Signal Transduction in the Visual Cascade Involves Specific Lipid-Protein Interactions*

Elke Hessel {ddagger} §, Martin Heck {ddagger}, Peter Müller ¶, Andreas Herrmann ¶ and Klaus Peter Hofmann {ddagger} ||

From the {ddagger}Institut für Medizinische Physik und Biophysik, Universitätsklinikum Charité, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin, Ziegelstrasse 5-9, 10098 Berlin, Germany and Institut für Biologie/Biophysik, Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultät I, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin, Invalidenstrasse 42, 10115 Berlin, Germany

Received for publication, March 18, 2003 , and in revised form, March 28, 2003.


    ABSTRACT
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 
In retinal rod photoreceptor cells, transducin (Gt) and cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase (PDE) are peripherally anchored to the cytoplasmic surface of the disk saccules. We have examined the role of specific phospholipids in the interaction of these proteins with native osmotically intact disk vesicles, employing spin-labeled phospholipid analogues (2% of total phospholipids) and bovine serum albumin back-exchange assay. Inactive GDP-bound transducin exclusively reduced the extraction of negatively charged phosphatidylserine. The effect disappeared upon activation of the G-protein with guanosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (GTP{gamma}S). PDE affected the extraction of the zwitterionic phosphatidylcholine and, to a smaller extent, of phosphatidylethanolamine. When active GtGTP{gamma}S interacted with the PDE to form the active effector, the interaction with phosphatidylcholine was specifically enhanced. Each copy of the G-protein bound 3 ± 1 molecules of phosphatidylserine, whereas the PDE bound a much larger amount (70 ± 10) of a mixture of phosphatidylcholine and ethanolamine. The results are interpreted as a head group-specific and state-dependent interaction of the signaling proteins with the phospholipids of the photoreceptor membrane.


    INTRODUCTION
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 
The transduction of the light signal in the retinal rod photoreceptor is a well studied model system for G-protein-coupled signal transduction. It involves the sequential activation of rhodopsin, transducin (Gt),1 and cGMP phosphodiesterase (PDE) on the cytoplasmic surface of the disk saccules that fill the rod outer segment (ROS). Absorption of light transforms rhodopsin into the activated metarhodopsin II state, which then interacts with Gt to rapidly catalyze the exchange of GDP for GTP in the nucleotide-binding site of the Gt{alpha}-subunit. Gt{alpha}-GTP dissociates and couples to the effector PDE (1, 2). Activation of PDE results in a decrease in the cytosolic cGMP concentration which in turn leads to closure of cGMP-regulated channels in the plasma membrane, hyperpolarization, and neuronal signaling (see Ref. 3).

Heterotrimeric Gt is peripherally attached to the disk membrane by weak hydrophobic and ionic interactions. Both N-terminal acylation of the Gt{alpha}-subunit and C-terminal farnesylation of the Gt{gamma}-subunit are required for membrane association of Gt (4). Electrostatic interactions, especially of Gt{beta}{gamma}, further enhance the membrane binding to negatively charged surfaces or to vesicles containing the acidic lipid phosphatidylserine (57). Inactive transducin in its GDP-bound form is attached as a Gt{alpha}{beta}{gamma} heterotrimer to the membrane. Gt couples to activated rhodopsin, triggering GDP release as a first step of catalytic nucleotide exchange. The interaction with the receptor occurs directly from the membrane-bound state of the holoprotein. After activation of transducin, Gt{alpha} dissociates from Gt{beta}{gamma} and couples stoichiometrically to the effector PDE.

The PDE is a heterotetrameric protein composed of the undissociable {alpha}{beta} complex (8) and two identical {gamma}-subunits (9). Full activation of the enzyme requires the binding of activated (GTP bound) Gt to both of its inhibitory {gamma}-subunits (see Ref. 10). Like Gt, the PDE complex is weakly associated to the surface of the disk membrane by geranylgeranylation of PDE-{beta} and farnesylation of PDE-{alpha} (11, 12). The geranylgeranyl moiety was mainly made responsible for membrane attachment, whereas the farnesyl group may play a role in protein-protein interactions. It is known that efficient activation of PDE by active Gt{alpha}GTP requires the presence of membranes, and protein-membrane interactions co-determine the interaction of Gt{alpha}-GTP with the PDE (13). PDE activation studies on vesicles of different lipid composition showed that the activity of PDE depended on the nature of the lipid. The highest PDE activation was found on large unilamellar vesicles composed of the unsaturated phospholipid dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (14).

