Abstract

An essential feature of the innate immune system is maintaining cellular homeostasis by identifying and removing senescent and apoptotic cells and modified lipoproteins. Identification is achieved through the recognition of molecular patterns, including structurally distinct oxidized phospholipids, on target cells by macrophage receptors. Both the structural nature of the molecular patterns recognized and their orientation within membranes has remained elusive. We recently described the membrane conformation of an endogenous oxidized phospholipid ligand for macrophage scavenger receptor CD36, where the truncated oxidized sn-2 fatty acid moiety protrudes into the aqueous phase, rendering it accessible for recognition. Herein we examine the generality of this conformational motif for peroxidized glycerophospholipids within membranes. Our data reveal that the addition of a polar oxygen atom on numerous peroxidized fatty acids reorients the acyl chain, whereby it no longer remains buried within the membrane interior but rather protrudes into the aqueous compartment. Moreover, we show that neither a conformational change in the head group relative to the membrane surface nor the presence of a polar head group is essential for CD36 recognition of free oxidized phospholipid ligands within membranes. Rather, our results suggest the following global phenomenon. As cellular membranes undergo lipid peroxidation, such as during senescence or apoptosis, previously hydrophobic portions of fatty acids will move from the interior of the lipid bilayer to the aqueous exterior. This enables physical contact between pattern recognition receptor and molecular pattern ligand. Cell membranes thus "grow whiskers" as phospholipids undergo peroxidation, and many of their oxidized fatty acids protrude at the surface.

Highlights

  • An integral feature of this model is the macromolecular assembly of amphipathic phospholipids into a bilayer structure, with polar head groups directed toward the aqueous phase and hydrophobic aliphatic fatty acid chains of glycerophospholipids extending toward the membrane interior

  • It is hard to envision how a macrophage pattern recognition receptor like CD36 can identify senescent or apoptotic cells through the presence of low abundance structurally specific oxidized phospholipid ligands interspersed within a target membrane bilayer, if the high affinity motif on the lipid resides within a buried acyl chain

  • By determining critical internuclear distances within oxPC and native PC in perdeuterated membrane bilayers, our results reveal that no significant conformational alterations occur in the head group region during oxidation; rather, for many oxPL examined, a dramatic reorienting of the more polar oxidized fatty acid chain occurs such that it protrudes into the aqueous compartment

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Summary

The Lipid Whisker Model of the Structure of Oxidized Cell Membranes*

As cellular membranes undergo lipid peroxidation, such as during senescence or apoptosis, previously hydrophobic portions of fatty acids will move from the interior of the lipid bilayer to the aqueous exterior This enables physical contact between pattern recognition receptor and molecular pattern ligand. It is hard to envision how a macrophage pattern recognition receptor like CD36 can identify senescent or apoptotic cells through the presence of low abundance structurally specific oxidized phospholipid ligands interspersed within a target membrane bilayer, if the high affinity motif on the lipid resides within a buried acyl chain. By determining critical internuclear distances within oxPC and native (nonoxidized) PC in perdeuterated membrane bilayers, our results reveal that no significant conformational alterations occur in the head group region during oxidation; rather, for many oxPL examined, a dramatic reorienting of the more polar oxidized fatty acid chain occurs such that it protrudes into the aqueous compartment. Our results are consistent with a global model in which peroxidized target membranes signal and engage scanning macrophages through protrusion of diverse sn-2 oxidized lipid fatty acid chains or “whiskers” at the cell surface

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
Conformational Change Following
Average distance
These results indicate that the choline
Glycerophospholipids Confirm That the Choline Head Group of Oxidized
The Polar Head Group Is Not
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