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Marine Drugs ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 74
Author(s):  
Kenneth Sandoval ◽  
Grace P. McCormack

Actinoporins are proteinaceous toxins known for their ability to bind to and create pores in cellular membranes. This quality has generated interest in their potential use as new tools, such as therapeutic immunotoxins. Isolated historically from sea anemones, genes encoding for similar actinoporin-like proteins have since been found in a small number of other animal phyla. Sequencing and de novo assembly of Irish Haliclona transcriptomes indicated that sponges also possess similar genes. An exhaustive analysis of publicly available sequencing data from other sponges showed that this is a potentially widespread feature of the Porifera. While many sponge proteins possess a sequence similarity of 27.70–59.06% to actinoporins, they show consistency in predicted structure. One gene copy from H. indistincta has significant sequence similarity to sea anemone actinoporins and possesses conserved residues associated with the fundamental roles of sphingomyelin recognition, membrane attachment, oligomerization, and pore formation, indicating that it may be an actinoporin. Phylogenetic analyses indicate frequent gene duplication, no distinct clade for sponge-derived proteins, and a stronger signal towards actinoporins than similar proteins from other phyla. Overall, this study provides evidence that a diverse array of Porifera represents a novel source of actinoporin-like proteins which may have biotechnological and pharmaceutical applications.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ana I. Seixas ◽  
Miguel R. G. Morais ◽  
Cord Brakebusch ◽  
Jo&atildeo B. Relvas

Bidirectional transmission of mechanical and biochemical signals is integral to cell-environment communication and underlies the function of Schwann cells, the myelinating glia of the peripheral nervous system. As major integrators of "outside-in" signaling, Rho GTPases link actin cytoskeleton dynamics with cellular architecture to regulate adhesion and cell deformation. Using Schwann cell-specific gene inactivation, we discovered that RhoA promotes the initiation of myelination, axonal wrapping and axial spreading of Schwann cells, and is later required to restrict myelin growth in peripheral nerves. These effects are mediated by modulation of actomyosin contractility, actin dynamics and cortical actin-membrane attachment, which collectively couple tensional forces to intracellular signaling that regulate axon-Schwann cell interaction and myelin synthesis. This work establishes RhoA as an intrinsic regulator of a biomechanical response that controls the switch of Schwann cells towards the myelinating and the homeostatic states.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (21) ◽  
pp. 11609
Author(s):  
ChihSheng New ◽  
Zhao-Yong Lee ◽  
Kai Sen Tan ◽  
Amanda Huee-Ping Wong ◽  
De Yun Wang ◽  
...  

Tetraspanins are transmembrane glycoproteins that have been shown increasing interest as host factors in infectious diseases. In particular, they were implicated in the pathogenesis of both non-enveloped (human papillomavirus (HPV)) and enveloped (human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), Zika, influenza A virus, (IAV), and coronavirus) viruses through multiple stages of infection, from the initial cell membrane attachment to the syncytium formation and viral particle release. However, the mechanisms by which different tetraspanins mediate their effects vary. This review aimed to compare and contrast the role of tetraspanins in the life cycles of HPV, HIV, Zika, IAV, and coronavirus viruses, which cause the most significant health and economic burdens to society. In doing so, a better understanding of the relative contribution of tetraspanins in virus infection will allow for a more targeted approach in the treatment of these diseases.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer F. Pinello ◽  
Yanjie Liu ◽  
William J Snell

Union of two gametes to form a zygote is a defining event in the life of sexual eukaryotes, yet the mechanisms that underlie cell-cell fusion during fertilization remain poorly characterized. Here, in studies of fertilization in the green alga, Chlamydomonas, we report identification of a membrane protein on minus gametes, Minus Adhesion Receptor 1 (MAR1), that is essential for the membrane attachment with plus gametes that immediately precedes lipid bilayer merger. We show that MAR1 forms a receptor pair with previously identified receptor FUS1 on plus gametes, whose ectodomain architecture we find is identical to a sperm adhesion protein conserved throughout plant lineages. Strikingly, before fusion, MAR1 is biochemically and functionally associated with the ancient, evolutionarily conserved eukaryotic class II fusion protein HAP2 on minus gametes. Thus, the integral membrane protein MAR1 provides a molecular link between membrane adhesion and bilayer merger during fertilization in Chlamydomonas.


2021 ◽  
Vol 118 (36) ◽  
pp. e2104219118
Author(s):  
Samuel G. Chamberlain ◽  
Andrea Gohlke ◽  
Arooj Shafiq ◽  
Iolo J. Squires ◽  
Darerca Owen ◽  
...  

RalA is a small GTPase and a member of the Ras family. This molecular switch is activated downstream of Ras and is widely implicated in tumor formation and growth. Previous work has shown that the ubiquitous Ca2+-sensor calmodulin (CaM) binds to small GTPases such as RalA and K-Ras4B, but a lack of structural information has obscured the functional consequences of these interactions. Here, we have investigated the binding of CaM to RalA and found that CaM interacts exclusively with the C terminus of RalA, which is lipidated with a prenyl group in vivo to aid membrane attachment. Biophysical and structural analyses show that the two RalA membrane-targeting motifs (the prenyl anchor and the polybasic motif) are engaged by distinct lobes of CaM and that CaM binding leads to removal of RalA from its membrane environment. The structure of this complex, along with a biophysical investigation into membrane removal, provides a framework with which to understand how CaM regulates the function of RalA and sheds light on the interaction of CaM with other small GTPases, including K-Ras4B.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jun Zhang ◽  
Jennifer F. Pinello ◽  
Ignacio Fernández ◽  
Eduard Baquero ◽  
Juliette Fedry ◽  
...  

