학술논문

Nano-scale resolution of native retinal rod disk membranes reveals differences in lipid composition.
Document Type
article
Source
The Journal of Cell Biology. 220(8)
Subject
ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters
Alcohol Oxidoreductases
Animals
Cattle
Cell Membrane
Eye Proteins
Lipidomics
Membrane Lipids
Membrane Proteins
Mice
Inbred BALB C
Mice
Knockout
Microscopy
Electron
Transmission
Nanotechnology
Peripherins
Retinal Rod Photoreceptor Cells
Rhodopsin
Single-Domain Antibodies
Tetraspanins
Language
Abstract
Photoreceptors rely on distinct membrane compartments to support their specialized function. Unlike protein localization, identification of critical differences in membrane content has not yet been expanded to lipids, due to the difficulty of isolating domain-specific samples. We have overcome this by using SMA to coimmunopurify membrane proteins and their native lipids from two regions of photoreceptor ROS disks. Each samples copurified lipids were subjected to untargeted lipidomic and fatty acid analysis. Extensive differences between center (rhodopsin) and rim (ABCA4 and PRPH2/ROM1) samples included a lower PC to PE ratio and increased LC- and VLC-PUFAs in the center relative to the rim region, which was enriched in shorter, saturated FAs. The comparatively few differences between the two rim samples likely reflect specific protein-lipid interactions. High-resolution profiling of the ROS disk lipid composition gives new insights into how intricate membrane structure and protein activity are balanced within the ROS, and provides a model for future studies of other complex cellular structures.