Publication | Open Access
Out-of-the-groove transport of lipids by TMEM16 and GPCR scramblases
77
Citations
45
References
2018
Year
Proteinlipid InteractionPhospholipid ScramblasesMolecular PhysiologySignal TransductionBiochemistryNatural SciencesMolecular BiologyOut-of-the-groove TransportMembrane BiologyProtein TransportIntracellular TraffickingCellular BiochemistryPhospholipid ScramblingMedicineLipid MovementCellular PhysiologyBiophysicsTransbilayer Lipid Translocation
Phospholipid scramblases externalize phosphatidylserine to facilitate numerous physiological processes. Several members of the structurally unrelated TMEM16 and G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) protein families mediate phospholipid scrambling. The structure of a TMEM16 scramblase shows a membrane-exposed hydrophilic cavity, suggesting that scrambling occurs via the ‟credit-card" mechanism where lipid headgroups permeate through the cavity while their tails remain associated with the membrane core. Here we show that afTMEM16 and opsin, representatives of the TMEM16 and GCPR scramblase families, transport phospholipids with polyethylene glycol headgroups whose globular dimensions are much larger than the width of the cavity. This suggests that transport of these large headgroups occurs outside rather than within the cavity. These large lipids are scrambled at rates comparable to those of normal phospholipids and their presence in the reconstituted vesicles promotes scrambling of normal phospholipids. This suggests that both large and small phospholipids can move outside the cavity. We propose that the conformational rearrangements underlying TMEM16- and GPCR-mediated credit-card scrambling locally deform the membrane to allow transbilayer lipid translocation outside the cavity and that both mechanisms underlie transport of normal phospholipids.
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