35 research outputs found

    Carlos Gutiérrez-Merino: Synergy of Theory and Experimentation in Biological Membrane Research

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    Professor Carlos Gutiérrez-Merino, a prominent scientist working in the complex realm of biological membranes, has made significant theoretical and experimental contributions to the field. Contemporaneous with the development of the fluid-mosaic model of Singer and Nicolson, the Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) approach has become an invaluable tool for studying molecular interactions in membranes, providing structural insights on a scale of 1–10 nm and remaining important alongside evolving perspectives on membrane structures. In the last few decades, Gutiérrez-Merino’s work has covered multiple facets in the field of FRET, with his contributions producing significant advances in quantitative membrane biology. His more recent experimental work expanded the ground concepts of FRET to high-resolution cell imaging. Commencing in the late 1980s, a series of collaborations between Gutiérrez-Merino and the authors involved research visits and joint investigations focused on the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor and its relation to membrane lipids, fostering a lasting friendship

    Nicotinic acetylcholine receptor channels are influenced by the physical state of their membrane environment.

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    We investigated the effect of the physical state of the cell membrane on the activity of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) in various clonal cell lines transfected with the cDNAs of embryonic or adult AChR by measuring single-channel properties and some membrane physicochemical properties as a function of temperature. Unitary conductance and channel closing rate, alpha, had Q(10) values of 1.2 and 2.2, respectively. Using Eyring's transition state theory, it was calculated that both embryonic and adult-type AChR had relatively low thermal sensitivity of ionic conductance and activation energy (E(a) of 3.0-5.0 kcal-mol(-1) at 20 degrees C), indicating that once the AChR channel opens, ion movement is dominated by diffusional processes. Channel closure exhibited higher energy requirements, with E(a) values of about 13 kcal-mol(-1). This process appears to be more endothermic (higher delta H(a) values) than ion permeation, and it is plausible that the energy acquired by the system can be used in the maintenance of its degree of order, as revealed by the delta S(a) 0 calculated for channel closure. The influence of the membrane environment on AChR function is reinforced by the observation that the conductance of the same, embryonic-type AChR protein, expressed in qualitatively different cellular lipid environments, appeared to have different energetic requirements. A correlation between the electrophysiological and thermodynamic parameters of the AChR and physicochemical properties of the membrane bilayer in which the protein is embedded could be established using measurements of the so-called generalized polarization (GP) of the lipophilic probe laurdan. Both embryonic and adult AChR exhibited a higher GP and a higher sensitivity to temperature-dependent changes in GP when heterologously expressed in stable form in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO)-derived cells than did the native embryonic AChR in BC3H-1 cells, indicating that these two properties are determined by the host membrane and are not inherent properties of the AChR type. In addition, the differences in the macroscopic physical states of the lipids and membrane-associated solvent (water) dipolar relaxation between BC3H-1 and CHO-derived cells indicated by the spectroscopic properties of laurdan suggest that both lipid and associated water may influence the microscopic activity of individual AChR molecules embedded in the lipid bilayer. Finally, the different dependence of AChR channel conductance and mean open time as a function of GP observed between the different AChR subtypes in clonal cell lines suggests the importance of specific lipid-protein interactions in addition to bulk membrane properties

    A novel agonist effect on the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor exerted by the anticonvulsive drug Lamotrigine

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    AbstractThe anticonvulsive drug Lamotrigine (LTG) is found to activate adult muscle nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (AChR). Single-channel patch-clamp recordings showed that LTG (0.05–400 μM) applied alone is able to open AChR channels. [125I]α-bungarotoxin-binding studies further indicate that LTG does not bind to the canonical ACh-binding sites. Fluorescence experiments using the probe crystal violet demonstrate that LTG induces the transition from the resting state to the desensitized state of the AChR in the presence of excess α-bungarotoxin, that is, when the agonist site is blocked. Allosterically-potentiating ligands or the open-channel blocker QX-314 exhibited a behavior different from that of LTG. We conclude that LTG activates the AChR through a site that is different from those of full agonists/competitive antagonists and allosterically-potentiating ligands, respectively

    Physical state of bulk and protein-associated lipid in nicotinic acetylcholine receptor-rich membrane studied by laurdan generalized polarization and fluorescence energy transfer.

