High-resolution FRET microscopy of cholera toxin B-subunit and GPI-anchored proteins in cell plasma membranes

被引:358
作者
Kenworthy, AK
Petranova, N
Edidin, M
机构
[1] Johns Hopkins Univ, Dept Biol, Baltimore, MD 21218 USA
[2] Acad Sci Czech Republ, Inst Mol Genet, Lab Leucocytes Antigens, CR-14220 Prague, Czech Republic
关键词
D O I
10.1091/mbc.11.5.1645
中图分类号
Q2 [细胞生物学];
学科分类号
071009 ; 090102 ;
摘要
Lipid rafts enriched in glyeosphingolipids (GSL), GPI-anchored proteins, and cholesterol have been proposed as functional microdomains in cell membranes. However, evidence supporting their existence has been indirect and controversial. In the past year, hive studies used fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) microscopy to probe for the presence of Lipid rafts; rafts here would be defined as membrane domains containing clustered GPI-anchored proteins at the cell surface. The results of these studies, each based on a single protein, gave conflicting views of rafts. To address the source of this discrepancy, we have now used FRET to study three different GPI-anchored proteins and a GSL endogenous to several different cell types. FRET was detected between molecules of the GSI, GM1 labeled with cholera toxin B-subunit and between antibody-labeled GPI-anchored proteins, showing these raft markers are in submicrometer proximity in the plasma membrane. However, in most cases FRET correlated with the surface density of the lipid raft marker, a result inconsistent with significant clustering in microdomains. We conclude that in the plasma membrane, lipid rafts either exist only as transiently stabilized structures or, if stable, comprise at most a minor fraction of the cell surface.
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页码:1645 / 1655
页数:11
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