membrane adhesion
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kohdai P. Nakajima ◽  
Clari Valansi ◽  
Daisuke Kurihara ◽  
Narie Sasaki ◽  
Benjamin Podbilewicz ◽  
...  

Abstract Successful gametic fusion requires species-specific membrane adhesion. However, the interaction of adhesion molecules in gametes is difficult to study in real time through low-throughput microscopic observation. Therefore, we developed a novel live imaging-based adhesion molecule (LIAM) assay to study gametic adhesion molecule interactions in cultured cells. First, we modified a fusion assay previously established for fusogens introduced into cultured cells, and confirmed that our live imaging technique could visualise cell-to-cell fusion in the modified fusion assay. Next, instead of fusogen, we introduced adhesion molecules including a mammalian gametic adhesion molecule pair, IZUMO and JUNO, and detected their temporal accumulation at the contact interfaces of adjacent cells. Accumulated IZUMO or JUNO was translocated to the opposite cells; the mutation in amino acids required for their interaction impaired accumulation and translocation. By using the novel LIAM assay, we investigated the species specificity of IZUMO and JUNO of mouse, human, hamster, and pig in all combinations. IZUMO and JUNO accumulation and translocation were observed in conspecific, and some interspecific, combinations, suggesting potentially interchangeable combinations of IZUMO and JUNO from different species.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Batuhan Kav ◽  
Bruno Demé ◽  
Christian Gege ◽  
Motomu Tanaka ◽  
Emanuel Schneck ◽  
...  

Glycolipids mediate stable membrane adhesion of potential biological relevance. In this article, we investigate the trans- and cis-interactions of glycolipids in molecular dynamics simulations and relate these interactions to the glycolipid-induced average separations of membranes obtained from neutron scattering experiments. We find that the cis-interactions between glycolipids in the same membrane leaflet tend to strengthen the trans-interactions between glycolipids in apposing leaflets. The trans-interactions of the glycolipids in our simulations require local membrane separations that are significantly smaller than the average membrane separations in the neutron scattering experiments, which indicates an important role of membrane shape fluctuations in glycolipid trans-binding. Simulations at the experimentally measured average membrane separations provide a molecular picture of the interplay between glycolipid attraction and steric repulsion of the fluctuating membranes probed in the experiments.


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.


Molecules ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (16) ◽  
pp. 4863
Author(s):  
Pathomwat Wongrattanakamon ◽  
Jutamas Jiaranaikulwanitch ◽  
Opa Vajragupta ◽  
Supat Jiranusornkul ◽  
Chalermpong Saenjum ◽  
...  

Guanidinyl tryptophan derivatives TGN1, TGN2, TGN3, and TGN4 were synthesized, and these compounds were shown to possess in vitro inhibitory activity for amyloid aggregation in a previous study. Nevertheless, the influence of the TGN series of compounds on the binding and permeation behaviors of an Aβ monomer to the cell membranes was not elucidated. In this study, we investigated the effect of compounds in the TGN series on the behavior of an Aβ monomer regarding its toxicity toward the bilayer lipid membrane using molecular dynamics (MD) simulation. MD simulations suggest that TGN4 is a potential agent that can interfere with the movement of the Aβ monomer into the membrane. The MM-GBSA result demonstrated that TGN4 exhibits the highest affinity to the Aβ1–42 monomer but has the lowest affinity to the bilayer. Moreover, TGN4 also contributes to a decrease in the binding affinity between the Aβ1–42 monomer and the POPC membrane. Regarding the results of the binding mode and conformational analyses, a high number of amino-acid residues were shown to provide the binding interactions between TGN4 and the Aβ1–42 monomer. TGN4 also reduces the conformational transition of the Aβ1–42 monomer by means of interacting with the monomer. The present study presents molecular-level insights into how the TGN series of compounds affect the membrane adsorption and the conformational transition of the Aβ1–42 monomer, which could be valuable for the further development of new anti-Alzheimer agents.