This study provides direct information on the phospholipid interaction of the signaling proteins in native disk membranes. In particular, we are interested in the dynamics of this protein-lipid interaction during activation of the signal cascade. To characterize this interaction, we incorporate spin-labeled phospholipids into disk membranes, and we probe their accessibility to extraction by bovine serum albumin (BSA) (15, 16). In a previous study, employing this approach, we have shown that the interaction of rhodopsin with phosphatidylserine (PS) is dependent on its state of the activation, in agreement with earlier results (17) obtained by chemical labeling of PS in which rhodopsin was found to protect some of the PS of the membrane. During the lifetime of the active metarhodopsin II conformation, one molecule of PS became released by rhodopsin (18). We have now measured the extractability by BSA of spin-labeled phospholipid analogues from the disk membrane in the absence or presence of Gt and PDE, both in the dark and under conditions of light activation. In the present study, we identified privileged interactions of Gt and PDE phospholipids. Gt anchors in a small cluster of PS, whereas PDE binds to a large "cushion" of more than 70 ± 10 molecules of phosphatidylcholine (PC) and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE).


    EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 
Materials—Short chain spin-labeled phospholipid analogues 1-palmitoyl-2-(4-doxyl-pentanoyl)-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (SL-PC), 1-palmitoyl-2-(4-doxyl-pentanoyl)-sn-glycero-3-phosphoserine (SL-PS), and 1-palmitoyl-2-(4-doxyl-pentanoyl)-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (SL-PE) were synthesized as described previously (16, 19). Spin-labeled phospholipids (SL-PL) carried a long chain fatty acid at the sn-1 position and a short spin-labeled fatty acid at the sn-2 position with a paramagnetic nitroxide group at the fourth carbon position. All chemicals were purchased from VWR International, Fluka, Roche Applied Science, and Sigma.

Preparation of Rod Outer Segments (ROS) and Disk Vesicles—ROS were purified from freshly dissected and frozen bovine retinae and prepared in the dark according to Kühn (20). Osmotically intact disk vesicles were prepared by extraction of soluble and membrane-associated proteins as described (18, 21) and resuspended in 1,3-bis[tris(hydroxymethyl)methylamino]-propane (BTP) buffer (2% (w/v) sucrose solution, 130 mM NaCl, 20 mM BTP, pH 7.4, 1 mM MgCl2) or Hepes buffer (5% (w/v) sucrose, 130 mM Hepes, pH 7.4, osmotic pressure 320 ± 5 mosmol) as indicated in the figure legends. To prepare isolated disks, the suspension was pressed through a filter with 2-µm pores (Nuclepore filter) and used immediately. The concentration of rhodopsin was determined spectrophotometrically using {epsilon}500 = 40,000 M 1 cm1.

To minimize lipid peroxidation during the experiment, we always used disk membranes that were freshly prepared and used immediately for spin label incorporation. Intact ROS that were prepared with their own complement of cytosolic anti-oxidants (prepared according to Schnetkamp (22)) and resuspended in a Ficoll/sucrose solution gave the same results as ROS prepared according to Kühn ((20), containing EDTA, dithiothreitol, and taurine). Also, disks in Ficoll/sucrose solution (22) and disks in salt/buffer/sucrose solution (see above) showed the same results.

Protein Preparation—Gt and PDE were purified from bovine retinae essentially as described (23) and stored in 20 mM Tris buffer, pH 7.0, 130 mM NaCl, 1 mM MgCl2, and 2 mM dithiothreitol at –40 °C.

Centrifugation Assay—The relative amount of soluble and membrane-associated Gt and PDE was determined using the centrifugation assay (24, 25). The applications to the gels were normalized as follows. Aliquots (100 µl) of the samples used for the ESR/spin-label experiments (30 µM rhodopsin reconstituted with 5 µM Gt and/or 1 µM PDE) were incubated at room temperature and pelleted by centrifugation (5 min, 52,000 x g, 4 °C). After complete removal of the supernatant, each pellet was resuspended in 100 µl of buffer to yield the initial membrane concentration. To determine the amount of protein either bound to the membrane pellet or present in the supernatant, the same volume of supernatant or resuspended pellet was analyzed by SDS-PAGE.

Measurement of Transbilayer Distribution of Spin-label Analogues— The SL-PL were dissolved in chloroform/methanol (1:1, v/v), transferred to a glass tube, dried under nitrogen, and mixed with the desired volume of buffer, leading to a suspension of SL-PL micelles. For labeling in the dark, disk membrane suspensions (30 µM rhodopsin, incubated with 5 mM diisopropyl fluorophosphate) were mixed with the label suspension corresponding to time 0 for all kinetic measurements. The final label concentration (30 µM) was 2% of total phospholipids. Independent of the preparation protocol, we found a complete uptake of spin-labeled phospholipids into disk membranes within 30 s after the addition of spin label at 20 °C.

