Cholesterol-mediated allosteric regulation of the mitochondrial translocator protein structure

2017 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

Jump to: Cite & Linked | Documents & Media | Details | Version history

Cite this publication

​Cholesterol-mediated allosteric regulation of the mitochondrial translocator protein structure​
Jaipuria, G.; Leonov, A.; Giller, K.; Vasa, S. K.; Jaremko, L.; Jaremko, M. & Linser, R. et al.​ (2017) 
Nature Communications8 art. 14893​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms14893 

Documents & Media

ncomms14893.pdf10.14 MBAdobe PDF

License

Published Version

Attribution 4.0 CC BY 4.0

Details

Authors
Jaipuria, Garima; Leonov, Andrei; Giller, Karin; Vasa, Suresh Kumar; Jaremko, Lukasz; Jaremko, Mariusz; Linser, Rasmus; Becker, Stefan; Zweckstetter, Markus
Abstract
Cholesterol is an important regulator of membrane protein function. However, the exact mechanisms involved in this process are still not fully understood. Here we study how the tertiary and quaternary structure of the mitochondrial translocator protein TSPO, which binds cholesterol with nanomolar affinity, is affected by this sterol. Residue-specific analysis of TSPO by solid-state NMR spectroscopy reveals a dynamic monomer-dimer equilibrium of TSPO in the membrane. Binding of cholesterol to TSPO's cholesterol-recognition motif leads to structural changes across the protein that shifts the dynamic equilibrium towards the translocator monomer. Consistent with an allosteric mechanism, a mutation within the oligomerization interface perturbs transmembrane regions located up to 35 angstrom away from the interface, reaching TSPO's cholesterol-binding motif. The lower structural stability of the intervening transmembrane regions provides a mechanistic basis for signal transmission. Our study thus reveals an allosteric signal pathway that connects membrane protein tertiary and quaternary structure with cholesterol binding.
Issue Date
2017
Status
published
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Journal
Nature Communications 
ISSN
2041-1723

Reference

Citations


Social Media