104 research outputs found

    Spectator no more, the role of the membrane in regulating ion channel function

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    CP is a Royal Society of Edinburgh (RSE) Personal Research Fellow, funded by the Scottish Government. Research funds for this study were also partly covered by a Tenovus Scotland grant (Tenovus Grant Application T15/41), awarded to CP. JHN is supported by the Chinese National Thousand Talents Program, Wellcome Trust Senior Investigator Award (WT100209MA) and Royal Society Wolfson Merit Award.A pressure gradient across a curved lipid bilayer leads to a lateral force within the bilayer. Following ground breaking work on eukaryotic ion channels, it is now known that many proteins sense this change in the lateral tension and alter their functions in response. It has been proposed that responding to pressure differentials may be one of the oldest signaling mechanisms in biology. The most well characterized mechanosensing ion channels are the bacterial ones which open when the pressure differential hits a threshold. Recent studies on one of these channels, MscS, have developed a simple molecular model for how they sense and adapt to pressure. Biochemical and structural studies on mechanosensitive channels from eukaryotes have disclosed pressure sensing mechanisms. In this review, we highlight these findings and discuss the potential for a general model for pressure sensing.PostprintPeer reviewe

    Optimization of Recombinant Membrane Protein Production in the Engineered Escherichia coli Strains SuptoxD and SuptoxR.

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    Membrane proteins (MPs) execute a wide variety of critical biological functions in all living organisms and constitute approximately half of current targets for drug discovery. As in the case of soluble proteins, the bacterium Escherichia coli has served as a very popular overexpression host for biochemical/structural studies of membrane proteins as well. Bacterial recombinant membrane protein production, however, is typically hampered by poor cellular accumulation and severe toxicity for the host, which leads to low levels of final biomass and minute volumetric yields. In previous work, we generated the engineered E. coli strains SuptoxD and SuptoxR, which upon coexpression of the effector genes djlA or rraA, respectively, can suppress the cytotoxicity caused by MP overexpression and produce enhanced MP yields. Here, we systematically looked for gene overexpression and culturing conditions that maximize the accumulation of membrane-integrated and well-folded recombinant MPs in these strains. We have found that, under optimal conditions, SuptoxD and SuptoxR achieve greatly enhanced recombinant production for a variety of MP, irrespective of their archaeal, eubacterial, or eukaryotic origin. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the use of these engineered strains enables the production of well-folded recombinant MPs of high quality and at high yields, which are suitable for functional and structural studies. We anticipate that SuptoxD and SuptoxR will become broadly utilized expression hosts for recombinant MP production in bacteria

    In-lipid structure of pressure sensitive domains hints mechanosensitive channel functional diversity

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    This project was supported by a BBSRC grant (BB/S018069/1) to C.P., who was supported by the Royal Society of Edinburgh, Tenovus (T15/41) and Carnegie Trust (OS000256), at the initial stages of this project. Further C.P. acknowledges support from the University of St Andrews for the C.K. studentship and the University of Leeds and the Chinese Scholarship Council for the Y.M. studentship. B.E.B. and C.P. acknowledge support by the Leverhulme Trust (RPG-2018–397). This work was also supported by previous Wellcome Trust [099149/Z/12/Z] and BBSRC equipment grants (BB/R013780/1).The mechanosensitive channel of large conductance (MscL) from Mycobacterium tuberculosis has been used as structural model for rationalizing functional observations in multiple MscL orthologues. Although these orthologues adopt similar structural architectures, they reportedly present significant functional differences. Subtle structural discrepancies on mechanosensitive channel nano-pockets are known to affect mechanical gating and may be linked to large variability in tension sensitivity among these membrane channels. Here we modify the nano-pocket regions of MscL from Escherichia coli and Mycobacterium tuberculosis and employ PELDOR/DEER distance and 3pESEEM deuterium accessibility measurements to interrogate channel structure within lipids, in which both channels adopt a closed conformation. Significant in-lipid structural differences between the two constructs suggest a more compact EcMscL at the membrane inner-leaflet, as a consequence of a rotated TM2 helix. Observed differences within lipids could explain EcMscL’s higher tension sensitivity and should be taken into account in extrapolated models used for MscL gating rationalization.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe

    Membrane force reception: mechanosensation in GPCRs and tools to address it

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    To survive, all organisms must detect and respond to mechanical cues in their environment. Cells are subjected to a plethora of mechanical forces, such as hydrostatic pressure, cell-cell contact, stretch, compression, and shear stress. Mechanosensitive membrane proteins have evolved across all life kingdoms to sense and respond to forces in the membrane. Bacterial mechanosensitive ion channels provide a blueprint for understanding the fundamental mechanisms that underpin cellular responses to mechanical signals. Recently, the identification of eukaryotic force transducers, which includes membrane proteins other than channels, has led to the recognition of common structural hallmarks and unified biophysical mechanisms that could potentially link these diverse proteins. Accumulating evidence suggests G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are candidates for pressure sensing in mammals. This review summarises the current knowledge on mechanosensitive GPCRs, describes the tools used to assess their mechanosensitivity, and aims to highlight the key characteristics that link these receptors to established mechanosensors

    Approaches for the modulation of mechanosensitive MscL channel pores

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    MscL was the first mechanosensitive ion channel identified in bacteria. The channel opens its large pore when the turgor pressure of the cytoplasm increases close to the lytic limit of the cellular membrane. Despite their ubiquity across organisms, their importance in biological processes, and the likelihood that they are one of the oldest mechanisms of sensory activation in cells, the exact molecular mechanism by which these channels sense changes in lateral tension is not fully understood. Modulation of the channel has been key to understanding important aspects of the structure and function of MscL, but a lack of molecular triggers of these channels hindered early developments in the field. Initial attempts to activate mechanosensitive channels and stabilize functionally relevant expanded or open states relied on mutations and associated post-translational modifications that were often cysteine reactive. These sulfhydryl reagents positioned at key residues have allowed the engineering of MscL channels for biotechnological purposes. Other studies have modulated MscL by altering membrane properties, such as lipid composition and physical properties. More recently, a variety of structurally distinct agonists have been shown bind to MscL directly, close to a transmembrane pocket that has been shown to have an important role in channel mechanical gating. These agonists have the potential to be developed further into antimicrobial therapies that target MscL, by considering the structural landscape and properties of these pockets

    Sparse labeling PELDOR spectroscopy on multimeric mechanosensitive membrane channels

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    BEB is grateful for funding from the European Union (Marie Curie Actions REA 334496). This work was supported by the EPSRC (EP/M024660/1) and the Wellcome Trust (099149/Z/12/Z). CP is a Royal Society of Edinburgh (RSE) Personal Research Fellow, funded by the Scottish Government.Pulse EPR is being applied to ever more complex biological systems comprising multiple subunits. Membrane channel proteins are of great interest as pulse EPR reports on functionally significant but distinct conformational states in a native environment without the need for crystallization. Pulse EPR, in the form of pulsed electron-electron double resonance (PELDOR), using site-directed spin labeling is most commonly employed to accurately determine distances (in the nanometer range) between different regions of the structure. However, PELDOR data analysis is more challenging in systems containing more than two spins (e.g. homo-multimers) due to distorting multi-spin effects. Without suppression of these effects much of the information contained in PELDOR data cannot be reliably retrieved. Thus, it is of utmost importance for future PELDOR applications in structural biology to develop suitable approaches that can overcome the multi-spin problem.Here, two different appro aches for suppressing multi-spin effects in PELDOR, sparse labeling of the protein (reducing the labeling efficiency f) and reducing the excitation probability of spins (λ), are compared on two distinct bacterial mechanosensitive channels. For both, the pentameric channel of large conductance (MscL) and the heptameric channel of small conductance (MscS) of E. coli, mutants containing a spin label in the cytosolic or the transmembrane region were tested. Data demonstrate that distance distributions can be significantly improved with either approach compared to the standard PELDOR measurement, and confirm that λ < 1/(n−1) is needed to sufficiently suppress multi-spin effects (with n being the number of spins in the system). A clear advantage of the sparse labeling approach is demonstrated for the cytosolic mutants due to a significantly smaller loss in sensitivity. For the transmembrane mutants, this advantage is less pronounced but still useful for MscS, but performance is inferior for MscL possibly due to structural perturbations by the bulkier diamagnetic spin label analogue.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe

    Novel variants provide differential stabilisation of human equilibrative nucleoside transporter 1 states