After insertion of SL-PL into the outer membrane leaflet of disks at 20 °C, the time-dependent decrease of the BSA-induced SL-PL extract-ability from the membrane was measured (15, 16, 18). At times indicated in the figures, aliquots from the labeled membrane suspension were mixed with fatty acid-free BSA solution (3% final concentration (w/v)) for 1 min on ice to extract all lipid analogues accessible to BSA (21). After centrifugation supernatant and pellet were frozen for further analysis.

Influence of Proteins on Analogue Extractability—To investigate the influence of PDE, washed disk vesicles (30 µM rhodopsin) were either incubated with 1–3 µM PDE at 20 °C for 30 min in the dark before labeling, or PDE (0.5–3 µM) was added to disk membranes after SL-PL had equilibrated between the two membrane leaflets (see below). To remove PDE from the disk membranes after incubation, the pellets of the spin-labeled disk membranes were washed in solution of low salt concentration (8.5% sucrose (w/v), 20 mM Hepes, pH 7.4, osmotic pressure 310 ± 10 mosmol) for 2 min (52,000 x g), and the concentrations of SL-PL in the supernatant and in the membrane pellet were measured by ESR spectroscopy as described below.

To assess the influence of Gt, SL-PL were first allowed to equilibrate across the disk membranes (30 µM rhodopsin) in the dark. Subsequently, transducin (5 µM) was added, and activation of G-protein was started by adding GTP{gamma}S (30 µM final concentration). ESR signal intensities were corrected for the dilution effect caused by the addition of PDE, transducin, and/or GTP{gamma}S.

To measure the SL-PC extractability by BSA after PDE addition, 700 µl of labeled disk vesicles with and without PDE addition (2 µM final concentration) were mixed with 350 µl of BSA (final concentration 3% (w/v)) and incubated further at 20 °C. At times indicated in the figures, 75-µl aliquots were taken from the samples, centrifuged, and washed, and both the supernatants and pellets were stored for analysis.

ESR Measurements—The amount of SL-PL in the samples (supernatant and pellet) was determined from the mid-field peak of the respective ESR spectra (Bruker ECS 106 spectrometer, Karlsruhe, Germany).

To reoxidize reduced nitroxide moieties, potassium ferricyanide (10 mM final concentration) was added. In the presence of diisopropyl fluorophosphate, analogue hydrolysis was less than 5% under the conditions. Experimental data are presented in the figures as the amount of SL-PL non-extractable from the disk membranes, either measured in the pellets or estimated from the BSA-containing supernatants. In both cases identical results were obtained. The increase with time of the non-extractable analogue fraction was fitted to a single exponential function, using a least squares fit procedure.

Statistical Analysis—Results are expressed as mean ± S.D. Statistical comparisons were performed using the Mann-Whitney test.


    RESULTS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 
Membrane Binding of Gt and PDE—In vitro, membrane binding of both Gt and PDE depends on several factors, including protein and membrane concentration, ionic strength, pH, and temperature. We therefore used a centrifugation assay to quantify membrane binding of both proteins under the conditions of the spin-label experiments (24, 26).

At the high membrane concentration (30 µM rhodopsin), about 70% of the Gt and PDE added bound to the membrane in the dark (Fig. 1, lanes 2 and 3). As expected, activation of Gt by GTP{gamma}S resulted in a substantial dissociation of Gt from the membranes (Fig. 1, lane 4), whereas Gt activation in the presence of PDE enhanced membrane binding of PDE (Fig. 1, lane 5). In addition, in the latter case a fraction of Gt{alpha} was retained on the membranes, consistent with enhanced membrane binding of the active PDE-Gt{alpha}GTP{gamma}S complex formed (27, 28).



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FIG. 1.
Membrane binding of Gt and PDE. Aliquots of samples used for ESR spin-label experiments were pelleted by centrifugation. The supernatants (A) and pellets (B) were analyzed by SDS-PAGE. Control membranes (lane 1) show no residual Gt or PDE but a fraction of rhodopsin (R) that remains unaggregated after heating (see "Experimental Procedures"). Samples contained Gt (5 µM), PDE (1 µM), and GTP{gamma}S (30 µM) and were treated as indicated in the lower panel. Molecular mass standard (left) are as follows: 78, 66.2, 42.7, and 30 kDa.

