Taming the Griffin : Membrane interactions of peripheral and monotopic glycosyltransferases and dynamics of bacterial and plant lipids in bicelles

Abstract: Biological membranes form a protective barrier around cells and cellular compartments. A broad range of biochemical processes occur in or at membranes demonstrating that they are not only of structural but also of functional importance. One important class of membrane proteins are membrane-associated glycosyltransferases. WaaG is a representative of this class of proteins; its function is to catalyze one step in the synthesis of lipopolysaccharides, which are outer membrane lipids found in Gram-negative bacteria.To study protein-membrane complexes by biophysical methods, one must employ membrane mimetics, i.e. simplifications of natural membranes. One type of membrane mimetic often employed in solution-state NMR is small isotropic bicelles, obloid aggregates formed from a lipid bilayer that is dissolved in aqueous solvent by detergent molecules that make up the rim of the bicelle.In this thesis, fast dynamics of lipid atoms in bicelles containing lipid mixtures that faithfully mimic plant and bacterial membranes were investigated by NMR relaxation. Lipids were observed to undergo a broad range of motions; while the glycerol backbone was found to be rigid, dynamics in the acyl chains were much more rapid and unrestricted. Furthermore, by employing paramagnetic relaxation enhancements an ‘atomic ruler’ was developed that allows for measurement of the immersion depths of lipid carbon atoms.WaaG is a membrane-associated protein that adopts a GT-B fold. For proteins of this type, it has been speculated that the N-terminal domain anchors tightly to the membrane via electrostatic interactions, while the anchoring of the C-terminal domain is weaker. Here, this model was tested for WaaG. It was found by a set of circular dichroism, fluorescence, and NMR techniques that an anchoring segment located in the N-terminal domain termed MIR-WaaG binds electrostatically to membranes, and the structure and localization of isolated MIR-WaaG inside micelles was determined. Full-length WaaG was also found to bind membranes electrostatically. It senses the surface charge density of the membrane whilst not discriminating between anionic lipid species. Motion of the C-terminal domain could not be observed under the experimental conditions used here. Lastly, the affinity of WaaG to membranes is lower than expected, indicating that WaaG should not be classified as a monotopic membrane protein but rather as a peripheral one.

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