4.2 Article

Order-disorder transitions of cytoplasmic N-termini in the mechanisms of P-type ATPases

Journal

FARADAY DISCUSSIONS
Volume 232, Issue -, Pages 172-187

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0fd00040j

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [DP121003548, DP150101112, DP170101732]
  2. Danish Medical Research Council
  3. Novo Nordisk Foundation

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Membrane protein structure and function are modulated by interactions with the lipid environment, particularly for P-type ATPases. These ATPases play vital roles in cell physiology, with some pumps possessing polybasic domains that interact with phosphatidylserine in the plasma membrane, affecting ion pumping activity and acting as potential death sensors.
Membrane protein structure and function are modulated via interactions with their lipid environment. This is particularly true for integral membrane pumps, the P-type ATPases. These ATPases play vital roles in cell physiology, where they are associated with the transport of cations and lipids, thereby generating and maintaining crucial (electro-)chemical potential gradients across the membrane. Several pumps (Na+, K+-ATPase, H+, K+-ATPase and the plasma membrane Ca2+-ATPase) which are located in the asymmetric animal plasma membrane have been found to possess polybasic (lysine-rich) domains on their cytoplasmic surfaces, which are thought to act as phosphatidylserine (PS) binding domains. In contrast, the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase, located within an intracellular organelle membrane, does not possess such a domain. Here we focus on the lysine-rich N-termini of the plasma-membrane-bound Na+, K+- and H+, K+-ATPases. Synthetic peptides corresponding to the N-termini of these proteins were found, via quartz crystal microbalance and circular dichroism measurements, to interact via an electrostatic interaction with PS-containing membranes, thereby undergoing an increase in helical or other secondary structure content. As well as influencing ion pumping activity, it is proposed that this interaction could provide a mechanism for sensing the lipid asymmetry of the plasma membrane, which changes drastically when a cell undergoes apoptosis, i.e. programmed cell death. Thus, polybasic regions of plasma membrane-bound ion pumps could potentially perform the function of a death sensor, signalling to a cell to reduce pumping activity and save energy.

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