of the innate immune response, is triggered by caspase-mediated cleavage of the inflammasome protein gasdermin D. Judy Lieberman and colleagues examine the underlying molecular mechanism for gasdermin functioning in pyroptosis. They present evidence that caspase 11 cleavage of gasdermin D, previously shown to mediate pyroptosis, induces oligomerization of the N-terminal domain and pore formation. Also in this issue of
Nature
, Feng Shao and colleagues show that the N-terminal domains of gasdermins D, A and A3 are cytotoxic because they disrupt cell membranes in both mammalian cells and artificially transformed bacteria through the formation of membrane pores.
Inflammatory caspases (caspases 1, 4, 5 and 11) are activated in response to microbial infection and danger signals. When activated, they cleave mouse and human gasdermin D (GSDMD) after Asp276 and Asp275, respectively, to generate an N-terminal cleavage product (GSDMD-NT) that triggers inflammatory death (pyroptosis) and release of inflammatory cytokines such as interleukin-1β
1
,
2
. Cleavage removes the C-terminal fragment (GSDMD-CT), which is thought to fold back on GSDMD-NT to inhibit its activation. However, how GSDMD-NT causes cell death is unknown. Here we show that GSDMD-NT oligomerizes in membranes to form pores that are visible by electron microscopy. GSDMD-NT binds to phosphatidylinositol phosphates and phosphatidylserine (restricted to the cell membrane inner leaflet) and cardiolipin (present in the inner and outer leaflets of bacterial membranes). Mutation of four evolutionarily conserved basic residues blocks GSDMD-NT oligomerization, membrane binding, pore formation and pyroptosis. Because of its lipid-binding preferences, GSDMD-NT kills from within the cell, but does not harm neighbouring mammalian cells when it is released during pyroptosis. GSDMD-NT also kills cell-free bacteria
in vitro
and may have a direct bactericidal effect within the cytosol of host cells, but the importance of direct bacterial killing in controlling
in vivo
infection remains to be determined.
Journal Article
Actin dynamics counteract membrane tension during clathrin-mediated endocytosis
2011
Kirchhausen and colleagues show that actin is required for clathrin-mediated endocytosis at membranes under tension—such as apical surfaces of polarized cells. Actin engages with Hip1R bound to clathrin light chain to complete the deformation of a clathrin-coated pit into an endocytic vesicle.
Clathrin-mediated endocytosis is independent of actin dynamics in many circumstances but requires actin polymerization in others. We show that membrane tension determines the actin dependence of clathrin-coat assembly. As found previously, clathrin assembly supports formation of mature coated pits in the absence of actin polymerization on both dorsal and ventral surfaces of non-polarized mammalian cells, and also on basolateral surfaces of polarized cells. Actin engagement is necessary, however, to complete membrane deformation into a coated pit on apical surfaces of polarized cells and, more generally, on the surface of any cell in which the plasma membrane is under tension from osmotic swelling or mechanical stretching. We use these observations to alter actin dependence experimentally and show that resistance of the membrane to propagation of the clathrin lattice determines the distinction between ‘actin dependent and ‘actin independent’. We also find that light-chain-bound Hip1R mediates actin engagement. These data thus provide a unifying explanation for the role of actin dynamics in coated-pit budding.
Journal Article
Fatty acid synthesis configures the plasma membrane for inflammation in diabetes
2016
Mice with macrophages deficient in fatty acid synthase exhibit lower levels of diabetes-related insulin resistance and inflammation, qualities that are restored on addition of exogenous cholesterol.
Cells must make fat to respond to fat
Dietary fat promotes chronic inflammation and insulin resistance. This involves the recruitment of macrophages to adipose tissue. This study shows that macrophage fatty acid synthase (FAS) is necessary for diet-induced inflammation. Deleting FAS from macrophages alters membrane order and composition of the macrophage, impairing retention of plasma membrane cholesterol and Rho GTPase trafficking required for cell adhesion, migration and activation. Hence, the absence of FAS prevents adipose macrophage recruitment, chronic inflammation and diet-induced insulin resistance in mice.
Dietary fat promotes pathological insulin resistance through chronic inflammation
1
,
2
,
3
. The inactivation of inflammatory proteins produced by macrophages improves diet-induced diabetes
4
, but how nutrient-dense diets induce diabetes is unknown
5
. Membrane lipids affect the innate immune response
6
, which requires domains
7
that influence high-fat-diet-induced chronic inflammation
8
,
9
and alter cell function based on phospholipid composition
10
. Endogenous fatty acid synthesis, mediated by fatty acid synthase (FAS)
11
, affects membrane composition. Here we show that macrophage FAS is indispensable for diet-induced inflammation. Deleting
Fasn
in macrophages prevents diet-induced insulin resistance, recruitment of macrophages to adipose tissue and chronic inflammation in mice. We found that FAS deficiency alters membrane order and composition, impairing the retention of plasma membrane cholesterol and disrupting Rho GTPase trafficking—a process required for cell adhesion, migration and activation. Expression of a constitutively active Rho GTPase, however, restored inflammatory signalling. Exogenous palmitate was partitioned to different pools from endogenous lipids and did not rescue inflammatory signalling. However, exogenous cholesterol, as well as other planar sterols, did rescue signalling, with cholesterol restoring FAS-induced perturbations in membrane order. Our results show that the production of endogenous fat in macrophages is necessary for the development of exogenous-fat-induced insulin resistance through the creation of a receptive environment at the plasma membrane for the assembly of cholesterol-dependent signalling networks.
Journal Article
The gasdermins, a protein family executing cell death and inflammation
2020
The gasdermins are a family of recently identified pore-forming effector proteins that cause membrane permeabilization and pyroptosis, a lytic pro-inflammatory type of cell death. Gasdermins contain a cytotoxic N-terminal domain and a C-terminal repressor domain connected by a flexible linker. Proteolytic cleavage between these two domains releases the intramolecular inhibition on the cytotoxic domain, allowing it to insert into cell membranes and form large oligomeric pores, which disrupts ion homeostasis and induces cell death. Gasdermin-induced pyroptosis plays a prominent role in many hereditary diseases and (auto)inflammatory disorders as well as in cancer. In this Review, we discuss recent developments in gasdermin research with a focus on mechanisms that control gasdermin activation, pore formation and functional consequences of gasdermin-induced membrane permeabilization.The gasdermin family of proteins has the capacity to form pores in the membrane, causing a pro-inflammatory lytic type of cell death called pyroptosis, This Review provides a comprehensive overview of the gasdermin family, the mechanisms that control their activation and their role in inflammatory disorders and cancer.
Journal Article