Title: Hydrophobic Mismatch between Proteins and Lipids in Membranes
1Hydrophobic Mismatch between Proteins and Lipids
in Membranes
- Susanne Pfeifer tiffy_at_tiffy.it
- 08.07.2004
- Seminar Theoretical Analysis of Protein-Protein
InteractionsUniversität des SaarlandesChair of
Prof. Dr. Volkhard Helms
2Agenda
- Introduction
- Possible adaptations to mismatch
- Consequences of mismatch for
- Proteins and peptides
- Lipid structure and organization
- Effects of mismatch in biomembranes
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4BasicsIntroduction
5Basics Introduction
6BasicsIntroduction
- Length of lipid-exposed hydrophobic segments is
equal to the hydrophobicbilayer thickness - Proteins that are encountered in one membrane can
have different lengths of their hydrophobic
parts - Membrane proteins with the same length can be
encountered in bilayers of different thickness
7BasicsQuestions
- How do membranes deal with a mismatch between
the hydrophobic part of a transmembrane protein
and the bilayer thickness? - How important is the extent ofhydrophobic
matching for membrane structure and function? - Could mismatch play a functional role?
8BasicsPossible adaptations to mismatch
- Positive mismatch
- The protein might oligomerize or aggregate in
the membrane to minimize the exposed hydrophobic
area - Transmembrane helices could tilt to reduce their
effective hydrophobic length - Transmembrane helices could adopt another
conformation
9Basics Possible adaptations to mismatch
- Negative mismatch
- Results in protein aggregation or changes in
backbone conformation or side chain orientation - Too short peptides might not incorporate and
adopt asurface localization - Lipids decrease the bilayer thickness by
disordering their acyl chains
10Basics Implications for membranes
- Effects on
- protein conformation
- protein orientation
- helical tilt
- aggregational behavior
- can affect
- protein activity
- membrane insertion
- protein assembly
- Effects on
- lipid structure
- lipid organization
-
- have implications for
- processes that are sensitive to lipid packing
- Processes that require the local and transient
formation of non-lamellar structures
11Basics Consequences of mismatch
- Consequences for properties of proteins
- Protein activity and stability
- Protein aggregation
- Tilt
- Localization at membrane surface
- Protein/peptide backbone conformation
12Basics - Consequences of mismatch Protein
activity stability
- The extent of hydrophobic matching is important
for determining the functional activity of
proteins - There are a number of proteins that do not show
a clear optimum bilayer thickness for activity,
but they require a minimal chain length - many other factors may be involved in determining
the functional activity of membrane
proteins(e.g. lipid packing, fluidity, surface
charge density, intrinsic curvature, lateral
pressure profile, ) - ?Protein activity may be related to protein
stability, which also can be affected by mismatch
13Basics - Consequences of mismatch Protein
aggregation
- Response to hydrophobic mismatch
- Occurred only with a rather large mismatch
- 4 Å thicker or
- 10 Å thinner
- than the estimated hydrophobic length of the
proteinare allowed without induction of
significant aggregation - Proteins with long hydrophobic stretchtilt in
the membrane - Reduction of their effective length
- Comparison is difficult, because the lipids
differ not only in acyl chain length, but also in
other properties
14Basics - Consequences of mismatch Tilt
- Occurs if the hydrophobic part of a protein is
too long to span the membrane - Important for the functional and transport
activity of membrane proteins - An increase in helix tilt occurs at increasing
protein content - decrease in lipid order
- decrease in bilayer thickness
- Accompanied by a bend to reduce unfavorable
effects on lipid packing
15Basics - Consequences of mismatch Tilt
- Change in helix tilt change in protein
activity
16Basics - Consequences of mismatch Tilt
- Special cases
- In large proteinschanges in helical tilt have
only little effect on lipid packing - Single transmembrane helix a tilt would cause a
strain on the surrounding lipids to accommodate
the helix in the bilayer - large degree of tilting is less favorable
17Basics - Consequences of mismatch Localization
at membrane surface
- Relatively small hydrophobic peptides may not be
able to integrate into the membrane - orientation at the membrane surface
- Peptide aggregation outside the bilayer
- Amino acid composition is important
- (in determining the consequences of hydrophobic
mismatch) - The extent of membrane insertion for amphipathic
pore-forming peptides is mismatch dependent
18Basics - Consequences of mismatch Localization
at membrane surface
- Surface-absorbed peptides insert their
hydrophobic side chains between the acyl chains
near the membrane surface - membrane-thinning effect
- dependent on the peptide/lipid ratio
- Important for studies
- on the mismatch dependence of insertion for
- such proteins
- insertion of hydrophobic peptides with an
equilibrium between a transmembrane orientation
and a surface localization
19Basics - Consequences of mismatch Backbone
conformation
- Helix length fluctuates due to local
- variations in backbone structure
- Sensitivity of the backbone conformation for
environmental changes depends on amino acid
composition - Peptides with a hydrophobic stretch of
alternating leucine and alanine are more
sensitive than peptides with a polyleucine
sequence
20BasicsConsequences of mismatch
- Consequences for lipid structure and
organization - Lipid chain order
- Phase transition temperature
- Preferential interactions andmicrodomain
formation
21Basics - Consequences of mismatch Phase
transition temperature
- Melting transition temperature of lipid bilayers
is strongly affected - Proteins with long hydrophobic segments
- stabilize the thicker gel phase
- Short proteins stabilize the fluid phase
22Basics - Consequences of mismatch Microdomains
- In fluid bilayers consisting of lipids with
different lengths, hydrophobic mismatch may
induce preferential protein-lipid interactions ?
