| Literature DB >> 30087894 |
Abstract
The cell membrane provides a functional link between the external environment and the replicating DNA genome by using ligand-gated receptors and chemical signals to activate signaling transduction pathways. However, increasing evidence has also indicated that the phospholipid bilayer itself by altering various physical parameters serves as a sensor that regulate membrane proteins in a specific manner. Changes in thickness and/or curvature of the membrane have been shown to be induced by mechanical forces and transmitted through the transmembrane helices of several types of mechanosensitive (MS) ion channels underlying functions such as osmoregulation in bacteria and sensory processing in mammalian cells. This review focus on recent protein functional and structural data indicating that the activation of bacterial and yeast osmosensors is consistent with thickness-induced tilting changes of the transmembrane domains of these proteins. Membrane thinning in combination with curvature changes may also lead to the lateral transfer of the small lipid-anchored GTPases Ras1 and H-Ras out of lipid rafts for clustering and signaling. The modulation of signaling pathways by amphiphilic peptides and the membrane-active antibiotics colistin and Amphotericin B is also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Ras proteins; amphotericin B; antimicrobial peptides; colistin; lipid bilayer thickness; membrane thinning; osmosensors; signaling pathways
Year: 2018 PMID: 30087894 PMCID: PMC6066546 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2018.00076
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
Figure 1(A) Mechanism of activation of the two-component PhoQ/PhoP signaling system by AMPs and colistin. Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) produce a membrane thinning effect that leads to changes in tilting and displacements of the TMs of PhoQ, a bacterial histidine kinase (HK). Such changes convert the HK phosphatase stage, in which the kinase is deactivated, into a phosphorylated state in which the kinase is activated. MgrB is a small transmembrane protein that is part of the PhoQ/PhoP regulatory circuit. MgrB contains a long hydrophobic domain of 20 aminoacids spanning the membrane that upon oxidation of external cysteine residues (see text) may form thicker aggregates that block PhoQ activation. PhoQ activation. Inactivation of mgrB in Gram-negative bacteria results in Colistin resistance through activation of PhoQ/PhoP (see text). (B) Mechanism of activation of HOG by loss of turgor. Sln1 is a histidine kinase (HK) that serves as the osmosensor of the SLN1 branch of the high osmolarity glycerol (HOG) pathway. Increased turgor pressure produces a membrane thinning effect that leads to changes in tilting and displacements of the TMs of Sln1. Such changes convert the phosphorylated state in which the kinase is activated to a phosphatase stage, in which the kinase is deactivated. Accumulation of unphosphorylated Sln1 (and downstream Ssk1) leads to the activation of the HOG pathway.
Amino acid sequence alignments of the C-terminal hypervariable region (HVR) in different Ras proteins isoforms.
The differences in amino acid sequences between mammalian Ras proteins (HRas-Hu, NRas-Hu, KRas4B-Hu) and fungal Ras1/Ras2 proteins are mainly in their C-terminal hypervariable region (HVR). Numbers at the two sides of H-Ras C-terminal indicate amino acid positions. Hu, Human; Cn, Cryptococcus neoformans; Sz, Schizosaccharomyces pombe; Sc, Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
*The HVR-1, HVR-2 and Lipid anchor domains at the C-terminal end of H-Ras are named following Rotblat et al. (.
Figure 2Model for fungal Ras1 activation by Turgor. In the step labeled 1, glucose-binding by a G-protein coupled receptor leads to an increase in the GTP-bound Ras1 concentration at the lipid raft boundary mediated by a guanine exchange factor (GEF) such as Cdc25. In step 2, increased turgor exerts a membrane thinning effect that induces lateral transfer and clustering of GTP-bound Ras1 monomers out of lipid raft boundaries driven by a more favorable entropic environment. A similar lateral membrane transfer mechanism induced by cell swelling is proposed for H-Ras (see text).