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Membrane Fusion
Chapter 8 of Yeagle.Majority of work is taken from papers by B. Lentz at UNCCH (Biochemistry)
Membrane fusion is ubiquitous and critical process in biology:•Cellular trafficking and compartmentalization•Import of food•Export of waste•Intracellular communication•Sexual reproduction•Cell division•Viral fusion
Protein Mediated
tubes
Lipid segregation
Fission/fusion
Lipid mixing
Mechanisms of Membrane Fusion: Fusion Pore is made of (A) protein and lipid, (B) lipid only
(B) Is the accepted pathway, this does not imply proteins are NOT involved. Proteins are involved, but they do not line the fusion Pore
Detailed molecular mechanism is still unclear for fusion.
Secretory Vesicles and Viral Fusion
Today: Focus just on the lipids and bilayer fusion without the aid of proteins.
Research of the last 15 years has shown a close association between membrane fusion and inverted phase formation.
Both TH and fusion can be affected by the physical properties of the lipids and the system:•Temp•pH•Lipid composition, lipids of negative or positive spontaneous curvature•Cation binding to lipids
Fusion Mechanisms are believed to proceed though intermediate structures that are also observed in the L to HII phase transition
“Stalk” Hypothesis
Relationship between Fusion and Inverted Phase Formation
TMC – trans monolayer contactETMC – extended trans monolayer contact
Fusion is a necessary step in the lamellar to inverted phase transition
So, if this is true, the physical properties that affected the phase transition should also affect fusion similarly
What are the 2 competing forces?
Two processes occur during fusion:1) Lipid mixing of different leaflets2) Content Mixing
Content Mixing is true Fusion
•If Stalks form, lipids can mix.•Contents only mix upon FP (Fusion Pore) formation
2 competing forces: curvature energy,Interstitial chain packing
Spontaneous curvature of a mixture of lipids is the mole-fraction weighted average of the spontaneous curvatures
1997 model
Lipid Effects.
Negative Spontaneous Curvature – PE, anything that lowers TH also facilitates fusion
Positive Spontaneous Curvature – LPC, anything that raises TH also inhibits fusion
Phospholipase C can induce membrane fusion because it’s in vivo reaction is to produce DAG. DAG has small head group compared to chain, hence, negative spontaneous curvature.
Conversely, production of LPC, lysophosphatidylcholine will inhibit fusion.
Additionally, sphingomylenase action of sphingomyelin to produce ceremide can also affect fusion. Ceremide seems to induce leakage instead of fusion unless cholesterol is present.
Arachidonic acid will also promote fusion
All of this work is done with PEG induced fusion
PEG will force lipid bilayers together in close proximity to induce fusion. Factors that can be affected to induce fusion:•Bilayer dehydration•Imperfect lipid packing•Local alterations in bilayer curvature•Outer leaflet packing defects•Elastic free energy•Changes in membrane fluidity•Locally induced non-bilayer phases
Assays to monitor lipid mixing versus content mixing:
Fluorescence
HTPS at pH 8.0(8-hydroxy-pyrene-1,3,6-trisulfonic acid)
Make other vessicle with pH 5.0,A decrease in fluorescence of HTPS indicates movement of protons, hence a small pore formed.
Tb3+ - DPA fluorescence increases upon interaction with DPA. Here an increase indicates content mixing.