Nanoresearchers challenge dogma in protein transportation
in cells
21 September 2009
New data on signalling proteins, called G proteins, may
prove important in fighting diseases such as cardiovascular,
neurodegenerative disorders, and cancer. For many decades
scientists have puzzled on "How signalling proteins
transport and organize in specific areas of the cell?"
Researchers from
Nano-Science
Center and
Department of Neuroscience and Pharmacology provide yet
unrecognized clues to solve this mystery.
- We now begin to understand how signalling proteins
recognize and transport to certain areas of the cell and get
a more clear insight on the mechanism of major cellular
processes such as cell signalling and growth. This valuable
knowledge could be used in the future to understand and cure
disease such as depression and Alzheimer's explains
Associate Professor Dimitrios Stamou, Nano-Science
Center and Department of Neuroscience and Pharmacology, who
led the work.
Cells depend critically on their ability to selectively,
transport and isolate proteins in specific areas. Earlier
ideas that proposed proteins to move around in the cell by
recognizing nanoscale patches in their surrounding membrane,
also called lipid rafts, are currently under intense debate.
However researchers from Nano-Science Center found a new
unsuspected mechanism based on the shape of the membrane and
just had their results published in the prominent scientific
journal Nature Chemical Biology.
Attractive curves on the nanoscale
Like all other materials, cell membranes will crack when
bend. Membranes however show a unique property: bending them
more and more does not create bigger cracks but simply many
more cracks of the same size. It turns out certain important
proteins "like" to bind in these cracks therefore the curved
parts of a membrane become a good place for them to "meet"
each other and thus perform the complicated tasks that need
many different proteins working side by side.
- We were very surprised that it is the number of cracks
in the membrane that determines how many proteins are bound.
Up until now researchers in the field thought that the
crucial element was the proteins ability and "desire" to
bind to the membrane, also called the affinity. Our data
speaks against that, explains Nikos Hatzakis, Nano-Science
Center and Department of Chemistry.
The model is general
In cells proteins are travelling around in small vesicles
– a kind of soap bubbles that like cells are surrounded by
membranes. The researchers made vesicles of different sizes
in the laboratory and tested how different types of proteins
bound to the vesicle membrane. They observed that the
smaller the size of the vesicle, and more curved the
membrane, the higher the number of cracks available and
therefore the greater the number of proteins that can be
bound pr. surface area.
- The moment we understood that the most critical
parameter in our observations was membrane-shape we
immediately thought that maybe we found a general mechanism
that would apply to many other types of proteins apart from
the ones we were studying. So we tested G proteins that are
important signalling proteins attached to the membrane in a
different way, using a lipid anchor. Our data confirmed that
the model was indeed general, explains Vikram Bhatia,
Nano-Science Center and Department of Nanoscience and
Pharmacology.
- Unravelling the overarching importance of
membrane-shape for the localization of literally hundreds of
important signalling proteins will prove critical to our
understanding of a plethora of biological process many of
which are directly linked to important diseases, emphasises
Associate Professor Dimitrios Stamou.
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