formation of microdomains - Systems consisting of two lipid species with
different acyl chain lengths and one
proteinhydrophobic mismatch induces
preferential protein-lipid interactions - (depending on hydrophobic length, differences in
hydrophobic length)
23Basics Effects in biomembranes
- Protein sorting
- Membrane protein insertion and topology
- Regulation
24Basics - Effects in biomembranes Protein sorting
- Eukaryotic cell
- Level of cholesterol increases from the
endoplasmatic reticulum via the Golgi to the
plasma membrane - (suggesting a concomitant increase in membrane
thickness) - Protein sorting in Golgi is based on this length
difference - Increasing the hydrophobic length of proteins
that normally reside in the Golgi - they can reroute the proteins to the plasma
membrane (or vice versa)
25Basics - Effects in biomembranes Protein sorting
- Preferential protein-lipid interactions are
consequences of hydrophobic mismatch - results in domain formation and protein sorting
26Basics - Effects in biomembranes Membrane
protein insertion
- Signal sequences
- short hydrophobic length (7-15 amino acids)
- high tendency to form alpha-helical structures
- (with insufficient length to span a membrane)
- Length of signal sequences and mismatch are
important for their functional activity - A mismatch could lead to a local destabilization
in a bilayer - helps the translocation or
- promotes preferential interactions with other
short helices of proteins in the translocation
machinery
27Basics - Effects in biomembranes Membrane
protein insertion
- Signal anchors
- length closer to the hydrophobic thickness of
the membrane (19-27 amino acids) - ? influences the topology of proteins
- Stop transfer sequences
- ? hydrophobicity is more important than length
28Basics - Effects in biomembranes Membrane
thickness regulation
- A large variation in membrane thickness can be
tolerated - Variations of acyl chain length lead to changes
in lipid composition - important for surface charge density
- serves as tool to regulate local bilayer
thickness - ?prevention of unwanted consequences of
hydrophobic mismatch in biological membranes
29BasicsResults
- Hydrophobic mismatch
- affects protein and lipid organisation
- affects conformation and thermodynamic
properties of the membranes - plays a role in protein sorting in vivo
- is required for specific functional properties
of membranes - depends on individual properties
30Chain Packing
- Calculation of all possible lipid conformations
- Probability of chain conformations relative to
their distances - Free interaction energy between two inclusions
- Detailed molecular-level information on chain
conformational properties - Problems
- Computationally expansive
- Full minimization of membrane shape is difficult
31Directors Model
- Theory-based model of elastic deformations is
used to describe free energy differences
associated with membrane perturbation due to
protein-bilayer interactions - (Huang, 1986 Helfrich and Jacobsson, 1990
Nielsen et. al. 1998) - All parameters were used beforein previous
studies - Thin, solvent-free lipid bilayer
- With an embedded inclusion similar to a
gramicidin channel
32Directors Model - TheoryThe Model
33Directors Model - TheoryThe Model
34Directors Model - TheoryApproximation of changes
- Elastic modes for approximation of changes in
lipid packing - Compression-Expansion (CE)(due to changes in
bilayer thickness) - Splay-Distortion (SD)(due to variation in
director among adjacent mol.) - Surface-Tension (ST)(due to changes in bilayer
surface area)
35Directors Model - TheoryTotal deformation free
energy
36Directors Model - ResultsChoice of boundary
conditions
- The bilayer deformation energy varies as a
function of - mechanical moduli
- boundary conditions
- ProblemEnergetic costs for packing the lipid
molecules which are adjacent to the inclusion are
not considered!
37Directors Model - ResultsChoice of boundary
conditions
38Directors Model - ResultsBilayer deformation
profile
- The shape of the deformation varies as a
function of the elastic moduli - Depending on the value of s, may the bilayer
deformation profile be nonmonotonic - Energy minimization requirement may causea
compression adjacent to the inclusion and an
expansion further away from the bilayer/inclusion
boundery - Packing Problemhydrophobic core volume per unit
bilayer surface will deviate from its equilibrium
value
39Directors Model - ResultsBilayer deformation
profile
40Directors Model - ResultsBilayer deformation
profile
41Directors Model - ResultsBilayer deformation
profile
42Directors Model - ResultsRadial decomposition of
free energy
- Depending on the choice of boundary conditions
?GCE can be less, equal or larger - than ?GSD
- The relative contributions of these major
components to ?Gdef vary in dependence of - s (contact slope)
- ? (length scale)
43Directors Model - ResultsRadial decomposition of
free energy
44Directors Model - ResultsRadial decomposition of
free energy
45Directors Model - DiscussionComparison
- The results of the presented model confirm and
extend the findings of Huang (1986) and Helfrich
and Jakobsson (1990) - Better results for s0
- Failures with ssmin could arise because the
parameters that are used may be inappropriateor
additional contributions to ?Gdef which are
neglected - Today there is insufficient information to choose
the appropriate boundary conditions
46Directors Model - DiscussionBiological
implications
47AppendixReferences
- Hydrophobic mismatch between proteins
- and lipids in membranes (1998, Killian)
- Energetics of Inclusion-Induced Bilayer
Deformations (1998, Nielson et al) - A Molecular Model for Lipid-Protein Interactions
in Membranes The Role of Hydrophobic Mismatch
(1993, Deborah et al) - Synthetic peptides as models for intrinsic
membrane proteins (2003, Killian)
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