Abstract

Lipid membrane surfaces can act as proton-collecting antennae, accelerating proton uptake by membrane-bound proton transporters. We investigated this phenomenon in lipid nanodiscs (NDs) at equilibrium on a local scale, analyzing fluorescence fluctuations of individual pH-sensitive fluorophores at the membrane surface by fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS). The protonation rate of the fluorophores was ∼100-fold higher when located at 9- and 12-nm diameter NDs, compared to when in solution, indicating that the proton-collecting antenna effect is maximal already for a membrane area of ∼60 nm2. Fluorophore-labeled cytochrome c oxidase displayed a similar increase when reconstituted in 12 nm NDs, but not in 9 nm NDs, i.e., an acceleration of the protonation rate at the surface of cytochrome c oxidase is found when the lipid area surrounding the protein is larger than 80 nm2, but not when below 30 nm2. We also investigated the effect of external buffers on the fluorophore proton exchange rates at the ND membrane-water interfaces. With increasing buffer concentrations, the proton exchange rates were found to first decrease and then, at millimolar buffer concentrations, to increase. Monte Carlo simulations, based on a simple kinetic model of the proton exchange at the membrane-water interface, and using rate parameter values determined in our FCS experiments, could reconstruct both the observed membrane-size and the external buffer dependence. The FCS data in combination with the simulations indicate that the local proton diffusion coefficient along a membrane is ∼100 times slower than that observed over submillimeter distances by proton-pulse experiments (Ds ∼ 10−5cm2/s), and support recent theoretical studies showing that proton diffusion along membrane surfaces is time- and length-scale dependent.

Highlights

  • Proton gradients across membranes generated by membrane-bound proton pumps and subsequently used in, e.g., ATP synthesis, transmembrane transport, and motility, is a central part of cellular energy turnover

  • For ND(9)-cytochrome c oxidase (CytcO)-flu, both the pKa values and the protonation on-rates were comparable to the values for CytcO-flu in aqueous solution, i.e., for the case when the protein is not surrounded by a lipid membrane

  • The data indicate that the proton-collecting antenna effect saturates already for a membrane area of p(9 nm/2)2 ~60 nm[2] (ND(9)-flu), i.e., a lipid area in the range of 60–80 nm[2] is sufficient to effectuate a full enhancement of the protonation rates

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Proton gradients across membranes generated by membrane-bound proton pumps and subsequently used in, e.g., ATP synthesis, transmembrane transport, and motility, is a central part of cellular energy turnover. Monitoring a low number of pH-sensitive fluorophores at a time as they diffuse through the confocal detection volume, free in solution, or labeled to lipids or proteins, it is possible to determine the proton exchange to and from the fluorophores in their specific local environment at steady state (17–19) Using this approach, proton uptake rates of dyes bound to a lipid within small (30-nm diameter) 1,2-dileoyl-sn-glycero-3[phospo-rac-(1-glycerol)] (DOPG) liposomes (20,21), or to the surface of CytcO, subsequently inserted into the same type of liposomes (22), have been studied. As predicted from a general form of Fick’s law, coupled bulk diffusion and the Grotthuss mechanism can make Ds for this mode of long-range proton translocation almost as prominent as in bulk water, while membranebound and bulk buffers significantly reduce Ds in proportion to the fraction of protonated buffer molecules and by their limited diffusivity compared to Dw (23,29) These buffer effects, as observed by proton-pulse experiments (13,14,24,30), lead to significantly smaller RPCA values, already at mM buffer concentrations (11,15,31). Protonation Dynamics on Lipid Nanodiscs aggregates, fractions containing NDs were pooled, concentrated, and reinjected onto the Superdex 200 10/300 GL column (GE Healthcare) once or twice for the 9- and 12 nm NDs, respectively

MATERIALS AND METHODS
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