1 research outputs found
Nanodomain Formation of Ganglioside GM1 in Lipid Membrane: Effects of Cholera Toxin-Mediated Cross-Linking
Cross-linking of specific lipid components
by proteins mediates
transmembrane signaling and material transport. In this work, we conducted
coarse-grained simulation to investigate the interactions of binding
units of chorela toxin (CTB) with mixed ganglioside GM1 and dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine
(DPPC) lipid bilayer membrane. We determine that the binding of CTB
pentamers cross-links GM1 molecules into protein-sized nanodomains
that have distinct lipid order compared with the bulk. The toxin in
the nanodomain partially penetrates into the membrane. The local disordering
can also transmit across the membrane via lipid coupling. Comparison
simulations on CTB binding to a membrane that is composed of various
lipid components demonstrate that several factors are responsible
for the nanodomain formation: (a) the negatively charged headgroup
of a GM1 receptor is responsible for the multivalent binding; (b)
the head groups being full of hydrogen-bonding donors and receptors
stabilize the GM1 cluster itself and ensure the toxin binding with
high affinity; and (c) significant size and order differences between
the protein receptor lipids and bulk lipids are essential to promoting
phase separation and signal transportation