Cells (Aug 2022)

Structural Entities Associated with Different Lipid Phases of Plant Thylakoid Membranes—Selective Susceptibilities to Different Lipases and Proteases

  • Ondřej Dlouhý,
  • Václav Karlický,
  • Uroš Javornik,
  • Irena Kurasová,
  • Ottó Zsiros,
  • Primož Šket,
  • Sai Divya Kanna,
  • Kinga Böde,
  • Kristýna Večeřová,
  • Otmar Urban,
  • Edward S. Gasanoff,
  • Janez Plavec,
  • Vladimír Špunda,
  • Bettina Ughy,
  • Győző Garab

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cells11172681
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 17
p. 2681

Abstract

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It is well established that plant thylakoid membranes (TMs), in addition to a bilayer, contain two isotropic lipid phases and an inverted hexagonal (HII) phase. To elucidate the origin of non-bilayer lipid phases, we recorded the 31P-NMR spectra of isolated spinach plastoglobuli and TMs and tested their susceptibilities to lipases and proteases; the structural and functional characteristics of TMs were monitored using biophysical techniques and CN-PAGE. Phospholipase-A1 gradually destroyed all 31P-NMR-detectable lipid phases of isolated TMs, but the weak signal of isolated plastoglobuli was not affected. Parallel with the destabilization of their lamellar phase, TMs lost their impermeability; other effects, mainly on Photosystem-II, lagged behind the destruction of the original phases. Wheat-germ lipase selectively eliminated the isotropic phases but exerted little or no effect on the structural and functional parameters of TMs—indicating that the isotropic phases are located outside the protein-rich regions and might be involved in membrane fusion. Trypsin and Proteinase K selectively suppressed the HII phase—suggesting that a large fraction of TM lipids encapsulate stroma-side proteins or polypeptides. We conclude that—in line with the Dynamic Exchange Model—the non-bilayer lipid phases of TMs are found in subdomains separated from but interconnected with the bilayer accommodating the main components of the photosynthetic machinery.

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