Abstract

The N-terminal six-transmembrane domain (TM) bundle of lactose permease of Escherichia coli is uniformly inverted when assembled in membranes lacking phosphatidylethanolamine (PE). Inversion is dependent on the net charge of cytoplasmically exposed protein domains containing positive and negative residues, net charge of the membrane surface, and low hydrophobicity of TM VII acting as a molecular hinge between the two halves of lactose permease (Bogdanov, M., Xie, J., Heacock, P., and Dowhan, W. (2008) J. Cell Biol. 182, 925-935). Net neutral lipids suppress the membrane translocation potential of negatively charged amino acids, thus increasing the cytoplasmic retention potential of positively charged amino acids. Herein, TM organization of sucrose permease (CscB) and phenylalanine permease (PheP) as a function of membrane lipid composition was investigated to extend these principles to other proteins. For CscB, topological dependence on PE only becomes evident after a significant increase in the net negative charge of the cytoplasmic surface of the N-terminal TM bundle. High negative charge is required to overcome the thermodynamic block to inversion due to the high hydrophobicity of TM VII. Increasing the positive charge of the cytoplasmic surface of the N-terminal TM hairpin of PheP, which is misoriented in PE-lacking cells, favors native orientation in the absence of PE. PheP and CscB also display co-existing dual topologies dependent on changes in the charge balance between protein domains and the membrane lipids. Therefore, the topology of both permeases is dependent on PE. However, CscB topology is governed by thermodynamic balance between opposing lipid-dependent electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions.

Highlights

  • Introduction ofN234D only reduced the overall hydrophobicity of transmembrane domain (TM) VII from Ϫ25.1 to Ϫ20.7 kcal/mol

  • Inversion is dependent on the net charge of cytoplasmically exposed protein domains containing positive and negative residues, net charge of the membrane surface, and low hydrophobicity of TM VII acting as a molecular hinge between the two halves of lactose permease (Bogdanov, M., Xie, J., Heacock, P., and Dowhan, W. (2008) J

  • In order to differentiate between charge distribution and high hydrophobicity of TM VII in CscB as a barrier to lipid sensitivity of topology, we investigated the effects of increasing the negative charge of the cytoplasmic surface of the N-terminal TM bundle of CscB

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Summary

Lipids and Topological Rules of Membrane Protein Assembly

Inversion is dependent on the net charge of cytoplasmically exposed protein domains containing positive and negative residues, net charge of the membrane surface, and low hydrophobicity of TM VII acting as a molecular hinge between the two halves of lactose permease Increasing the net positive charge of the cytoplasmic extramembrane domains of PheP prevented topological inversion in PE-lacking cells, similar to results found with LacY. These results extend to other proteins the importance of lipid-protein charge interactions in establishing membrane protein topological organization. This observation provides molecular insight into how some proteins (22–24) exhibit multiple topological organizations within the same cell

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
Charge mutants used in CscB topology studies
NT net charge
DISCUSSION
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