Abstract

The structural and functional consequences of a mismatch between the hydrophobic thickness d(P) of a transmembrane protein and that d(L) of the supporting lipid bilayer were investigated using melibiose permease (MelB) from Escherichia coli reconstituted in a set of bis saturated and monounsaturated phosphatidylcholine species differing in acyl-chain length. Influence of MelB on the midpoint gel-to-liquid-phase transition temperature, T(m), of the saturated lipids was investigated through fluorescence polarization experiments, with 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene as the probe, for varying protein/lipid molar ratio. Diagrams in temperature versus MelB concentration showed positive or negative shifts in T(m) with the short-chain lipids DiC12:0-PC and DiC14:0-PC or the long-chain lipids DiC16:0-PC and DiC18:0-PC, respectively. Theoretical analysis of the data yielded a d(L) value of 3.0 +/- 0.1 nm for the protein, similar to the 3.02 nm estimated from hydropathy profiles. Influence of the acyl chain length on the carrier activity of MelB was investigated in the liquid phase, using the monounsaturated PCs. Binding of the sugar to the transporter showed no dependence on the acyl chain length. In contrast, counterflow and Deltapsi-driven experiments revealed strong dependence of melibiose transport on the lipid acyl chain length. Similar bell-shaped transport versus acyl chain length profiles were obtained, optimal activity being supported by diC16:1-PC. On account of a d(P) value of 2.65 nm for the lipid and of various local constraints which would all tend to elongate the acyl chains in contact with the protein, one can conclude that maximal activity was obtained when the hydrophobic thickness of the bilayer matched that of the protein.

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