4.8 Article

Metabolic and immune-sensitive contacts between lipid droplets and endoplasmic reticulum reconstituted in vitro

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NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2200513119

关键词

lipid droplets; membrane contact sites; optical trap; supported lipid bilayer; Rab18

资金

  1. Department of Biotechnolgy, Government of India [BT/PR4982/AGR/36/718/2012]
  2. Augmented Seed Grant of the Indian Institute of Technology Bombay
  3. Department of Atomic Energy Government of India
  4. Wellcome Trust India Alliance Senior Fellowships [IA/S/11/2500255, IA/S/19/2/504634]
  5. Department of Biotechnology

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This study demonstrates real-time lipid and protein exchange across contacts between ER-mimicking membrane and lipid droplets (LDs) purified from rat liver, revealing a significant increase in LD-ER contacts in response to changes in metabolic state and immune system activation in vitro.
Coordinated cell function requires a variety of subcellular organelles to exchange proteins and lipids across physical contacts that are also referred to as membrane contact sites. Such organelle-to-organelle contacts also evoke interest because they can appear in response to metabolic changes, immune activation, and possibly other stimuli. The microscopic size and complex, crowded geometry of these contacts, however, makes them difficult to visualize, manipulate, and understand inside cells. To address this shortcoming, we deposited endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-enriched microsomes purified from rat liver or from cultured cells on a coverslip in the form of a proteinaceous planar membrane. We visualized real-time lipid and protein exchange across contacts that form between this ER-mimicking membrane and lipid droplets (LDs) purified from the liver of rat. The high-throughput imaging possible in this geometry reveals that in vitro LD-ER contacts increase dramatically when the metabolic state is changed by feeding the animal and also when the immune system is activated. Contact formation in both cases requires Rab18 GTPase and phosphatidic acid, thus revealing common molecular targets operative in two very different biological pathways. An optical trap is used to demonstrate physical tethering of individual LDs to the ER-mimicking membrane and to estimate the strength of this tether. These methodologies can potentially be adapted to understand and target abnormal contact formation between different cellular organelles in the context of neurological and metabolic disorders or pathogen infection.

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