Abstract

The EuroConference on Microdomains, Lipid Rafts and Caveolae was held in Tomar, Portugal, from 17 to 22 May 2003. This joint EURESCO Conference/EMBO workshop was organized by G. van Meer and K. Simons and was the second meeting in a series that was initiated by K. Fiedler in 2001. ![][1] The plasma membrane was described as a fluid mosaic in the early 1970s by Singer & Nicolson (1972). Since then, several studies that were designed to elucidate the temporal and spatial architecture of the plasma membrane have provided a more complicated picture (reviewed in Edidin, 2003a). Many of these studies indicate that the plasma membrane is at the very least a mosaic of compartments that is maintained by an active cytoskeleton mesh. The membrane raft hypothesis proposes another type of compartmentalization (Simons & Ikonen, 1997; Simons & van Meer, 1988), in which specific lipids may dynamically associate with each other to form platforms that are important for membrane protein sorting and the formation of signalling complexes. This conference focused on the lateral domains that occur in biomembranes. In this report, we discuss new developments in the understanding of the lateral segregation of lipids that have been obtained from studies in artificial membranes and the parallel efforts to visualize lipidic assemblies in living cell membranes. We also report on new information about the roles of rafts in several cellular processes, such as in the sorting of membrane constituents during vesicular trafficking and in signal transduction, especially in immunological processes and caveolae formation and function. ### Raft structure In artificial membranes. To address the role of lipids in the formation of membrane rafts, studies have been performed with artificial membranes, and these suggest that homogeneous membrane bilayers might be an exception rather than a rule (Edidin, 2003b; McConnell & Vrljic, 2003). In general, … [1]: /embed/graphic-1.gif

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