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    Human equilibrative nucleoside transporters represent a major pharmaceutical target for cardiac, cancer and viral therapies. Understanding the molecular basis for transport is crucial for the development of improved therapeutics through structure-based drug design. ENTs have been proposed to utilise an alternating access mechanism of action, similar to that of the major facilitator superfamily. However, ENTs lack functionally-essential features of that superfamily, suggesting that they may use a different transport mechanism. Understanding the molecular basis of their transport requires insight into diverse conformational states. Differences between intermediate states may be discrete and mediated by subtle gating interactions, such as salt bridges. We identified four variants of human equilibrative nucleoside transporter isoform 1 (hENT1) at the large intracellular loop (ICL6) and transmembrane helix 7 (TM7) that stabilise the apo-state (T-m 0.7-1.5 degrees C). Furthermore, we showed that variants K263A (ICL6) and I282V (TM7) specifically stabilise the inhibitor-bound state of hENT1 (T-m 5.0 +/- 1.7 degrees C and 3.0 +/- 1.8 degrees C), supporting the role of ICL6 in hENT1 gating. Finally, we showed that, in comparison with wild type, variant T336A is destabilised by nitrobenzylthioinosine (T-m -4.7 +/- 1.1 degrees C) and binds it seven times worse. This residue may help determine inhibitor and substrate sensitivity. Residue K263 is not present in the solved structures, highlighting the need for further structural data that include the loop regions.Peer reviewe

    HDX-guided EPR spectroscopy to interrogate membrane protein dynamics

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    This project was supported by a Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) grant (BB/S018069/1) to C.P., who also acknowledges support from the Wellcome Trust (WT) (219999/Z/19/Z) and the Chinese Scholarship Council (CSC) in the form of studentships for B.J.L. and B.W., respectively. A.N.C. is a Sir Henry Dale Fellow jointly funded by the WT and the Royal Society (220628/Z/20/Z). Funding from the BBSRC (BB/M012573/1) enabled the purchase of mass spectrometry equipment.Solvent accessibilities of and distances between protein residues measured by pulsed-EPR approaches provide high-resolution information on dynamic protein motions. We describe protocols for the purification and site-directed spin labeling of integral membrane proteins. In our protocol, peptide-level HDX-MS is used as a precursor to guide single-residue resolution ESEEM accessibility measurements and spin labeling strategies for EPR applications. Exploiting the pentameric MscL channel as a model, we discuss the use of cwEPR, DEER/PELDOR, and ESEEM spectroscopies to interrogate membrane protein dynamics. For complete details on the use and execution of this protocol, please refer to Wang et al. (2022).Publisher PDFPeer reviewe

    Enhanced imaging of lipid rich nanoparticles embedded in methylcellulose films for transmission electron microscopy using mixtures of heavy metals

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    This work was supported by funds from the St Andrews EM facility and the University of St Andrews. CP is a Royal Society of Edinburgh (RSE) Personal Research Fellow, funded by the Scottish Government. CP is also supported by a Tenovus Scotland Award (T15/41). JML was supported by a Programme grant from the Wellcome Trust (Number 045404).Synthetic and naturally occurring lipid-rich nanoparticles are of wide ranging importance in biomedicine. They include liposomes, bicelles, nanodiscs, exosomes and virus particles. The quantitative study of these particles requires methods for high-resolution visualization of the whole population. One powerful imaging method is cryo-EM of vitrified samples, but this is technically demanding, requires specialized equipment, provides low contrast and does not reveal all particles present in a population. Another approach is classical negative stain-EM, which is more accessible but is difficult to standardize for larger lipidic structures, which are prone to artifacts of structure collapse and contrast variability. A third method uses embedment in methylcellulose films containing uranyl acetate as a contrasting agent. Methylcellulose embedment has been widely used for contrasting and supporting cryosections but only sporadically for visualizing lipid rich vesicular structures such as endosomes and exosomes. Here we present a simple methylcellulose-based method for routine and comprehensive visualization of synthetic lipid rich nanoparticles preparations, such as liposomes, bicelles and nanodiscs. It combines a novel double-staining mixture of uranyl acetate (UA) and tungsten-based electron stains (namely phosphotungstic acid (PTA) or sodium silicotungstate (STA)) with methylcellulose embedment. While the methylcellulose supports the delicate lipid structures during drying, the addition of PTA or STA to UA provides significant enhancement in lipid structure display and contrast as compared to UA alone. This double staining method should aid routine structural evaluation and quantification of lipid rich nanoparticles structures.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
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