4.8 Article

How cholesterol stiffens unsaturated lipid membranes

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2004807117

关键词

area compressibility; membrane viscosity; deuterium NMR; neutron spin echo; molecular dynamics simulations

资金

  1. state of Virginia
  2. Clifford G. Shull Fellowship program - Neutron Sciences Directorate at ORNL
  3. NIH [R01GM120642, R01EY026041, 1F32GM13470401, P41GM103521, R01GM123779]
  4. NSF [MCB-1817929, MCB1817862, CHE-1904125, DMR-1508249, DMR-0520547]
  5. 1923 Fund
  6. Scientific User Facilities Division of the Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science
  7. Basic Energy Science (BES) Program, DOE Office of Science [DEAC05-00OR22725]
  8. NIST, U.S. Department of Commerce [70NANB15H259]
  9. NIST [DMR-1508249]
  10. Scientific User Facilities Division, Office of BES, US DOE
  11. US DOE [DE-AC0500OR22725]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Cholesterol is an integral component of eukaryotic cell membranes and a key molecule in controlling membrane fluidity, organization, and other physicochemical parameters. It also plays a regulatory function in antibiotic drug resistance and the immune response of cells against viruses, by stabilizing the membrane against structural damage. While it is well understood that, structurally, cholesterol exhibits a densification effect on fluid lipid membranes, its effects on membrane bending rigidity are assumed to be nonuniversal; i.e., cholesterol stiffens saturated lipid membranes, but has no stiffening effect on membranes populated by unsaturated lipids, such as 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DOPC). This observation presents a clear challenge to structure-property relationships and to our understanding of cholesterol-mediated biological functions. Here, using a comprehensive approach-combining neutron spin-echo (NSE) spectroscopy, solid-state deuterium NMR (H-2 NMR) spectroscopy, and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations-we report that cholesterol locally increases the bending rigidity of DOPC membranes, similar to saturated membranes, by increasing the bilayer's packing density. All three techniques, inherently sensitive to mesoscale bending fluctuations, show up to a threefold increase in effective bending rigidity with increasing cholesterol content approaching a mole fraction of 50%. Our observations are in good agreement with the known effects of cholesterol on the area-compressibility modulus and membrane structure, reaffirming membrane structure-property relationships. The current findings point to a scale-dependent manifestation of membrane properties, highlighting the need to reassess cholesterol's role in controlling membrane bending rigidity over mesoscopic length and time scales of important biological functions, such as viral budding and lipid-protein interactions.

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