Publication | Closed Access
A lipid-anchored SNARE supports membrane fusion
49
Citations
32
References
2011
Year
Membrane FusionMembrane StructureProteinlipid InteractionMembrane BiophysicsLittle Lipid MixingNatural SciencesIntracellular Membrane FusionLipid AnchorMolecular BiologyMembrane BiologyProtein EngineeringIntracellular TraffickingCellular BiochemistryLipid MovementMedicineBiophysics
Intracellular membrane fusion requires R-SNAREs and Q-SNAREs to assemble into a four-helical parallel coiled-coil, with their hydrophobic anchors spanning the two apposed membranes. Based on the fusion properties of chemically defined SNARE- proteoliposomes, it has been proposed that the assembly of this helical bundle transduces force through the entire bilayer via the transmembrane SNARE anchor domains to drive fusion. However, an R-SNARE, Nyv1p, with a genetically engineered lipid anchor that spans half of the bilayer suffices for the fusion of isolated vacuoles, although this organelle has other R-SNAREs. To demonstrate unequivocally the fusion activity of lipid-anchored Nyv1p, we reconstituted proteoliposomes with purified lipid-anchored Nyv1p as the only protein. When these proteoliposomes were incubated with those bearing cognate Q-SNAREs, there was trans-SNARE complex assembly but, in accord with prior studies of the neuronal SNAREs, little lipid mixing. However, the addition of physiological fusion accessory proteins (HOPS, Sec17p, and Sec18p) allows lipid-anchored Nyv1p to support fusion, suggesting that trans-SNARE complex function is not limited to force transduction across the bilayers through the transmembrane domains.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1