4.6 Article

Endogenous sphingomyelin segregates into submicrometric domains in the living erythrocyte membrane

Journal

JOURNAL OF LIPID RESEARCH
Volume 55, Issue 7, Pages 1331-1342

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1194/jlr.M048538

Keywords

toxin; His-mCherry-NT-lysenin; lateral membrane heterogeneity; vital confocal imaging; membrane tension; cholesterol; temperature

Funding

  1. Universite catholique de Louvain (UCL) (FSR)
  2. F.R.S-FNRS
  3. Salus Sanguinis Foundation
  4. Actions de Recherche Concertees (ARC)
  5. InterUniversity Attraction Pole (IUAP)
  6. Region Wallonne

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We recently reported that trace insertion of exogenous fluorescent (green BODIPY) analogs of sphingomyelin (SM) into living red blood cells (RBCs), partially spread onto coverslips, labels submicrometric domains, visible by confocal microscopy. We here extend this feature to endogenous SM, upon binding of a SM-specific nontoxic (NT) fragment of the earthworm toxin, lysenin, fused to the red monomeric fluorescent protein, mCherry [construct named His-mCherry-NT-lysenin (lysenin*)]. Specificity of lysenin* binding was verified with composition-defined liposomes and by loss of I-125-lysenin* binding to erythrocytes upon SM depletion by SMase. The I-125-lysenin* binding isotherm indicated saturation at 3.5 x 10(6) molecules/RBC, i.e., similar to 3% of SM coverage. Nonsaturating lysenin* concentration also labeled submicrometric domains on the plasma membrane of partially spread erythrocytes, colocalizing with inserted green BODIPY-SM, and abrogated by SMase. Lysenin*-labeled domains were stable in time and space and were regulated by temperature and cholesterol. The abundance, size, positioning, and segregation of lysenin*-labeled domains from other lipids (BODIPY-phosphatidylcholine or -glycosphingolipids) depended on membrane tension. Similar lysenin*-labeled domains were evidenced in RBCs gently suspended in 3D-gel. Taken together, these data demonstrate submicrometric compartmentation of endogenous SM at the membrane of a living cell in vitro, and suggest it may be a genuine feature of erythrocytes in vivo.

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