2021 ◽  
Vol 118 (24) ◽  
pp. e2023510118
Author(s):  
John Xiao He Li ◽  
Vivian W. Tang ◽  
Kingsley A. Boateng ◽  
William M. Brieher

Cadherins harness the actin cytoskeleton to build cohesive sheets of cells using paradoxically weak bonds, but the molecular mechanisms are poorly understood. In one popular model, actin organizes cadherins into large, micrometer-sized clusters known as puncta. Myosin is thought to pull on these puncta to generate strong adhesion. Here, however, we show that cadherin puncta are actually interdigitated actin microspikes generated by actin polymerization mediated by three factors (Arp2/3, EVL, and CRMP-1). The convoluted membranes in these regions give the impression of cadherin clustering by fluorescence microscopy, but the ratio of cadherin to membrane is constant. Nevertheless, these interlocking fingers of membrane are important for adhesion because perturbing their formation disrupts cell adhesion. In contrast, blocking myosin-dependent contractility does not disrupt either the interdigitated microspikes or lateral membrane adhesion. “Puncta” are zones of strong cell–cell adhesion not due to cadherin clustering but that occur because the interdigitated microspikes expand the surface area available for adhesive bond formation and increase the asperity of the cell surface to promote friction between cells.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (7) ◽  
pp. 3699
Author(s):  
Long Li ◽  
Bernd Henning Stumpf ◽  
Ana-Sunčana Smith

Cells interact with their environment by forming complex structures involving a multitude of proteins within assemblies in the plasma membrane. Despite the omnipresence of these assemblies, a number of questions about the correlations between the organisation of domains and the biomechanical properties of the involved proteins, namely their length, flexibility and affinity, as well as about the coupling to the elastic, fluctuating membrane, remain open. Here we address these issues by developing an effective Kinetic Monte Carlo simulation to model membrane adhesion. We apply this model to a typical experiment in which a cell binds to a functionalized solid supported bilayer and use two ligand-receptor pairs to study these couplings. We find that differences in affinity and length of proteins forming adhesive contacts result in several characteristic features in the calculated phase diagrams. One such feature is mixed states occurring even with proteins with length differences of 10 nm. Another feature are stable nanodomains with segregated proteins appearing on time scales of cell experiments, and for biologically relevant parameters. Furthermore, we show that macroscopic ring-like patterns can spontaneously form as a consequence of emergent protein fluxes. The capacity to form domains is captured by an order parameter that is founded on the virial coefficients for the membrane mediated interactions between bonds, which allow us to collapse all the data. These findings show that taking into account the role of the membrane allows us to recover a number of experimentally observed patterns. This is an important perspective in the context of explicit biological systems, which can now be studied in significant detail.


Soft Matter ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Long Li ◽  
Jinglei Hu ◽  
Xinghua Shi ◽  
Bartosz Różycki ◽  
Fan Song

Binding cooperativity of membrane adhesion proteins is associated with coalescence of nanoscale lipid clusters in adhering membranes.


2020 ◽  
Vol 198 ◽  
pp. 108138
Author(s):  
Tina B. McKay ◽  
Ursula Schlötzer-Schrehardt ◽  
Sonali Pal-Ghosh ◽  
Mary Ann Stepp

Biomolecules ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (7) ◽  
pp. 1085 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrés Tolosa-Díaz ◽  
Víctor G. Almendro-Vedia ◽  
Paolo Natale ◽  
Iván López-Montero

Mitochondria are double-membrane organelles that continuously undergo fission and fusion. Outer mitochondrial membrane fusion is mediated by the membrane proteins mitofusin 1 (Mfn1) and mitofusin 2 (Mfn2), carrying a GTP hydrolyzing domain (GTPase) and two coiled-coil repeats. The detailed mechanism on how the GTP hydrolysis allows Mfns to approach adjacent membranes into proximity and promote their fusion is currently under debate. Using model membranes built up as giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs), we show here that Mfn1 promotes membrane adhesion of apposing lipid vesicles. The adhesion forces were sustained by the GDP-bound state of Mfn1 after GTP hydrolysis. In contrast, the incubation with the GDP:AlF 4 − , which mimics the GTP transition state, did not induce membrane adhesion. Due to the flexible nature of lipid membranes, the adhesion strength depended on the surface concentration of Mfn1 through a cooperative binding mechanism. We discuss a possible scenario for the outer mitochondrial membrane fusion based on the modulated action of Mfn1.


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