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binding to negatively curved membranes. Cell biology with bacteria?. 5 µm. Localization of cell division proteins. Rut Carballido-López. GFP-MinD. How do proteins localize to cell poles ? (DivIVA as model system). DivIVA-GFP. (lack of) Information from secondary structure prediction.
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How do proteins localize to cell poles ?(DivIVA as model system) DivIVA-GFP
(lack of) Information from secondary structure prediction 164 amino acids, mostly helical secondary structure prediction by PSIPRED coiled coil prediction by LUPAS multimerization via coiled coil regions
Possible mechanisms: 1) binding to another (cell division) protein 2) binding to a specific lipid species 3) affinity for curved membranes
20 % membrane vesicles 30 % 70 % Binding to another (membrane) protein? DG = DivIVA-GFP V = membrane vesicles Lip = liposomes D = DivIVA G = GFP
amphipathic helix of N-terminus (60 aa) Biacore (surface plasmon resonance) with L1-chip T = min
Possible mechanisms: 1) binding to another (cell division) protein 2) binding to a specific lipid species 3) affinity for curved membranes Edwards, 2000, EMBO
Cardiolipin Domains in Bacillus subtilis Kawai, 2003, J. Bac.
DivIVA localization in B. subtilis strains lacking certain lipids wt - PG -PE - CL
Possible mechanisms: 1) binding to another (cell division) protein 2) binding to a specific lipid species 3) affinity for curved membranes
Affinity for curvature = induces curvature ‘BAR domains as sensors or membrane curvature’ Peter et al., 2004, Science
Affinity for curvature = induces curvature ‘BAR domains as sensors or membrane curvature’ Peter et al., 2004, Science
DivIVA D D D D D D D D D liposomes Induction of curved membranes ? liposomes + DivIVA liposomes 200 nm
Possible mechanisms: 1) binding to another (cell division) protein 2) binding to a specific lipid species 3) affinity for curved membranes ?
Does curvature really not play a role? B. subtilis E. coli
E. coli division mutant MHD63
Possible mechanisms: 1) binding to another (cell division) protein 2) binding to a specific lipid species 3) affinity for curved membranes….., but not as we know it
Ø ~ 25 nm Higher order DivIVA structures ‘Doggy bones’ Stahlberg, 2004, Mol. Mic. ( Cryo-negative stain EM )
? ~ 25 nm ? Ø ~ 100 nm Conceptual simplification:
‘Molecular Bridging’ 1) self interaction (clustering) of subunits 2) subunits should be large (relative to curvature) 3) membrane interaction (weak) - no other proteins / lipids / or curved proteins necessary -
Monte Carlo simulation • Rules: • - cylinder 1 x 4 µm • - DivIVA oligomers (green) = spheres of 25 nm diameter • - curvature of membranes at transition from lateral wall to sides = diameter of 100 nm • - spheres can make max 8 contacts (doggy bone contains at least 8 DivIVA molecules) • 2 membrane contacts maximal (based on our EM data) • Epp and Epm in the range 1.5-6 k bT • (equivalent to 1-4 kcal/mol) ~in range of typical weak protein-protein attractions
- spheres can make 8 contacts - 2 membrane contacts maximal - spheres can make 4 contacts - no limitations in membrane contacts
d = 50 nm d =100 nm - No restrictions in nr. of interactions Epp = 2 k bT Epm = 6 k bT - 4 pp bonds - membrane contact = 1 pp contact Epp = 2.5 k bT Epm = 5.5 k bT
d = 50 nm d =100 nm • - max 4 pp bonds • - membrane contact • = 2 pp contact • Epp = 3 k bT • Emp = 5.5 k bT • max 6 pp bonds • membrane contact • = 3 pp contacts • Epp = 3.5 k bT • Epm = 5.5 k bT
Max 8 pp bonds • membrane contact • = 4 pp contacts • Epp = 3.5 k bT • Epm = 5.5 k bT d = 50 nm d =100 nm
CBCB - Newcastle University Rok Lenarcic Ling Wu Jeff Errington Sven Halbedel University of Oxford Wouter de Jong LoekVisser Michael Shaw University of Edinburgh Davide Marenduzzo