AbstractRecognition and fusion between gametes during fertilization is an ancient process. Protein HAP2, recognized as the primordial eukaryotic gamete fusogen, is a structural homolog of viral class II fusion proteins. The mechanisms that regulate HAP2 function, and whether virus-fusion-like conformational changes are involved, however, have not been investigated. We report here that fusion between plus and minus gametes of the green alga Chlamydomonas indeed requires an obligate conformational rearrangement of HAP2 on minus gametes from a labile, prefusion form into the stable homotrimers observed in structural studies. Activation of HAP2 to undergo its fusogenic conformational change occurs only upon species-specific adhesion between the two gamete membranes. Following a molecular mechanism akin to fusion of enveloped viruses, the membrane insertion capacity of the fusion loop is required to couple formation of trimers to gamete fusion. Thus, species-specific membrane attachment is the gateway to fusion-driving HAP2 rearrangement into stable trimers.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexios Chatzigoulas ◽  
Zoe Cournia

Motivation: Abnormal protein-membrane attachment is involved in deregulated cellular pathways and in disease. Therefore, the possibility to modulate protein-membrane interactions represents a new promising therapeutic strategy for peripheral membrane proteins that have been considered so far undruggable. A major obstacle in this drug design strategy is that the membrane binding domains of peripheral membrane proteins are usually not known. The development of fast and efficient algorithms predicting the protein-membrane interface would shed light into the accessibility of membrane-protein interfaces by drug-like molecules. Results: Herein, we describe an ensemble machine learning methodology and algorithm for predicting membrane-penetrating residues. We utilize available experimental data in the literature for training 21 machine learning classifiers and a voting classifier. Evaluation of the ensemble classifier accuracy produced a macro-averaged F1 score = 0.92 and an MCC = 0.84 for predicting correctly membrane-penetrating residues on unknown proteins of an independent test set. Availability and implementation: The python code for predicting protein-membrane interfaces of peripheral membrane proteins is available at https://github.com/zoecournia/DREAMM.


Author(s):  
Diana Morzy ◽  
Roger Rubio-Sánchez ◽  
Himanshu Joshi ◽  
Aleksei Aksimentiev ◽  
Lorenzo Di Michele ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leila Lesanpezeshki ◽  
Hiroshi Qadota ◽  
Masoud Norouzi Darabad ◽  
Karishma Kashyap ◽  
Carla M. R. Lacerda ◽  
...  

AbstractBackgroundCaenorhabditis elegans has been widely used as a model to study muscle structure and function due to many genes having human homologs. Its body wall muscle is functionally and structurally similar to vertebrate skeletal muscle with conserved molecular pathways contributing to sarcomere structure, and muscle function. However, a systematic investigation of the relationship between muscle force and sarcomere organization is lacking. Here, we investigate the contribution of various sarcomere proteins and membrane attachment components to muscle structure and function to introduce C. elegans as a model organism to study the genetic basis of muscle strength.MethodsWe employ two recently developed assays that involve exertion of muscle forces to investigate the correlation of muscle function to sarcomere organization. We utilized a microfluidic pillar-based platform called NemaFlex that quantifies the maximum exertable force and a burrowing assay that challenges the animals to move in three dimensions under a chemical stimulus. We selected 20 mutants with known defects in various substructures of sarcomeres and compared the physiological function of muscle proteins required for force generation and transmission. We also characterized the degree of sarcomere disorganization using immunostaining approaches.ResultsWe find that mutants with genetic defects in thin filaments, thick filaments and M-lines are generally weaker, and our assays are successful in detecting the functional changes in response to each sarcomere location tested. We find that the NemaFlex and burrowing assays are functionally distinct informing on different aspects of muscle physiology. Specifically, the burrowing assay has a larger bandwidth in phenotyping muscle mutants, because it could pick ten additional mutants impaired while exerting normal muscle force in NemaFlex. This enabled us to combine their readouts to develop an integrated muscle function score that was found to correlate with the score for muscle structure disorganization.ConclusionsOur results highlight the suitability of NemaFlex and burrowing assays for evaluating muscle physiology of C. elegans. Using these approaches, we discuss the importance of the studied sarcomere proteins for muscle function and structure. The scoring methodology we have developed lays the foundation for investigating the contribution of conserved sarcomere proteins and membrane attachment components to human muscle function and strength.


eLife ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Achinta Sannigrahi ◽  
Sourav Chowdhury ◽  
Bidisha Das ◽  
Amrita Banerjee ◽  
Animesh Halder ◽  
...  

Aggregation of Cu-Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD1) is implicated in the motor neuron disease, ALS. Although more than 140 disease mutations of SOD1 are available, their stability or aggregation behaviors in membrane environment are not correlated with disease pathophysiology. Here, we use multiple mutational variants of SOD1 to show that the absence of Zn, and not Cu, significantly impacts membrane attachment of SOD1 through two loop regions facilitating aggregation driven by lipid induced conformational changes. These loop regions influence both the primary (through Cu intake) and the gain of function (through aggregation) of SOD1 presumably through a shared conformational landscape. Combining experimental and theoretical frameworks using representative ALS disease mutants, we develop a 'co-factor derived membrane association model' wherein mutational stress closer to the Zn (but not to the Cu) pocket is responsible for membrane association mediated toxic aggregation and survival time scale after ALS diagnosis.


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