Cargando…

A Fluorescent Glycolipid-Binding Peptide Probe Traces Cholesterol Dependent Microdomain-Derived Trafficking Pathways

BACKGROUND: The uptake and intracellular trafficking of sphingolipids, which self-associate into plasma membrane microdomains, is associated with many pathological conditions, including viral and toxin infection, lipid storage disease, and neurodegenerative disease. However, the means available to l...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Steinert, Steffen, Lee, Esther, Tresset, Guillaume, Zhang, Dawei, Hortsch, Ralf, Wetzel, Richard, Hebbar, Sarita, Sundram, Jeyapriya Raja, Kesavapany, Sashi, Boschke, Elke, Kraut, Rachel
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2518528/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18716682
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0002933
_version_ 1782158584795103232
author Steinert, Steffen
Lee, Esther
Tresset, Guillaume
Zhang, Dawei
Hortsch, Ralf
Wetzel, Richard
Hebbar, Sarita
Sundram, Jeyapriya Raja
Kesavapany, Sashi
Boschke, Elke
Kraut, Rachel
author_facet Steinert, Steffen
Lee, Esther
Tresset, Guillaume
Zhang, Dawei
Hortsch, Ralf
Wetzel, Richard
Hebbar, Sarita
Sundram, Jeyapriya Raja
Kesavapany, Sashi
Boschke, Elke
Kraut, Rachel
author_sort Steinert, Steffen
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The uptake and intracellular trafficking of sphingolipids, which self-associate into plasma membrane microdomains, is associated with many pathological conditions, including viral and toxin infection, lipid storage disease, and neurodegenerative disease. However, the means available to label the trafficking pathways of sphingolipids in live cells are extremely limited. In order to address this problem, we have developed an exogenous, non-toxic probe consisting of a 25-amino acid sphingolipid binding domain, the SBD, derived from the amyloid peptide Aβ, and conjugated by a neutral linker with an organic fluorophore. The current work presents the characterization of the sphingolipid binding and live cell trafficking of this novel probe, the SBD peptide. SBD was the name given to a motif originally recognized by Fantini et al [1] in a number of glycolipid-associated proteins, and was proposed to interact with sphingolipids in membrane microdomains. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: In accordance with Fantini's model, optimal SBD binding to membranes depends on the presence of sphingolipids and cholesterol. In synthetic membrane binding assays, SBD interacts preferentially with raft-like lipid mixtures containing sphingomyelin, cholesterol, and complex gangliosides in a pH-dependent manner, but is less glycolipid-specific than Cholera toxin B (CtxB). Using quantitative time-course colocalization in live cells, we show that the uptake and intracellular trafficking route of SBD is unlike that of either the non-raft marker Transferrin or the raft markers CtxB and Flotillin2-GFP. However, SBD traverses an endolysosomal route that partially intersects with raft-associated pathways, with a major portion being diverted at a late time point to rab11-positive recycling endosomes. Trafficking of SBD to acidified compartments is strongly disrupted by cholesterol perturbations, consistent with the regulation of sphingolipid trafficking by cholesterol. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The current work presents the characterization and trafficking behavior of a novel sphingolipid-binding fluorescent probe, the SBD peptide. We show that SBD binding to membranes is dependent on the presence of cholesterol, sphingomyelin, and complex glycolipids. In addition, SBD targeting through the endolysosomal pathway in neurons is highly sensitive to cholesterol perturbations, making it a potentially useful tool for the analysis of sphingolipid trafficking in disease models that involve changes in cholesterol metabolism and storage.
format Text
id pubmed-2518528
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2008
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-25185282008-08-21 A Fluorescent Glycolipid-Binding Peptide Probe Traces Cholesterol Dependent Microdomain-Derived Trafficking Pathways Steinert, Steffen Lee, Esther Tresset, Guillaume Zhang, Dawei Hortsch, Ralf Wetzel, Richard Hebbar, Sarita Sundram, Jeyapriya Raja Kesavapany, Sashi Boschke, Elke Kraut, Rachel PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: The uptake and intracellular trafficking of sphingolipids, which self-associate into plasma membrane microdomains, is associated with many pathological conditions, including viral and toxin infection, lipid storage disease, and neurodegenerative disease. However, the means available to label the trafficking pathways of sphingolipids in live cells are extremely limited. In order to address this problem, we have developed an exogenous, non-toxic probe consisting of a 25-amino acid sphingolipid binding domain, the SBD, derived from the amyloid peptide Aβ, and conjugated by a neutral linker with an organic fluorophore. The current work presents the characterization of the sphingolipid binding and live cell trafficking of this novel probe, the SBD peptide. SBD was the name given to a motif originally recognized by Fantini et al [1] in a number of glycolipid-associated proteins, and was proposed to interact with sphingolipids in membrane microdomains. