Protein-lipid interactions and non-lamellar lipidic structures in membrane pore formation and membrane fusion

Biochim Biophys Acta. 2016 Mar;1858(3):487-99. doi: 10.1016/j.bbamem.2015.11.026. Epub 2015 Dec 2.

Abstract

Pore-forming proteins and peptides act on their targeted lipid bilayer membranes to increase permeability. This approach to the modulation of biological function is relevant to a great number of living processes, including; infection, parasitism, immunity, apoptosis, development and neurodegeneration. While some pore-forming proteins/peptides assemble into rings of subunits to generate discrete, well-defined pore-forming structures, an increasing number is recognised to form pores via mechanisms which co-opt membrane lipids themselves. Among these, membrane attack complex-perforin/cholesterol-dependent cytolysin (MACPF/CDC) family proteins, Bax/colicin family proteins and actinoporins are especially prominent and among the mechanisms believed to apply are the formation of non-lamellar (semi-toroidal or toroidal) lipidic structures. In this review I focus on the ways in which lipids contribute to pore formation and contrast this with the ways in which lipids are co-opted also in membrane fusion and fission events. A variety of mechanisms for pore formation that involve lipids exists, but they consistently result in stable hybrid proteolipidic structures. These structures are stabilised by mechanisms in which pore-forming proteins modify the innate capacity of lipid membranes to respond to their environment, changing shape and/or phase and binding individual lipid molecules directly. In contrast, and despite the diversity in fusion protein types, mechanisms for membrane fusion are rather similar to each other, mapping out a pathway from pairs of separated compartments to fully confluent fused membranes. Fusion proteins generate metastable structures along the way which, like long-lived proteolipidic pore-forming complexes, rely on the basic physical properties of lipid bilayers. Membrane fission involves similar intermediates, in the reverse order. I conclude by considering the possibility that at least some pore-forming and fusion proteins are evolutionarily related homologues. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Pore-Forming Toxins edited by Mauro Dalla Serra and Franco Gambale.

Keywords: Membrane fission; Membrane fusion; Membrane pore formation; Molecular evolution; Non-lamellar (toroidal) lipids.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Cell Membrane* / chemistry
  • Cell Membrane* / metabolism
  • Colicins* / chemistry
  • Colicins* / metabolism
  • Humans
  • Membrane Fusion*
  • Membrane Lipids* / chemistry
  • Membrane Lipids* / metabolism
  • Perforin* / chemistry
  • Perforin* / metabolism
  • bcl-2-Associated X Protein* / chemistry
  • bcl-2-Associated X Protein* / metabolism

Substances

  • Colicins
  • Membrane Lipids
  • bcl-2-Associated X Protein
  • Perforin