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Method for measuring the unbinding energy of strongly-bound membrane-associated proteins

Biochimica et Biophysica Acta - Biomembranes

Kent, Michael S.; La Bauve, Elisa; Vernon, Briana C.; Ye, Dongmei Y.; Rogers, David M.; Mayes, Cathryn M.; Carson, Bryan C.; Rempe, Susan R.; Zheng, Aihua; Kielian, Margaret; Shreve, Andrew P.

We describe a new method to measure the activation energy for unbinding (enthalpy ΔH*u and free energy ΔG*u) of a strongly-bound membrane-associated protein from a lipid membrane. It is based on measuring the rate of release of a liposome-bound protein during centrifugation on a sucrose gradient as a function of time and temperature. The method is used to determine ΔH*u and ΔG*u for the soluble dengue virus envelope protein (sE) strongly bound to 80:20 POPC:POPG liposomes at pH 5.5. ΔH*u is determined from the Arrhenius equation whereas ΔG*u is determined by fitting the data to a model based on mean first passage time for escape from a potential well. The binding free energy ΔGb of sE was also measured at the same pH for the initial, predominantly reversible, phase of binding to a 70:30 PC:PG lipid bilayer. The unbinding free energy (20 ± 3 kcal/mol, 20% PG) was found to be roughly three times the binding energy per monomer, (7.8 ± 0.3 kcal/mol for 30% PG, or est. 7.0 kcal/mol for 20% PG). This is consistent with data showing that free sE is a monomer at pH 5.5, but assembles into trimers after associating with membranes. This new method to determine unbinding energies should be useful to understand better the complex interactions of integral monotopic proteins and strongly-bound peripheral membrane proteins with lipid membranes.

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New Method for Measuring the Anchoring Energy of Strongly-Bound Membrane-Associated Proteins [Method for measuring the anchoring energy of strongly-bound membrane-associated proteins]

Biophysical Journal

Kent, Michael S.; La Bauve, Elisa; Vernon, Briana C.; Ye, Dongmei Y.; Rogers, David M.; Mayes, Cathryn M.; Carson, Bryan C.; Rempe, Susan R.; Zheng, Aihua; Kielian, Margaret; Schreve, Andrew P.

Here, we describe a new method to measure the activation energy required to remove a strongly-bound membrane-associated protein from a lipid membrane (anchoring energy). It is based on measuring the rate of release of a liposome-bound protein during centrifugation on a sucrose gradient as a function of time and temperature. The method was used to determine anchoring energy for the soluble dengue virus envelope protein (sE) strongly bound to 80:20 POPC:POPG liposomes at pH 5.5. We also measured the binding energy of sE at the same pH for the initial, predominantly reversible, phase of binding to a 70:30 PC:PG lipid bilayer. The anchoring energy (37 +/- 1.7 kcal/mol, 20% PG) was found to be much larger than the binding energy (7.8 +/- 0.3 kcal/mol for 30% PG, or est. 7.0 kcal/mol for 20% PG). This is consistent with data showing that free sE is a monomer at pH 5.5, but assembles into trimers after associating with membranes. But, trimerization alone is insufficient to account for the observed difference in energies, and we conclude that some energy dissipation occurs during the release process. This new method to determine anchoring energy should be useful to understand the complex interactions of integral monotopic proteins and strongly-bound peripheral membrane proteins with lipid membranes.

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Mechanism of fusion of pathogenic enveloped viruses with the endosomal membrane

Kent, Michael S.; Carson, Bryan; Rempe, Susan; La Bauve, Sadie; Vanegas, Juan; Rogers, David; Vernon, Briana C.; Ricken, James B.; Ye, Dongmei; Moczydlowski, Edward; Zheng, Aihua; Kielian, Margaret C.

Dengue virus is a devastating human pathogen responsible for millions of infections each year. No antiviral therapies for Dengue currently exist, making effective treatment of the virus challenging. Dengue is taken into the cell through endocytosis. Low-pH mediated structural rearrangements of the envelope protein E leads to the formation of fusogenic E trimers that facilitate membrane fusion with late endosomes. The fusion mechanism is not fully understood, but is a key target for inhibiting the viral infection pathway. An important aspect of fusion is the dependence on endosomal membrane composition, and in particular, the requirement of anionic lipids. This study aims to characterize the biophysical reasons for this dependence. The work includes experimental studies and molecular simulations of the interactions of E with lipid membranes. These approaches revealed the structure of E bound to lipid membranes including the depth of its insertion into the membrane and the average angle with respect to the membrane, the fundamental interactions involved, the dependence of adsorption and anchoring energy on membrane composition, the membrane curvature induced upon insertion, and the correlation of the above with fusion efficiency of virus like particles (VLPs) with liposomes. As a part of this work we developed a new biophysical technique to measure the energy for pulling E out of a membrane, and distinguished anchoring (pull-out) and binding energies for this nonequilibrium system. We also developed a modeling approach combining molecular and continuum approaches to provide the first theoretical estimate of the binding energy. Taken together, this work lays the foundation for developing a systematic fundamental understanding of fusion in enveloped viruses that has been elusive to date.

