Biomolecules (Jul 2019)

Caveolin-1 Endows Order in Cholesterol-Rich Detergent Resistant Membranes

  • Carla Raggi,
  • Marco Diociaiuti,
  • Giulio Caracciolo,
  • Federica Fratini,
  • Luca Fantozzi,
  • Giovanni Piccaro,
  • Katia Fecchi,
  • Elisabetta Pizzi,
  • Giuseppe Marano,
  • Fiorella Ciaffoni,
  • Elena Bravo,
  • Maria L. Fiani,
  • Massimo Sargiacomo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biom9070287
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 7
p. 287

Abstract

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Cholesterol-enriched functional portions of plasma membranes, such as caveolae and rafts, were isolated from lungs of wild-type (WT) and caveolin-1 knockout (Cav-1 KO) mice within detergent resistant membranes (DRMs). To gain insight into their molecular composition we performed proteomic and lipid analysis on WT and Cav-1 KO-DRMs that showed predicted variations of proteomic profiles and negligible differences in lipid composition, while Langmuir monolayer technique and small and wide-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS-WAXS) were here originally introduced to study DRMs biophysical association state. Langmuir analysis of Cav-1 containing DRMs displayed an isotherm with a clear-cut feature, suggesting the coexistence of the liquid-ordered (Lo) phase typical of the raft structure, namely “cholesterol-rich Lo phase”, with a phase fully missing in Cav-1 KO that we named “caveolin-induced Lo phase”. Furthermore, while the sole lipid component of both WT and KO-DRMs showed qualitatively similar isotherm configuration, the reinsertion of recombinant Cav-1 into WT-DRMs lipids restored the WT-DRM pattern. X-ray diffraction results confirmed that Cav-1 causes the formation of a “caveolin-induced Lo phase”, as suggested by Langmuir experiments, allowing us to speculate about a possible structural model. These results show that the unique molecular link between Cav-1 and cholesterol can spur functional order in a lipid bilayer strictly derived from biological sources.

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