Abstract
AbstractLipids in biological membranes are thought to be functionally organized, but few experimental tools can probe nanoscale membrane structure. Using brominated lipids as contrast probes for cryo-EM and a model ESCRT-III membrane remodeling system, we observed leaflet-level and protein-localized lipid structural patterns within highly constricted and thinned membrane nanotubes. These nanotubes differed markedly from protein-free, flat bilayers in leaflet thickness, lipid diffusion rates, and lipid compositional and conformational asymmetries. Simulations and cryo-EM imaging of brominated SDPC showed how a pair of phenylalanine residues scored the outer leaflet with a helical hydrophobic defect where polyunsaturated docosahexaenoyl (DHA) tails accumulated at the bilayer surface. Combining cryo-EM of halogenated lipids with molecular dynamics thus enables new characterizations of the composition and structure of membranes on molecular length scales.One-Sentence SummaryCryo-EM imaging of halogenated lipids and MD simulations provide molecular-scale insight into constricted bilayer structure.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
4 articles.
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