Docosahexaenoic acid alters bilayer elastic properties.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Weill Medical College of Cornell University, New York, NY 10021, USA.

Published: June 2007

AI Article Synopsis

  • At low concentrations, polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) affect membrane proteins' functions through a common mechanism that likely involves their interaction with the lipid bilayer.
  • This interaction can alter the bilayer's elasticity and curvature, thereby impacting how membrane proteins behave when they change shape.
  • Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) specifically enhances channel formation in gramicidin analogues and does so by modifying bilayer properties, while oleic acid (OA) shows little effect on membrane proteins despite higher absorption.

Article Abstract

At low micromolar concentrations, polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) alter the function of many membrane proteins. PUFAs exert their effects on unrelated proteins at similar concentrations, suggesting a common mode of action. Because lipid bilayers serve as the common "solvent" for membrane proteins, the common mechanism could be that PUFAs adsorb to the bilayer/solution interface to promote a negative-going change in lipid intrinsic curvature and, like other reversibly adsorbing amphiphiles, increase bilayer elasticity. PUFA adsorption thus would alter the bilayer deformation energy associated with protein conformational changes involving the protein/bilayer boundary, which would alter protein function. To explore the feasibility of such a mechanism, we used gramicidin (gA) analogues of different lengths together with bilayers of different thicknesses to assess whether docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) could exert its effects through a bilayer-mediated mechanism. Indeed, DHA increases gA channel appearance rates and lifetimes and decreases the free energy of channel formation. The appearance rate and lifetime changes increase with increasing channel-bilayer hydrophobic mismatch and are not related to differing DHA bilayer absorption coefficients. DHA thus alters bilayer elastic properties, not just lipid intrinsic curvature; the elasticity changes are important for DHA's bilayer-modifying actions. Oleic acid (OA), which has little effect on membrane protein function, exerts no such effects despite OA's adsorption coefficient being an order of magnitude greater than DHA's. These results suggest that DHA (and other PUFAs) may modulate membrane protein function by bilayer-mediated mechanisms that do not involve specific protein binding but rather changes in bilayer material properties.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1887599PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0701015104DOI Listing

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