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    The spectral properties of the fluorescent probe laurdan (6-dodecanoyl-2-dimethylaminonaphthalene) were exploited to learn about the physical state of the lipids in the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR)-rich membrane and compare them with those in reconstituted liposomes prepared from lipids extracted from the native membrane and those formed with synthetic phosphatidylcholines. In all cases redshifts of 50 to 60 nm were observed as a function of temperature in the spectral emission maximum of laurdan embedded in these membranes. The so-called generalized polarization of laurdan exhibited high values (0.6 at 5 degrees C) in AChR-rich membranes, diminishing by approximately 85% as temperature increased, but no phase transitions with a clear Tm were observed. A still unexploited property of laurdan, namely its ability to act as a fluorescence energy transfer acceptor from tryptophan emission, has been used to measure properties of the protein-vicinal lipid. Energy transfer from the protein in the AChR-rich membrane to laurdan molecules could be observed upon excitation at 290 nm. The efficiency of this process was approximately 55% for 1 microM laurdan. A minimum donor-acceptor distance r of 14 +/- 1 A could be calculated considering a distance 0 < H < 10 A for the separation of the planes containing donor and acceptor molecules, respectively. This value of r corresponds closely to the diameter of the first-shell protein-associated lipid. A value of approximately 1 was calculated for Kr, the apparent dissociation constant of laurdan, indicating no preferential affinity for the protein-associated probe, i.e., random distribution in the membrane. From the spectral characteristics of laurdan in the native AChR-rich membrane, differences in the structural and dynamic properties of water penetration in the protein-vicinal and bulk bilayer lipid regions can be deduced. We conclude that 1) the physical state of the bulk lipid in the native AChR-rich membrane is similar to that of the total lipids reconstituted in liposomes, exhibiting a decreasing polarity and an increased solvent dipolar relaxation at the hydrophilic/hydrophobic interface upon increasing the temperature; 2) the wavelength dependence of laurdan generalized polarization spectra indicates the presence of a single, ordered (from the point of view of molecular axis rotation)-liquid (from the point of view of lateral diffusion) lipid phase in the native AChR membrane; 3) laurdan molecules within energy transfer distance of the protein sense protein-associated lipid, which differs structurally and dynamically from the bulk bilayer lipid in terms of polarity and molecular motion and is associated with a lower degree of water penetration

    Free cholesterol and cholesterol esters in bovine oocytes: Implications in survival and membrane raft organization after cryopreservation.

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    Part of the damage caused by cryopreservation of mammalian oocytes occurs at the plasma membrane. The addition of cholesterol to cell membranes as a strategy to make it more tolerant to cryopreservation has been little addressed in oocytes. In order to increase the survival of bovine oocytes after cryopreservation, we proposed not only to increase cholesterol level of oocyte membranes before vitrification but also to remove the added cholesterol after warming, thus recovering its original level. Results from our study showed that modulation of membrane cholesterol by methyl-β-cyclodextrin (MβCD) did not affect the apoptotic status of oocytes and improved viability after vitrification yielding levels of apoptosis closer to those of fresh oocytes. Fluorometric measurements based on an enzyme-coupled reaction that detects both free cholesterol (membrane) and cholesteryl esters (stored in lipid droplets), revealed that oocytes and cumulus cells present different levels of cholesterol depending on the seasonal period. Variations at membrane cholesterol level of oocytes were enough to account for the differences found in total cholesterol. Differences found in total cholesterol of cumulus cells were explained by the differences found in both the content of membrane cholesterol and of cholesterol esters. Cholesterol was incorporated into the oocyte plasma membrane as evidenced by comparative labeling of a fluorescent cholesterol. Oocytes and cumulus cells increased membrane cholesterol after incubation with MβCD/cholesterol and recovered their original level after cholesterol removal, regardless of the season. Finally, we evaluated the effect of vitrification on the putative raft molecule GM1. Cholesterol modulation also preserved membrane organization by maintaining ganglioside level at the plasma membrane. Results suggest a distinctive cholesterol metabolic status of cumulus-oocyte complexes (COCs) among seasons and a dynamic organizational structure of cholesterol homeostasis within the COC. Modulation of membrane cholesterol by MβCD improved survival of bovine oocytes and preserved integrity of GM1-related rafts after vitrification

