Start Publications Brominated lipid probes expose structural asymmetries in ...
KSV NIMA

Brominated lipid probes expose structural asymmetries in constricted membranes

Year: 2023

Journal: Nature Structural & Molecular Biology, Volume 30, 2023-02

Authors: Moss, Frank R.; Lincoff, James; Tucker, Maxwell; Mohammed, Arshad; Grabe, Michael; Frost, Adam

Keywords: Cryoelectron microscopy; Membrane biophysics

Lipids in biological membranes are thought to be functionally organized, but few experimental tools can probe nanoscale membrane structure. Using brominated lipids as contrast probes for cryo-EM and a model ESCRT-III membrane-remodeling system composed of human CHMP1B and IST1, we observed leaflet-level and protein-localized structural lipid patterns within highly constricted and thinned membrane nanotubes. These nanotubes differed markedly from protein-free, flat bilayers in leaflet thickness, lipid diffusion rates and lipid compositional and conformational asymmetries. Simulations and cryo-EM imaging of brominated stearoyl-docosahexanenoyl-phosphocholine showed how a pair of phenylalanine residues scored the outer leaflet with a helical hydrophobic defect where polyunsaturated docosahexaenoyl tails accumulated at the bilayer surface. Combining cryo-EM of halogenated lipids with molecular dynamics thus enables new characterizations of the composition and structure of membranes on molecular length scales.