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Trends in Thermostability Provide Information on the Nature of Substrate, Inhibitor, and Lipid Interactions with Mitochondrial Carriers

Mitochondrial carriers, including uncoupling proteins, are unstable in detergents, which hampers structural and mechanistic studies. To investigate carrier stability, we have purified ligand-free carriers and assessed their stability with a fluorescence-based thermostability assay that monitors prot...

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Autores principales: Crichton, Paul G., Lee, Yang, Ruprecht, Jonathan J., Cerson, Elizabeth, Thangaratnarajah, Chancievan, King, Martin S., Kunji, Edmund R. S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4375477/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25653283
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M114.616607
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author Crichton, Paul G.
Lee, Yang
Ruprecht, Jonathan J.
Cerson, Elizabeth
Thangaratnarajah, Chancievan
King, Martin S.
Kunji, Edmund R. S.
author_facet Crichton, Paul G.
Lee, Yang
Ruprecht, Jonathan J.
Cerson, Elizabeth
Thangaratnarajah, Chancievan
King, Martin S.
Kunji, Edmund R. S.
author_sort Crichton, Paul G.
collection PubMed
description Mitochondrial carriers, including uncoupling proteins, are unstable in detergents, which hampers structural and mechanistic studies. To investigate carrier stability, we have purified ligand-free carriers and assessed their stability with a fluorescence-based thermostability assay that monitors protein unfolding with a thiol-reactive dye. We find that mitochondrial carriers from both mesophilic and thermophilic organisms exhibit poor stability in mild detergents, indicating that instability is inherent to the protein family. Trends in the thermostability of yeast ADP/ATP carrier AAC2 and ovine uncoupling protein UCP1 allow optimal conditions for stability in detergents to be established but also provide mechanistic insights into the interactions of lipids, substrates, and inhibitors with these proteins. Both proteins exhibit similar stability profiles across various detergents, where stability increases with the size of the associated detergent micelle. Detailed analysis shows that lipids stabilize carriers indirectly by increasing the associated detergent micelle size, but cardiolipin stabilizes by direct interactions as well. Cardiolipin reverses destabilizing effects of ADP and bongkrekic acid on AAC2 and enhances large stabilizing effects of carboxyatractyloside, revealing that this lipid interacts in the m-state and possibly other states of the transport cycle, despite being in a dynamic interface. Fatty acid activators destabilize UCP1 in a similar way, which can also be prevented by cardiolipin, indicating that they interact like transport substrates. Our controls show that carriers can be soluble but unfolded in some commonly used detergents, such as the zwitterionic Fos-choline-12, which emphasizes the need for simple validation assays like the one used here.
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spelling pubmed-43754772015-04-08 Trends in Thermostability Provide Information on the Nature of Substrate, Inhibitor, and Lipid Interactions with Mitochondrial Carriers Crichton, Paul G. Lee, Yang Ruprecht, Jonathan J. Cerson, Elizabeth Thangaratnarajah, Chancievan King, Martin S. Kunji, Edmund R. S. J Biol Chem Bioenergetics Mitochondrial carriers, including uncoupling proteins, are unstable in detergents, which hampers structural and mechanistic studies. To investigate carrier stability, we have purified ligand-free carriers and assessed their stability with a fluorescence-based thermostability assay that monitors protein unfolding with a thiol-reactive dye. We find that mitochondrial carriers from both mesophilic and thermophilic organisms exhibit poor stability in mild detergents, indicating that instability is inherent to the protein family. Trends in the thermostability of yeast ADP/ATP carrier AAC2 and ovine uncoupling protein UCP1 allow optimal conditions for stability in detergents to be established but also provide mechanistic insights into the interactions of lipids, substrates, and inhibitors with these proteins. Both proteins exhibit similar stability profiles across various detergents, where stability increases with the size of the associated detergent micelle. Detailed analysis shows that lipids stabilize carriers indirectly by increasing the associated detergent micelle size, but cardiolipin stabilizes by direct interactions as well. Cardiolipin reverses destabilizing effects of ADP and bongkrekic acid on AAC2 and enhances large stabilizing effects of carboxyatractyloside, revealing that this lipid interacts in the m-state and possibly other states of the transport cycle, despite being in a dynamic interface. Fatty acid activators destabilize UCP1 in a similar way, which can also be prevented by cardiolipin, indicating that they interact like transport substrates. Our controls show that carriers can be soluble but unfolded in some commonly used detergents, such as the zwitterionic Fos-choline-12, which emphasizes the need for simple validation assays like the one used here. American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2015-03-27 2015-02-04 /pmc/articles/PMC4375477/ /pubmed/25653283 http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M114.616607 Text en © 2015 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc. Author's Choice—Final version full access. Creative Commons Attribution Unported License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) applies to Author Choice Articles
spellingShingle Bioenergetics
Crichton, Paul G.
Lee, Yang
Ruprecht, Jonathan J.
Cerson, Elizabeth
Thangaratnarajah, Chancievan
King, Martin S.
Kunji, Edmund R. S.
Trends in Thermostability Provide Information on the Nature of Substrate, Inhibitor, and Lipid Interactions with Mitochondrial Carriers
title Trends in Thermostability Provide Information on the Nature of Substrate, Inhibitor, and Lipid Interactions with Mitochondrial Carriers
title_full Trends in Thermostability Provide Information on the Nature of Substrate, Inhibitor, and Lipid Interactions with Mitochondrial Carriers
title_fullStr Trends in Thermostability Provide Information on the Nature of Substrate, Inhibitor, and Lipid Interactions with Mitochondrial Carriers
title_full_unstemmed Trends in Thermostability Provide Information on the Nature of Substrate, Inhibitor, and Lipid Interactions with Mitochondrial Carriers
title_short Trends in Thermostability Provide Information on the Nature of Substrate, Inhibitor, and Lipid Interactions with Mitochondrial Carriers
title_sort trends in thermostability provide information on the nature of substrate, inhibitor, and lipid interactions with mitochondrial carriers
topic Bioenergetics
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4375477/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25653283
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M114.616607
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