Abstract

The major yeast phosphatidylinositol/phosphatidylcholine transfer protein Sec14p is the founding member of a large eukaryotic protein superfamily. Functional analyses indicate Sec14p integrates phospholipid metabolism with the membrane trafficking activity of yeast Golgi membranes. In this regard, the ability of Sec14p to rapidly exchange bound phospholipid with phospholipid monomers that reside in stable membrane bilayers is considered to be important for Sec14p function in cells. How Sec14p-like proteins bind phospholipids remains unclear. Herein, we describe the application of EPR spectroscopy to probe the local dynamics and the electrostatic microenvironment of phosphatidylcholine (PtdCho) bound by Sec14p in a soluble protein-PtdCho complex. We demonstrate that PtdCho movement within the Sec14p binding pocket is both anisotropic and highly restricted and that the C5 region of the sn-2 acyl chain of bound PtdCho is highly shielded from solvent, whereas the distal region of that same acyl chain is more accessible. Finally, high field EPR reports on a heterogeneous polarity profile experienced by a phospholipid bound to Sec14p. Taken together, the data suggest a headgroup-out orientation of Sec14p-bound PtdCho. The data further suggest that the Sec14p phospholipid binding pocket provides a polarity gradient that we propose is a primary thermodynamic factor that powers the ability of Sec14p to abstract a phospholipid from a membrane bilayer.

Highlights

  • The major yeast phosphatidylinositol/phosphatidylcholine transfer protein Sec14p is the founding member of a large eukaryotic protein superfamily

  • We describe our application of EPR spectroscopy to probe the local dynamics and the electrostatic microenvironment of a series of spin-labeled n-doxyl-PtdCho molecules incorporated into the Sec14p phospholipid binding pocket

  • We describe the first spin-labeling EPR experiments to access local dynamics and the electrostatic microenvironment of a PtdCho molecule sequestered within the Sec14p phospholipid-binding pocket

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Summary

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES

Expression and Purification of Sec14p—Recombinant His6Sec14p was purified from Escherichia coli essentially as previlipid exchange reaction (Fig. 1B). Bound phospholipid is predicted to orient with the were harvested by centrifugation, and the cell pellet was resusacyl-chains packed into the hydrophobic interior of the pocket, pended in ice-cold lysis buffer

EPR Spectroscopy and Spectral
RESULTS
Unshielded MTSL site
DISCUSSION
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