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Programmed assembly of nanoscale structures using peptoids

Robinson, David R.; Buffleben, George M.; Kent, Michael S.

Sequence-specific polymers are the basis of the most promising approaches to bottom-up programmed assembly of nanoscale materials. Examples include artificial peptides and nucleic acids. Another class is oligo(N-functional glycine)s, also known as peptoids, which permit greater sidegroup diversity and conformational control, and can be easier to synthesize and purify. We have developed a set of peptoids that can be used to make inorganic nanoparticles more compatible with biological sequence-specific polymers so that they can be incorporated into nucleic acid or other biologically based nanostructures. Peptoids offer degrees of modularity, versatility, and predictability that equal or exceed other sequence-specific polymers, allowing for rational design of oligomers for a specific purpose. This degree of control will be essential to the development of arbitrarily designed nanoscale structures.

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Initiation of the TLR4 signal transduction network : deeper understanding for better therapeutics

Kent, Michael S.; Branda, Steven B.; Hayden, Carl C.; Sasaki, Darryl Y.; Sale, Kenneth L.

The innate immune system represents our first line of defense against microbial pathogens, and in many cases is activated by recognition of pathogen cellular components (dsRNA, flagella, LPS, etc.) by cell surface membrane proteins known as toll-like receptors (TLRs). As the initial trigger for innate immune response activation, TLRs also represent a means by which we can effectively control or modulate inflammatory responses. This proposal focused on TLR4, which is the cell-surface receptor primarily responsible for initiating the innate immune response to lipopolysaccharide (LPS), a major component of the outer membrane envelope of gram-negative bacteria. The goal was to better understand TLR4 activation and associated membrane proximal events, in order to enhance the design of small molecule therapeutics to modulate immune activation. Our approach was to reconstitute the receptor in biomimetic systems in-vitro to allow study of the structure and dynamics with biophysical methods. Structural studies were initiated in the first year but were halted after the crystal structure of the dimerized receptor was published early in the second year of the program. Methods were developed to determine the association constant for oligomerization of the soluble receptor. LPS-induced oligomerization was observed to be a strong function of buffer conditions. In 20 mM Tris pH 8.0 with 200 mM NaCl, the onset of receptor oligomerization occurred at 0.2 uM TLR4/MD2 with E coli LPS Ra mutant in excess. However, in the presence of 0.5 uM CD14 and 0.5 uM LBP, the onset of receptor oligomerization was observed to be less than 10 nM TLR4/MD2. Several methods were pursued to study LPS-induced oligomerization of the membrane-bound receptor, including CryoEM, FRET, colocalization and codiffusion followed by TIRF, and fluorescence correlation spectroscopy. However, there approaches met with only limited success.

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Computational and experimental study of nanoporous membranes for water desalination and decontamination

Debusschere, Bert D.; Zendejas, Frank Z.; Adalsteinsson, Helgi A.; Tran, Huu T.; Najm, H.N.; Chinn, Douglas A.; Kent, Michael S.; Simmons, Blake S.

Fundamentals of ion transport in nanopores were studied through a joint experimental and computational effort. The study evaluated both nanoporous polymer membranes and track-etched nanoporous polycarbonate membranes. The track-etched membranes provide a geometrically well characterized platform, while the polymer membranes are more closely related to ion exchange systems currently deployed in RO and ED applications. The experimental effort explored transport properties of the different membrane materials. Poly(aniline) membranes showed that flux could be controlled by templating with molecules of defined size. Track-etched polycarbonate membranes were modified using oxygen plasma treatments, UV-ozone exposure, and UV-ozone with thermal grafting, providing an avenue to functionalized membranes, increased wettability, and improved surface characteristic lifetimes. The modeling effort resulted in a novel multiphysics multiscale simulation model for field-driven transport in nanopores. This model was applied to a parametric study of the effects of pore charge and field strength on ion transport and charge exclusion in a nanopore representative of a track-etched polycarbonate membrane. The goal of this research was to uncover the factors that control the flux of ions through a nanoporous material and to develop tools and capabilities for further studies. Continuation studies will build toward more specific applications, such as polymers with attached sulfonate groups, and complex modeling methods and geometries.

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Biological research survey for the efficient conversion of biomass to biofuels

Kent, Michael S.; Andrews, Katherine M.

The purpose of this four-week late start LDRD was to assess the current status of science and technology with regard to the production of biofuels. The main focus was on production of biodiesel from nonpetroleum sources, mainly vegetable oils and algae, and production of bioethanol from lignocellulosic biomass. One goal was to assess the major technological hurdles for economic production of biofuels for these two approaches. Another goal was to compare the challenges and potential benefits of the two approaches. A third goal was to determine areas of research where Sandia's unique technical capabilities can have a particularly strong impact in these technologies.

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Results 26–50 of 84
Results 26–50 of 84