4.1 Article

α-Synuclein's Uniquely Long Amphipathic Helix Enhances its Membrane Binding and Remodeling Capacity

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEMBRANE BIOLOGY
Volume 250, Issue 2, Pages 183-193

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00232-017-9946-1

Keywords

Alpha-Synuclein; Membrane remodeling; Tubulation

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 NS084998]
  2. NRSA Fellowship [F31 NS077634]
  3. [GM102815]
  4. [GM008283]

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alpha-Synuclein is the primary protein found in Lewy bodies, the protein and lipid aggregates associated with Parkinson's disease and Lewy body dementia. The protein folds into a uniquely long amphipathic alpha-helix (AH) when bound to a membrane, and at high enough concentrations, it induces large-scale remodeling of membranes (tubulation and vesiculation). By engineering a less hydrophobic variant of alpha-Synuclein, we previously showed that the energy associated with binding of alpha-Synuclein's AH correlates with the extent of membrane remodeling (Braun et al. in J Am Chem Soc 136:9962-9972, 2014). In this study, we combine fluorescence correlation spectroscopy, electron microscopy, and vesicle clearance assays with coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations to test the impact of decreasing the length of the amphipathic helix on membrane binding energy and tubulation. We show that truncation of alpha-Synuclein's AH length by approximately 15% reduces both its membrane binding affinity (by fivefold) and membrane remodeling capacity (by nearly 50% on per mole of bound protein basis). Results from simulations correlate well with the experiments and lend support to the idea that at high protein density there is a stabilization of individual, protein-induced membrane curvature fields. The extent to which these curvature fields are stabilized, a function of binding energy, dictates the extent of tubulation. Somewhat surprisingly, we find that this stabilization does not correlate directly with the geometric distribution of the proteins on the membrane surface.

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