Abstract

The cytoplasmically oriented monotopic integral membrane protein stomatin forms high-order oligomers and associates with lipid rafts. To characterize the domains that are involved in oligomerization and detergent-resistant membrane (DRM) association, we expressed truncation and point mutants of stomatin and analyzed their size and buoyancy by ultracentrifugation methods. A small C-terminal region of stomatin that is largely hydrophobic, Ser-Thr-Ile-Val-Phe-Pro-Leu-Pro-Ile (residues 264-272), proved to be crucial for oligomerization, whereas the N-terminal domain (residues 1-20) and the last 12 C-terminal amino acids (residues 276-287) were not essential. The introduction of alanine substitutions in the region 264-272 resulted in the appearance of monomers. Remarkably, only three of these residues, Ile-Val-Phe (residues 266-268), were found to be indispensable for the DRM association. Interestingly, the exchange of Pro-269 and to some extent the residues 270-272, which are essential for oligomerization, did not affect the DRM association of stomatin. This suggests that the formation of oligomers is not necessary for the association of stomatin with DRMs. Internal deletions near the membrane anchoring domain resulted in the formation of intermediate size oligomers suggesting a conformational interdependence of large parts of the C-terminal region. Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching analysis of the tagged, monomeric, non-DRM mutant ST-(1-262)-green fluorescent protein and wild type stomatin StomGFP showed a significantly higher lateral mobility of the truncation mutant in the plasma membrane suggesting a membrane interaction of the respective C-terminal region also in vivo.

Highlights

  • We show that the C-terminal region between residues 264 and 272 is essential for oligomerization and that only three hydrophobic residues (266 –268) within this region are necessary for detergent-resistant membrane (DRM) association

  • Amino Acid Residues between Positions 262 and 275 Are Essential for Oligomerization—We have previously shown that the last 25 C-terminal amino acid residues of stomatin are essential for homo-oligomerization [13]

  • SDS-PAGE of the collected fractions, subsequent Western blotting, and densitometric evaluation showed that about 90% of the C-terminal truncation mutant, ST-(1–275), is oligomeric (Figs. 2 and 6), similar to wild type (WT) stomatin, ST-(1– 287)

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Summary

Introduction

Rather basic C-terminal end, 276QGIIGAKHSHLG287, or the more proximal, mainly hydrophobic region, 262KNSTIVFPLPIDML275 (Fig. 1), was important for oligomerization, we generated several C-terminal truncation mutants and stably expressed them in A431 or UAC cells. Truncation Mutants Deficient in Oligomerization Do Not Associate with DRMs—We have already shown that endogenous stomatin associates with lipid rafts in UAC cells, whereas the monomeric C-terminal truncation mutant, ST-(1–262), is not detected in DRMs [11].

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