    α7-type acetylcholine receptor localization and its modulation by nicotine and cholesterol in vascular endothelial cells

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    The neuronal-type 7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (7AChR) is also found in various non-neural tissues, including vascular endothelium, where its peculiar ionotropic properties (high Ca2+ permeability) and its supervening Ca2+-mediated intracellular cascades may play important roles in physiology (angiogenesis) and pathology (inflammation and atherogenesis). Changes in molecular (up-regulation, affinity and conformational states) and cellular (distribution, association with membranes) properties of the 7AChR related to angiogenesis (wound-repair cell migration) and atherogenesis (alterations in cholesterol content) were studied in living endothelial cells, with the aim of determining whether such changes constitute early markers of inflammatory response. The combination of pharmacological, biochemical and fluorescence microscopy tools showed that 7AChRs in rat arterial endothelial (RAEC) and human venous endothelial (HUVEC) cells occur at extremely low expression levels (~50 fmol/mg protein) but undergo agonist-induced up-regulation at relatively high nicotine concentrations (~300-fold with 50 M ligand), increasing their cell-surface exposure. When analyzed in terms of cold Triton X-100 solubility and subcellular distribution, 7AChRs occur in the "non-raft" subcellular membrane fractions.Acute cholesterol depletion reduced not only cholesterol levels but the number of cell-surface 7AChRs. Nicotine exposure markedly stimulated cell migration and accelerated wound repair, which drastically diminished in cells deprived of the sterol. The angiogenic effect of nicotine appears to be synergistic with cholesterol content. Finally, the apparent KD of 7AChRs for the open-channel blocker crystal violet was found to be ~600-fold lower in receptor-enriched membranes obtained from up-regulated HUVEC.Fil: Ayala Peña, Victoria Belen. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Bahia Blanca. Instituto de Investigaciones Bioquímicas Bahia Blanca (i); Argentina. UNESCO Chair of Biophysics & Molecular Neurobiology; ArgentinaFil: Bonini, Ida Clara. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Bahia Blanca. Instituto de Investigaciones Bioquímicas Bahia Blanca (i); Argentina. UNESCO Chair of Biophysics & Molecular Neurobiology; ArgentinaFil: Antollini, Silvia Susana. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Bahia Blanca. Instituto de Investigaciones Bioquímicas Bahia Blanca (i); Argentina. UNESCO Chair of Biophysics & Molecular Neurobiology; ArgentinaFil: Barrantes, Francisco Jose. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Bahia Blanca. Instituto de Investigaciones Bioquímicas Bahia Blanca (i); Argentina. UNESCO Chair of Biophysics & Molecular Neurobiology; Argentin

    The position of the double bond in monounsaturated free fatty acids is essential for the inhibition of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor

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    Abstract: Free fatty acids (FFAs) are non-competitive antagonists of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR). Their site of action is supposedly located at the lipid-AChR interface. To elucidate the mechanism involved in this antagonism, we studied the effect that FFAs with a single double-bond at different positions (ω6, ω9, ω11 and ω13 cis-18:1) have on different AChR properties. Electrophysiological studies showed that only two FFAs (ω6 and ω9) reduced the duration of the channel open-state. The briefest component of the closed-time distribution remained unaltered, suggesting that ω6 and ω9 behave as allosteric blockers. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer studies indicated that all FFAs locate at the lipid-AChR interface, ω6 being restricted to annular sites and all others occupying non-annular sites. The perturbation of the native membrane order by FFAs was evaluated by DPH (1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene) and Laurdan fluorescence polarization studies, with the greatest decrease observed for ω9 and ω11. AChR conformational changes produced by FFAs present at the lipid bilayer were evaluated by fluorescence quenching studies of pyrene-labeled AChR and also using the AChR conformational-sensitive probe crystal violet. All cis-FFAs produced AChR conformational changes at the transmembrane level, but only ω9, ω11 and ω13 perturbed the resting state. Thus, the position and isomerism of the torsion angle of unsaturated FFAs are probably a key factor in terms of AChR blockage, suggesting that FFAs with a unique cis double bond at a superficial position inside the membrane directly inhibit AChR function by perturbing a potential conserved core structure for AChR gating at that level
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