36 research outputs found

    Solubility and Permeation of Hydrogen Sulfide in Lipid Membranes

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    Hydrogen sulfide (H2S) is mainly known for its toxicity but has recently been shown to be produced endogenously in mammalian tissues and to be associated with physiological regulatory functions. To better understand the role of biomembranes in modulating its biological distribution and effects; we measured the partition coefficient of H2S in models of biological membranes. The partition coefficients were found to be 2.1±0.2, 1.9±0.5 and 2.0±0.6 in n-octanol, hexane and dilauroylphosphatidylcholine liposome membranes relative to water, respectively (25°C). This two-fold higher concentration of H2S in the membrane translates into a rapid membrane permeability, Pm = 3 cm s−1. We used a mathematical model in three dimensions to gain insight into the diffusion of total sulfide in tissues. This model shows that the sphere of action of sulfide produced by a single cell expands to involve more than 200 neighboring cells, and that the resistance imposed by lipid membranes has a significant effect on the diffusional spread of sulfide at pH 7.4, increasing local concentrations. These results support the role of hydrogen sulfide as a paracrine signaling molecule and reveal advantageous pharmacokinetic properties for its therapeutic applications

    β-Carbonic Anhydrases Play a Role in Fruiting Body Development and Ascospore Germination in the Filamentous Fungus Sordaria macrospora

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    Carbon dioxide (CO2) is among the most important gases for all organisms. Its reversible interconversion to bicarbonate (HCO3−) reaches equilibrium spontaneously, but slowly, and can be accelerated by a ubiquitous group of enzymes called carbonic anhydrases (CAs). These enzymes are grouped by their distinct structural features into α-, β-, γ-, δ- and ζ-classes. While physiological functions of mammalian, prokaryotic, plant and algal CAs have been extensively studied over the past years, the role of β-CAs in yeasts and the human pathogen Cryptococcus neoformans has been elucidated only recently, and the function of CAs in multicellular filamentous ascomycetes is mostly unknown. To assess the role of CAs in the development of filamentous ascomycetes, the function of three genes, cas1, cas2 and cas3 (carbonic anhydrase of Sordaria) encoding β-class carbonic anhydrases was characterized in the filamentous ascomycetous fungus Sordaria macrospora. Fluorescence microscopy was used to determine the localization of GFP- and DsRED-tagged CAs. While CAS1 and CAS3 are cytoplasmic enzymes, CAS2 is localized to the mitochondria. To assess the function of the three isoenzymes, we generated knock-out strains for all three cas genes (Δcas1, Δcas2, and Δcas3) as well as all combinations of double mutants. No effect on vegetative growth, fruiting-body and ascospore development was seen in the single mutant strains lacking cas1 or cas3, while single mutant Δcas2 was affected in vegetative growth, fruiting-body development and ascospore germination, and the double mutant strain Δcas1/2 was completely sterile. Defects caused by the lack of cas2 could be partially complemented by elevated CO2 levels or overexpression of cas1, cas3, or a non-mitochondrial cas2 variant. The results suggest that CAs are required for sexual reproduction in filamentous ascomycetes and that the multiplicity of isoforms results in redundancy of specific and non-specific functions

    Identifying Drug Effects via Pathway Alterations using an Integer Linear Programming Optimization Formulation on Phosphoproteomic Data

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    Understanding the mechanisms of cell function and drug action is a major endeavor in the pharmaceutical industry. Drug effects are governed by the intrinsic properties of the drug (i.e., selectivity and potency) and the specific signaling transduction network of the host (i.e., normal vs. diseased cells). Here, we describe an unbiased, phosphoproteomicbased approach to identify drug effects by monitoring drug-induced topology alterations. With the proposed method, drug effects are investigated under several conditions on a cell-type specific signaling network. First, starting with a generic pathway made of logical gates, we build a cell-type specific map by constraining it to fit 13 key phopshoprotein signals under 55 experimental cases. Fitting is performed via a formulation as an Integer Linear Program (ILP) and solution by standard ILP solvers; a procedure that drastically outperforms previous fitting schemes. Then, knowing the cell topology, we monitor the same key phopshoprotein signals under the presence of drug and cytokines and we re-optimize the specific map to reveal the drug-induced topology alterations. To prove our case, we make a pathway map for the hepatocytic cell line HepG2 and we evaluate the effects of 4 drugs: 3 selective inhibitors for the Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor (EGFR) and a non selective drug. We confirm effects easily predictable from the drugs’ main target (i.e. EGFR inhibitors blocks the EGFR pathway) but we also uncover unanticipated effects due to either drug promiscuity or the cell’s specific topology. An interesting finding is that the selective EGFR inhibitor Gefitinib is able to inhibit signaling downstream the Interleukin-1alpha (IL-1α) pathway; an effect that cannot be extracted from binding affinity based approaches. Our method represents an unbiased approach to identify drug effects on a small to medium size pathways and is scalable to larger topologies with any type of signaling perturbations (small molecules, 3 RNAi etc). The method is a step towards a better picture of drug effects in pathways, the cornerstone in identifying the mechanisms of drug efficacy and toxicity

