Abstract

Some transmembrane proteins must associate with lipid rafts to function. However, even if acylated, transmembrane proteins should not pack well with ordered raft lipids, and raft targeting is puzzling. Acylation is necessary for raft targeting of linker for activation of T cells (LAT). To determine whether an acylated transmembrane domain is sufficient, we examined raft association of palmitoylated and nonpalmitoylated LAT transmembrane peptides in lipid vesicles by a fluorescence quenching assay, by microscopic examination, and by association with detergent-resistant membranes (DRMs). All three assays detected very low raft association of the nonacylated LAT peptide. DRM association was the same as a control random transmembrane peptide. Acylation did not measurably enhance raft association by the first two assays but slightly enhanced DRM association. The palmitoylated LAT peptide and a FLAG-tagged LAT transmembrane domain construct expressed in cells showed similar DRM association when both were reconstituted into mixed vesicles (containing cell-derived proteins and lipids and excess artificial raft-forming lipids) before detergent extraction. We conclude that the acylated LAT transmembrane domain has low inherent raft affinity. Full-length LAT in mixed vesicles associated better with DRMs than the peptide. However, cells appeared to contain two pools of LAT, with very different raft affinities. Since some LAT (but not the transmembrane domain construct) was isolated in a protein complex, and the Myc- and FLAG-tagged forms of LAT could be mutually co-immunoprecipitated, oligomerization or interactions with other proteins may enhance raft affinity of one pool of LAT. We conclude that both acylation and other factors, possibly protein-protein interactions, target LAT to rafts.

Highlights

  • Some transmembrane proteins must associate with lipid rafts to function

  • The palmitoylated linker for activation of T cells (LAT) peptide and a FLAG-tagged LAT transmembrane domain construct expressed in cells showed similar detergent-resistant membranes (DRMs) association when both were reconstituted into mixed vesicles before detergent extraction

  • We will use “rafts” to describe lo phase domains in model membranes and similar domains thought to exist in cells and “DRMs” to refer to detergent-resistant membranes isolated from either source

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Summary

Introduction

Some transmembrane proteins must associate with lipid rafts to function. even if acylated, transmembrane proteins should not pack well with ordered raft lipids, and raft targeting is puzzling. The palmitoylated LAT peptide and a FLAG-tagged LAT transmembrane domain construct expressed in cells showed similar DRM association when both were reconstituted into mixed vesicles (containing cell-derived proteins and lipids and excess artificial raft-forming lipids) before detergent extraction. Since some LAT (but not the transmembrane domain construct) was isolated in a protein complex, and the Myc- and FLAG-tagged forms of LAT could be mutually co-immunoprecipitated, oligomerization or interactions with other proteins may enhance raft affinity of one pool of LAT We conclude that both acylation and other factors, possibly proteinprotein interactions, target LAT to rafts. Many pathogenic viruses and bacteria hijack host cell rafts during infection (8 –10) In all of these cases, function depends on selective enrichment of a subset of membrane proteins in rafts. § Present address: Sphingolipid Functions Laboratory, Supra-Biomolecular System Research Group, RIKEN Frontier Research System 2-1, Hirosawa, Wako Saitama 351-0198, Japan

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