Title: H
1WHY LOOK FOR A PED HOMOLOG IN MAN?
- PED GENE PRODUCT IS MHC CLASS 1B MOLECULE Qa-2
- Qa-2 CONTROLS RATE OF EARLY CLEAVAGE DIVISION
- Qa-2 INFLUENCES SUBSEQUENT EMBRYO SURVIVAL
- HUMAN EMBRYOS HAVE VARIED CLEVAGE RATES
- FASTEST CLEVAGE RATES GIVE BEST PREGNANCY
OUTCOME - PED PHENOTYPE APPEARS TO EXIST IN MAN
- WE BELIEVE HLA-G IS THE HUMAN Qa-2 FUNCTIONAL
HOMOLOG
2Why use particle tracking/laser tweezers to track
HLA-G?
- HLA-G is its putative human functional homolog
of murine Qa-2 protein - There are good sequence and structural
homologies between the molecules - Neither has a cytoplasmic tail - How do they
send signals into the cell? - Qa-2 has a GPI-Linkage to the cell membrane and
is found in caveolae - HLA-G has no GPI linkage-localization in
membrane not reported - Can both molecules associate with other
components in the membrane - and still share a conserved signaling pathway?
- Can SPT/laser tweezers allow us to determine
location HLA-G in the - cell membrane by evaluating the behavior of
the molecule tagged with gold beads?
3Model of Phospholipid Bilayer making up cell
membrane
Phospholipid Molecules
Outer Leaflet of bilayer
Hydrophobic Lipid Tail
Hydrophilic Head group
Cholesterol
4FLUID MOSAIC MODEL OF CELL PLASMA MEMBRANE
GPI-LINKED PROTEIN
GPI-LINK IN OUTER LAYER OF BILAYER
SATURATED PHOSPHO LIPID (more ordered, less fluid)
UNSATURATED LIPID (more fluid in membrane)
5WHAT IS SINGLE PARTICLE TRACKING?
- SPT EXPERIMENTS FOLLOW BROWNIAN MOTION OF
MEMBRANE PROTEINS - IN TERMS OF CHANGE IN POSITION OF AB-COATED
BEADS BOUND TO THE - MOLECULE OF INTEREST
- CHANGE IN POSITION OF CENTROID OF A BEAD CAN BE
TRACKED WITH - NANOMETER PRECISION
- PARTICLE TRACKS DERIVE FROM SEQUENTIAL VIDEO
FRAMES OF A LABELED - CELL
- TRACKS GIVE INFORMATION ABOUT LATERAL DIFFUSION
OF BEAD-LABELED - MOLECULES.
- SPT CAN REVEAL LOCATION OF MOLECULE IN PLASMA
MEMBRANE e.g - IS MOLECULE LOCALIZED IN LIPID RAFT?
6MAPPING THE SINGLE PARTICLE TRACK IN A CELL
MEMBRANE
Lateral transport modes on the cell surface. (A)
Transient confinement by obstacle clusters, (B)
or by the cytoskeleton, (C) directed motion, and
(D) free random diffusion (Jacobson et al
Science, (1995) 268 p 1441
7What is an optical trap?
You may not know what an optical trap is, but
you've probably all seen something like it. It's
essentially a tractor beam like one from an
episode of Star Trek, only on a microscopic
scale.
8Optical trap or laser tweezers
In the geometric optics regime light can be
represented by light rays. Two rays 1 and 2 of a
laser beam focused in f are shown. Upon hitting a
dielectric particle with refractive index (np)
greater than the refractive index (nm) of the
surrounding medium the light rays are refracted.
The changes in light momentum for the two rays
result in forces F1 and F2 on the particle. The
sum of forces F in a focused laser beam drives
the particle back into the focus.
9Moving particles around with the laser tweezers
- A single beam of tightly focused laser light
creates an extremely high electric field gradient
in the vicinity of the focus. - Similar to the force which draws a dielectric
into the high field region of a capacitor, a
dielectric particle falling within the laser beam
will experience a force which is directed towards
the focus of the beam. - Provided the numerical aperture of the focusing
optics is high, the so called "optical tweezers"
give rise to a 3-dimensional trap. - The force due to the field gradient is
sufficiently high to overcome the forces due to
both gravity and radiation pressure. The
particles can be moved around in three
dimensions. - If the particle in a membrane moves into a more
ordered/less fluid part of the membrane, it
will escape the optical trap - Behavior of the particle can be used to evaluate
the topology of the local membrane
structure
10WHATS THE BIG DEAL ABOUT CAVEOLAE (A SUBSET OF
LIPID RAFTS)?
- DEFINED BY
- RESISTANCE TO SOLUBILZATION BY TRITON-X AT 40C
- LIGHT BOUYANT DENSITY
- ENRICHED IN GLYCOSPHINGOLIPIDS, CHOLESTEROL AND
- LIPID ENRICHED MEMBRANE PROTEINS (E.G
GPI-LINKED) - CALVEOLIN-1 IS MARKER PROTEIN
- Qa-2 IS FOUND IN CAVEOLAE
- COMPARTMENTALIZATION OF SIGNALING ACTIVITIES
- RICH IN RECEPTORS AND INTRACELLULAR
SIGNAL-TRANSDUCERS - REMEMBER THAT SHORT TAIL ON MEMBRANE-BOUND
HLA-G? EVEN WITH - GPI LINKAGE MISSING, DOES IT AGGREGATE IN
CAVEOLAE LIKE QA-2? - IF HLA-G AND Qa-2 BOTH AGGREGATE IN CAVEOLAE, WE
CAN POSTULATE - THE EXISTANCE OF A COMMON/CONSERVED DOWNSTREAM
SIGNAL - TRANSDUCTION PATHWAY, WHICH WILL THEN HAVE TO
BE PROVEN - EXPERIMENTALLY
11GPI-linked proteins aggregate in lipid rafts in
the cell membrane when they are cross-linked on
the surface
- Lipid rafts may or may not contain caveolae
- Lipid rafts tend to have more ordered lipids,
less fluidity than normal membrane - When a particle-tagged molecule moves into a
raft, it escapes from the laser trap - Particle diffusion co-efficient, barrier free
path length, and resistance measurements - can be made
12EXPERIMENTAL CONSIDERATIONS FOR SPT EXPERIMENTS
- TEMPERATURE
- AB COATED BEADS MEET OBSTACLES EVERY 1mM AT 220C
- AB COATED BEADS MEET OBSTACLES EVERY 3-4mM _at_
340C - TO FIX OR NOT TO FIX
- CHEMICAL CROSS LINKING OF MEMBRANE PROTEIN TO
CYTOSKELETON - COULD PREVENT LATERAL DIFFUSION THAT WOULD
OTHERWISE OCCUR - Fab OR IgG
- IgG SEEMS TO GIVE REDUCTION IN MOBILITY IN SOME
SPT EXPTS - IgG MAY ALTER MOLECULE DISTRIBUTION IN MEMBRANE
- HOW TO BIND PROTEIN TO BEAD
- SOMETIMES CANT BE ATTACHED DIRECTLY TO BEAD
- APPROPRIATE PROTEIN CONCENTRATION (DENATURES ON
BEAD) - HIGH CONCENTRATION CAN CROSSLINK MOLECULES
- CROSS LINKING CAN CHANGE DISTRIBUTION
- SIZE OF BEAD INFLUENCES BEHAVIOR OF MOLECULES
BEING TRACKED