    No facilitator required for membrane transport of hydrogen sulfide

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    Hydrogen sulfide (H2S) has emerged as a new and important member in the group of gaseous signaling molecules. However, the molecular transport mechanism has not yet been identified. Because of structural similarities with H2O, it was hypothesized that aquaporins may facilitate H2S transport across cell membranes. We tested this hypothesis by reconstituting the archeal aquaporin AfAQP from sulfide reducing bacteria Archaeoglobus fulgidus into planar membranes and by monitoring the resulting facilitation of osmotic water flow and H2S flux. To measure H2O and H2S fluxes, respectively, sodium ion dilution and buffer acidification by proton release (H2S ⇆ H+ + HS−) were recorded in the immediate membrane vicinity. Both sodium ion concentration and pH were measured by scanning ion-selective microelectrodes. A lower limit of lipid bilayer permeability to H2S, PM,H2S ≥ 0.5 ± 0.4 cm/s was calculated by numerically solving the complete system of differential reaction diffusion equations and fitting the theoretical pH distribution to experimental pH profiles. Even though reconstitution of AfAQP significantly increased water permeability through planar lipid bilayers, PM,H2S remained unchanged. These results indicate that lipid membranes may well act as a barrier to water transport although they do not oppose a significant resistance to H2S diffusion. The fact that cholesterol and sphingomyelin reconstitution did not turn these membranes into an H2S barrier indicates that H2S transport through epithelial barriers, endothelial barriers, and membrane rafts also occurs by simple diffusion and does not require facilitation by membrane channels

    Membrane Transport of Singlet Oxygen Monitored by Dipole Potential Measurements

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    The efficiency of photodynamic reactions depends on 1), the penetration depth of the photosensitizer into the membrane and 2), the sidedness of the target. Molecules which are susceptible to singlet oxygen (1O2) experience less damage when separated from the photosensitizer by the membrane. Since 1O2 lifetime in the membrane environment is orders of magnitude longer than the time required for nonexcited oxygen (O2) to cross the membrane, this observation suggests that differences between the permeabilities or membrane partition of 1O2 and O2 exist. We investigated this hypothesis by releasing 1O2 at one side of a planar membrane while monitoring the kinetics of target damage at the opposite side of the same membrane. Damage to the target, represented by dipole-modifying molecules (phloretin or phlorizin), was indicated by changes in the interleaflet dipole potential difference Δϕb. A simple analytical model allowed estimation of the 1O2 interleaflet concentration difference from the rate at which Δϕb changed. It confirmed that the lower limit of 1O2 permeability is ∼2 cm/s; i.e., it roughly matches O2 permeability as predicted by Overton's rule. Consequently, the membrane cannot act as a barrier to 1O2 diffusion. Differences in the reaction rates at the cytoplasmic and extracellular membrane leaflets may be attributed only to 1O2 quenchers inside the membrane

    Calcium carbonate crystallization in tailored constrained environments

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    Synthesis of inorganic particles using routes inspired by biomineralization is a goal of growing interest. Recently it was demonstrated that the size and geometry of crystallization sites are as important as the structure of charged templating surfaces to obtain particles with controlled features. Most biominerals are formed inside restricted, constrained or confined spaces where at least parts of the boundaries are cell membranes containing phospholipids. In this study, we used a gas diffusion method to determine the effect of different lecithin media on the crystallization of CaCO3 and to evaluate the influence of the spatial arrangement of lecithin molecules on templating CaCO3 crystal formation. By using inorganic synthesis, Raman spectroscopy, dynamic light scattering, electrochemical methods and scanning electron microscopy, we showed that the occurrence of surface-modified calcite crystals and diverse textured vaterite crystals reflects the geometry and spatial distribution of aqueous constrained spaces due to the lecithin assembly controlled by lecithin concentration in an ionized calcium chloride solution under a continuous CO2 diffusion atmosphere. This research shows that by tailoring the assembly of lecithin molecules, as micelles or reversed micelles, it is possible to modulate the texture, polymorphism, size and shape of calcium carbonate crystals

    Passive membrane permeability: beyond the standard solubility-diffusion model

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    The spontaneous diffusion of solutes through lipid bilayers is still a challenge for theoretical predictions. Since permeation processes remain beyond the capabilities of unbiased molecular dynamics simulations, an alternative strategy is currently adopted to gain insight into their mechanism and time scale. This is based on a monodimensional description of the translocation process only in terms of the position of the solute along the normal to the lipid bilayer, which is formally expressed in the solubility-diffusion model. Actually, a role of orientational and conformational motions has been pointed out, and the use of advanced simulation techniques has been proposed to take into account their effect. Here, we discuss the limitations of the standard solubility-diffusion approach and propose a more general description of membrane translocation as a diffusion process on a free energy surface, which is a function of the translational and rotational degrees of freedom of the molecule. Simple expressions for the permeability coefficient are obtained under suitable conditions. For fast solute reorientation, the classical solubility-diffusion equation is recovered. Under the assumption that well-defined minima can be identified on the free energy landscape, a mechanistic interpretation of the permeability coefficient in terms of all possible permeation paths is given
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