4.6 Article

Probing macromolecular crowding at the lipid membrane interface with genetically-encoded sensors

Journal

PROTEIN SCIENCE
Volume 32, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/pro.4797

Keywords

biological interfaces; biosensors; excluded volume; fluorescence spectroscopy; FRET; membrane dynamics; quinary interactions; steric repulsion

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Biochemical processes in crowded cellular environments, such as membranes, are affected by macromolecular crowding. Researchers developed a fluorescence-based sensor to quantify macromolecular crowding at membrane interfaces, and validated its dynamics in Escherichia coli inner membrane vesicles.
Biochemical processes within the living cell occur in a highly crowded environment, where macromolecules, first of all proteins and nucleic acids, occupy up to 30% of the volume. The phenomenon of macromolecular crowding is not an exclusive feature of the cytoplasm and can be observed in the densely protein-packed, nonhomogeneous cellular membranes and at the membrane interfaces. Crowding affects diffusional and conformational dynamics of proteins within the lipid bilayer, alters kinetic and thermodynamic properties of biochemical reactions, and modulates the membrane organization. Despite its importance, the non-invasive quantification of the membrane crowding is not trivial. Here, we developed a genetically-encoded fluorescence-based sensor for probing the macromolecular crowding at the membrane interfaces. Two sensor variants, both composed of fluorescent proteins and a membrane anchor, but differing by flexible linker domains were characterized in vitro, and the procedures for the membrane reconstitution were established. Steric pressure induced by membrane-tethered synthetic and protein crowders altered the sensors' conformation, causing increase in the intramolecular Forster's resonance energy transfer. Notably, the effect of protein crowders only weakly correlated with their molecular weight, suggesting that other factors, such as shape and charge contribute to the crowding via the quinary interactions. Finally, measurements performed in inner membrane vesicles of Escherichia coli validated the crowding-dependent dynamics of the sensors in the physiologically relevant environment. The sensors offer broad opportunities to study interfacial crowding in a complex environment of native membranes, and thus add to the toolbox of methods for studying membrane dynamics and proteostasis.

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