AI Article Synopsis

  • * The study specifically focused on oleic acid, the main component of olive oil, and its ability to improve the function of mutated cyclic nucleotide channels linked to retinal diseases.
  • * Results showed that olive oil and oleic acid helped transport non-functional mutant channels to the cell surface, restoring their functionality and suggesting potential therapeutic uses.

Article Abstract

One of the reasons to suggest olive oil consumption for a healthy life is its potential to induce robust lipidomic remodeling through membrane modification by dietary lipids. This remodeling might, in turn, modulate essential lipid-protein interactions while maintaining accurate transmembrane protein/domain orientation. Oleic acid, the primary compound in olive oil, has been suggested as a modulator of ion channel function. In this study, we explored whether this lipid could rescue the trafficking of mutated transmembrane proteins. In our initial approach, we supplemented the cell culture medium of HEK-293 cells expressing cyclic nucleotide channels tagged using green fluorescent protein (CNG-GFP) with olive oil or oleic acid. In addition to wild-type channels, we also expressed R272Q and R278W mutant channels, two non-functional intracellularly retained channels related to retinopathies. We used fluorescence microscopy and patch-clamp in the inside-out configuration to assess changes in the cell localization and function of the tested channels. Our results demonstrated that olive oil and oleic acid facilitated the transport of cyclic nucleotide-gated R272Q mutant channels towards the plasma membrane, rendering them electrophysiologically functional. Thus, our findings reveal a novel property of olive oil as a membrane protein traffic inductor.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11306028PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2024.1408156DOI Listing

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