Literature DB >> 34927881

Adaptive Lipid Immiscibility and Membrane Remodeling Are Active Functional Determinants of Primary Ciliogenesis.

Miguel Bernabé-Rubio1,2, Minerva Bosch-Fortea1,3, Esther García4,5, Jorge Bernardino de la Serna4,6,7, Miguel A Alonso1.   

Abstract

Lipid liquid-liquid immiscibility and its consequent lateral heterogeneity have been observed under thermodynamic equilibrium in model and native membranes. However, cholesterol-rich membrane domains, sometimes referred to as lipid rafts, are difficult to observe spatiotemporally in live cells. Despite their importance in many biological processes, robust evidence for their existence remains elusive. This is mainly due to the difficulty in simultaneously determining their chemical composition and physicochemical nature, whilst spatiotemporally resolving their nanodomain lifetime and molecular dynamics. In this study, a bespoke method based on super-resolution stimulated emission depletion (STED) microscopy and raster imaging correlation spectroscopy (RICS) is used to overcome this issue. This methodology, laser interleaved confocal RICS and STED-RICS (LICSR), enables simultaneous tracking of lipid lateral packing and dynamics at the nanoscale. Previous work indicated that, in polarized epithelial cells, the midbody remnant licenses primary cilium formation through an unidentified mechanism. LICSR shows that lipid immiscibility and its adaptive collective nanoscale self-assembly are crucial for the midbody remnant to supply condensed membranes to the centrosome for the biogenesis of the ciliary membrane. Hence, this work poses a breakthrough in the field of lipid biology by providing compelling evidence of a functional role for liquid ordered-like membranes in primary ciliogenesis.
© 2020 The Authors. Small Methods published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.

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Keywords:  cholesterol-rich nanodomains; ciliary membranes; lipid immiscibility; membrane dynamics; midbody remnant; primary cilium; stimulated emission depletion nanoscopy

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Year:  2020        PMID: 34927881     DOI: 10.1002/smtd.202000711

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Small Methods        ISSN: 2366-9608


  1 in total

1.  Sphingomyelin Depletion Inhibits CXCR4 Dynamics and CXCL12-Mediated Directed Cell Migration in Human T Cells.

Authors:  Sofía R Gardeta; Eva M García-Cuesta; Gianluca D'Agostino; Blanca Soler Palacios; Adriana Quijada-Freire; Pilar Lucas; Jorge Bernardino de la Serna; Carolina Gonzalez-Riano; Coral Barbas; José Miguel Rodríguez-Frade; Mario Mellado
Journal:  Front Immunol       Date:  2022-07-12       Impact factor: 8.786

  1 in total

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