4.6 Article

A Three-Dimensional Model of the Yeast Transmembrane Sensor Wsc1 Obtained by SMA-Based Detergent-Free Purification and Transmission Electron Microscopy

期刊

JOURNAL OF FUNGI
卷 7, 期 2, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jof7020118

关键词

Wsc1; membrane sensor; SMALP; detergent-free extraction; fluorescence correlation spectroscopy; transmission electron microscopy; 3D reconstruction

资金

  1. German Research Foundation (DFG) [STE640/15]
  2. Ostpartnerschaftenprogramm of DAAD
  3. RFBR [18-504-12045]

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In this study, Wsc1 was purified by trapping in water-soluble polymer-stabilized lipid nanoparticles, allowing for its extraction from yeast plasma membrane without denaturation. The structure of Wsc1 was characterized, providing new prospects for in vitro studies of yeast plasma proteins and potentially other fungi, including plant and human pathogens.
The cell wall sensor Wsc1 belongs to a small family of transmembrane proteins, which are crucial to sustain cell integrity in yeast and other fungi. Wsc1 acts as a mechanosensor of the cell wall integrity (CWI) signal transduction pathway which responds to external stresses. Here we report on the purification of Wsc1 by its trapping in water-soluble polymer-stabilized lipid nanoparticles, obtained with an amphipathic styrene-maleic acid (SMA) copolymer. The latter was employed to transfer tagged sensors from their native yeast membranes into SMA/lipid particles (SMALPs), which allows their purification in a functional state, i.e., avoiding denaturation. The SMALPs composition was characterized by fluorescence correlation spectroscopy, followed by two-dimensional image acquisition from single particle transmission electron microscopy to build a three-dimensional model of the sensor. The latter confirms that Wsc1 consists of a large extracellular domain connected to a smaller intracellular part by a single transmembrane domain, which is embedded within the hydrophobic moiety of the lipid bilayer. The successful extraction of a sensor from the yeast plasma membrane by a detergent-free procedure into a native-like membrane environment provides new prospects for in vitro structural and functional studies of yeast plasma proteins which are likely to be applicable to other fungi, including plant and human pathogens.

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