Abstract

Among amphitropic proteins, human glycolipid transfer protein (GLTP) forms a structurally-unique fold that translocates on/off membranes to specifically transfer glycolipids. Phosphatidylcholine (PC) bilayers with curvature-induced packing stress stimulate much faster glycolipid intervesicular transfer than nonstressed PC bilayers raising questions about planar cytosol-facing biomembranes being viable sites for GLTP interaction. Herein, GLTP-mediated desorption kinetics of fluorescent glycolipid (tetramethyl-boron dipyrromethene (BODIPY)-label) from lipid monolayers are assessed using a novel microfluidics-based surface balance that monitors lipid lateral packing while simultaneously acquiring surface fluorescence data. At biomembrane-like packing (30-35 mN/m), GLTP uptake of BODIPY-glycolipid from POPC monolayers was nearly nonexistent but could be induced by reducing surface pressure to mirror packing in curvature-stressed bilayers. In contrast, 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylethanolamine (POPE) matrices supported robust BODIPY-glycolipid uptake by GLTP at both high and low surface pressures. Unexpectedly, negatively-charged cytosol-facing lipids, i.e., phosphatidic acid and phosphatidylserine, also supported BODIPY-glycolipid uptake by GLTP at high surface pressure. Remarkably, including both 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphate (5 mol%) and POPE (15 mol%) in POPC synergistically activated GLTP at high surface pressure. Our study shows that matrix lipid headgroup composition, rather than molecular packing per se, is a key regulator of GLTP-fold function while demonstrating the novel capabilities of the microfluidics-based film balance for investigating protein-membrane interfacial interactions.

Highlights

  • Among amphitropic proteins, human glycolipid transfer protein (GLTP) forms a structurally-unique fold that translocates on/off membranes to transfer glycolipids

  • We initially investigated the ability of GLTP to acquire galactosylceramide (1 mol%) labeled with tetramethyl boron dipyrromethene (BODIPY) via a pentadecanoyl acyl linker (B15-GalCer) from POPC monolayers poised at 30 mN/m, a surface pressure that mimics packing conditions in planar biomembranes [32, 33]

  • The fluorescence detection capability enabled direct assessment of GLTPmediated departure of B15-GalCer from monolayers composed of different matrix lipids into a flowing subphase while controlling the lateral packing state

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Summary

Introduction

Human glycolipid transfer protein (GLTP) forms a structurally-unique fold that translocates on/off membranes to transfer glycolipids. To assess the relative importance of monolayer matrix lipid composition versus lipid interfacial packing in regulating GLTP accessibility to B15-GalCer, glycolipid removal from POPC and POPE was compared at different initial surface pressures (Fig. 4).

Results
Conclusion
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