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: In accordance with Fantini's model, optimal SBD binding to membranes depends on the presence of sphingolipids and cholesterol. In synthetic membrane binding assays, SBD interacts preferentially with raft-like lipid mixtures containing sphingomyelin, cholesterol, and complex gangliosides in a pH-dependent manner, but is less glycolipid-specific than Cholera toxin B (CtxB). Using quantitative time-course colocalization in live cells, we show that the uptake and intracellular trafficking route of SBD is unlike that of either the non-raft marker Transferrin or the raft markers CtxB and Flotillin2-GFP. However, SBD traverses an endolysosomal route that partially intersects with raft-associated pathways, with a major portion being diverted at a late time point to rab11-positive recycling endosomes. Trafficking of SBD to acidified compartments is strongly disrupted by cholesterol perturbations, consistent with the regulation of sphingolipid trafficking by cholesterol. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The current work presents the characterization and trafficking behavior of a novel sphingolipid-binding fluorescent probe, the SBD peptide. We show that SBD binding to membranes is dependent on the presence of cholesterol, sphingomyelin, and complex glycolipids. In addition, SBD targeting through the endolysosomal pathway in neurons is highly sensitive to cholesterol perturbations, making it a potentially useful tool for the analysis of sphingolipid trafficking in disease models that involve changes in cholesterol metabolism and storage. Public Library of Science 2008-08-13 /pmc/articles/PMC2518528/ /pubmed/18716682 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0002933 Text en Steinert et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Steinert, Steffen
Lee, Esther
Tresset, Guillaume
Zhang, Dawei
Hortsch, Ralf
Wetzel, Richard
Hebbar, Sarita
Sundram, Jeyapriya Raja
Kesavapany, Sashi
Boschke, Elke
Kraut, Rachel
A Fluorescent Glycolipid-Binding Peptide Probe Traces Cholesterol Dependent Microdomain-Derived Trafficking Pathways
title A Fluorescent Glycolipid-Binding Peptide Probe Traces Cholesterol Dependent Microdomain-Derived Trafficking Pathways
title_full A Fluorescent Glycolipid-Binding Peptide Probe Traces Cholesterol Dependent Microdomain-Derived Trafficking Pathways
title_fullStr A Fluorescent Glycolipid-Binding Peptide Probe Traces Cholesterol Dependent Microdomain-Derived Trafficking Pathways
title_full_unstemmed A Fluorescent Glycolipid-Binding Peptide Probe Traces Cholesterol Dependent Microdomain-Derived Trafficking Pathways
title_short A Fluorescent Glycolipid-Binding Peptide Probe Traces Cholesterol Dependent Microdomain-Derived Trafficking Pathways
title_sort fluorescent glycolipid-binding peptide probe traces cholesterol dependent microdomain-derived trafficking pathways
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2518528/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18716682
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0002933
work_keys_str_mv AT steinertsteffen afluorescentglycolipidbindingpeptideprobetracescholesteroldependentmicrodomainderivedtraffickingpathways
AT leeesther afluorescentglycolipidbindingpeptideprobetracescholesteroldependentmicrodomainderivedtraffickingpathways
AT tressetguillaume afluorescentglycolipidbindingpeptideprobetracescholesteroldependentmicrodomainderivedtraffickingpathways
AT zhangdawei afluorescentglycolipidbindingpeptideprobetracescholesteroldependentmicrodomainderivedtraffickingpathways
AT hortschralf afluorescentglycolipidbindingpeptideprobetracescholesteroldependentmicrodomainderivedtraffickingpathways
AT wetzelrichard afluorescentglycolipidbindingpeptideprobetracescholesteroldependentmicrodomainderivedtraffickingpathways
AT hebbarsarita afluorescentglycolipidbindingpeptideprobetracescholesteroldependentmicrodomainderivedtraffickingpathways
AT sundramjeyapriyaraja afluorescentglycolipidbindingpeptideprobetracescholesteroldependentmicrodomainderivedtraffickingpathways
AT kesavapanysashi afluorescentglycolipidbindingpeptideprobetracescholesteroldependentmicrodomainderivedtraffickingpathways
AT boschkeelke afluorescentglycolipidbindingpeptideprobetracescholesteroldependentmicrodomainderivedtraffickingpathways
AT krautrachel afluorescentglycolipidbindingpeptideprobetracescholesteroldependentmicrodomainderivedtraffickingpathways
AT steinertsteffen fluorescentglycolipidbindingpeptideprobetracescholesteroldependentmicrodomainderivedtraffickingpathways
AT leeesther fluorescentglycolipidbindingpeptideprobetracescholesteroldependentmicrodomainderivedtraffickingpathways
AT tressetguillaume fluorescentglycolipidbindingpeptideprobetracescholesteroldependentmicrodomainderivedtraffickingpathways
AT zhangdawei fluorescentglycolipidbindingpeptideprobetracescholesteroldependentmicrodomainderivedtraffickingpathways
AT hortschralf fluorescentglycolipidbindingpeptideprobetracescholesteroldependentmicrodomainderivedtraffickingpathways
AT wetzelrichard fluorescentglycolipidbindingpeptideprobetracescholesteroldependentmicrodomainderivedtraffickingpathways
AT hebbarsarita fluorescentglycolipidbindingpeptideprobetracescholesteroldependentmicrodomainderivedtraffickingpathways
AT sundramjeyapriyaraja fluorescentglycolipidbindingpeptideprobetracescholesteroldependentmicrodomainderivedtraffickingpathways
AT kesavapanysashi fluorescentglycolipidbindingpeptideprobetracescholesteroldependentmicrodomainderivedtraffickingpathways
AT boschkeelke fluorescentglycolipidbindingpeptideprobetracescholesteroldependentmicrodomainderivedtraffickingpathways
AT krautrachel fluorescentglycolipidbindingpeptideprobetracescholesteroldependentmicrodomainderivedtraffickingpathways