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COPI buds 60-nm lipid droplets from reconstituted water-phospholipid-triacylglyceride interfaces, suggesting a tension clamp function

Year: 2013

Journal: PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Vol. 110, p 13244-13249, 20150703

Authors: Thiam, Abdou Rachid; Antonny, Bruno; Wang, Jing; Delacotte, Jerome; Wilfling, Florian; Walther, Tobias C.; Beck, Rainer; Rothman, James E.; Pincet, Frederic

Organizations: Yale Univ, Sch Med, Dept Cell Biol, New Haven, CT 06520 USA; Univ Paris Diderot, Univ Paris 06, Ecole Normale Super Paris, Lab Phys Stat,Ctr Natl Rech Sci, F-75005 Paris, France; Univ Nice Sophia Antipolis, Inst Pharmacol Mol & Cellulaire, F-06560 Valbonne, France; Ctr Natl Rech Sci, F-06560 Valbonne, France; Heidelberg Univ, Biochem Ctr, D-69120 Heidelberg, Germany

Intracellular trafficking between organelles is achieved by coat protein complexes, coat protomers, that bud vesicles from bilayer membranes. Lipid droplets are protected by a monolayer and thus seem unsuitable targets for coatomers. Unexpectedly, coat protein complex I (COPI) is required for lipid droplet targeting of some proteins, suggesting a possible direct interaction between COPI and lipid droplets. Here, we find that COPI coat components can bud 60-nm triacylglycerol nanodroplets from artificial lipid droplet (LD) interfaces. This budding decreases phospholipid packing of the monolayer decorating the mother LD. As a result, hydrophobic triacylglycerol molecules become more exposed to the aqueous environment, increasing LD surface tension. In vivo, this surface tension increase may prime lipid droplets for reactions with neighboring proteins or membranes. It provides a mechanism fundamentally different from transport vesicle formation by COPI, likely responsible for the diverse lipid droplet phenotypes associated with depletion of COPI subunits.