 

BSA Extraction of Spin-labeled Phospholipid Analogues—To identify and characterize the interaction of Gt and PDE with spin-labeled phospholipid analogues (SL-PL), we measured the BSA-extractable amounts of those analogues from disk membranes in the absence or presence of proteins. Briefly, the technique (18, 21) consists of the following: (i) incorporation of SL-PL into the outer membrane leaflet, (ii) extraction of SL-PL localized in the outer leaflet with BSA after various incubation times, and (iii) centrifugation of membranes and quantification of SL-PL in the pellet (i.e. lipid analogues which remained in the membrane) and in the supernatant (i.e. BSA-extracted lipid analogues) by ESR spectroscopy. Upon mixture with membranes, analogues incorporated into the outer membrane leaflet within a few seconds (29). Subsequently, the extractable amount of SL-PL decreases within minutes (Fig. 2A), which is explained by a redistribution of the SL-PL between outer and inner leaflet of the membrane. The final level of SL-PL available for back-exchange with BSA reflected the equilibrium distribution of SL-PL. We have discussed previously (21) to what degree the distribution between the outer and inner leaflet of the membranes of the SL-PL is a correct measure of the endogenous phospholipid species. It can be stated that in the case of PS, all available techniques yielded consistent results (17, 30, 31). No direct assay was available for PC, so that these data cannot be directly compared. For PE, chemical probing of the native lipid yielded higher asymmetries than found with the SL-PL (21, 32).



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FIG. 2.
Transbilayer distribution of spin-labeled lipid analogues in disk vesicles in the dark and in dependence of Gt binding and activation. A, spin-labeled lipids (2% of total phospholipids) were incorporated into the outer leaflet of disk membranes (30 µM rhodopsin, BTP buffer, pH 7.4, 2% (w/v) sucrose) in the dark at 20 °C (t = 0). At the indicated time points, aliquots of the disk suspension were collected, and the fraction of analogues present in the outer leaflet was assayed by back-exchange on BSA. After analyzing the ESR spectra, the percentage of SL-PL that remained non-extractable is plotted versus time (SL-PS, triangle; SL-PC, circle; SL-PE, square). Data points are means ± S.D., solid lines are fits with a sum of exponentials from independent measurements of at least 10 different preparations. B, spin-labeled analogues were allowed to equilibrate across the disk membranes in the dark at 20 °C (30 µM rhodopsin, BTP, or Hepes buffer, pH 7.4). After 60 min, Gt (5 µM; gray symbols) or Gt (5 µM) with GTP{gamma}S (30 µM; white symbols) were added to disk vesicles in the dark. Control shown with black symbols. The percentage of non-extractable SL-PL is presented as mean ± S.D. from three independent preparations (SL-PS, triangle; SL-PC, circle; and SL-PE, square). C, percentage of Gt-induced non-extractable spin-labeled phosphatidylserine analogue as a function of the total Gt concentration.

 

The three SL-PL analogues reached a stable equilibrium distribution with a mean half-time of less than 5 min. The data indicate (Fig. 2A) an almost symmetrical distribution of spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine (SL-PC) and phosphatidylethanolamine (SL-PE), and a more asymmetrical distribution of spin-labeled phosphatidylserine (SL-PS), i.e. 75% of the spin label in the outer leaflet. This is the same distribution as was previously reported under slightly different conditions (see "Experimental Procedures") (18, 21).

Transducin Reduces the BSA Extraction of Spin-labeled PS—To investigate the interaction of Gt with SL-PL, Gt (5 µM) was added to the membranes after complete equilibration of SL-PL between the two leaflets. Subsequently, the extraction of SL-PL by BSA (1 min for each aliquot) was assayed in 5-min intervals and compared with that of samples without transducin. The influence of Gt activation on lipid interaction was investigated in a separate sample in which excess GTP{gamma}S was co-injected together with Gt. The sample was left in the dark to keep the amount of activated rhodopsin as low as possible. Even under these conditions Gt is activated within seconds by a small fraction of endogenous opsin/all-trans-retinal complexes present in the membranes (33).

Fig. 2B shows the fraction of SL-PL that remained in the membranes after BSA extraction in the presence of inactive or active Gt. SL-PS becomes significantly less extractable upon addition of Gt. In the presence of 5 µM Gt, additional 5.2 ± 0.6% of SL-PS was not accessible to BSA. This was not observed upon activation of Gt with GTP{gamma}S, indicating that it is the membrane-associated inactive holoprotein that specifically affects the extraction of SL-PS. A much smaller, if any, effect was measured for SL-PC or SL-PE (~2% less extractable SL-PE with 5 µM Gt). Although we found consistently a slightly lower level of extraction, the effect was not significant, neither with nor without GTP{gamma}S.

The extraction of SL-PS was repeated with different amounts of Gt. The membrane-bound non-extractable amount of SL-PS increased with Gt concentration (Fig. 2C). Similar results were obtained in the absence and presence of 1 mM MgCl2 (see "Experimental Procedures").

PDE Reduces the BSA Extraction of Spin-labeled PC and PE—To measure the influence of PDE on BSA extraction of SL-PL, disk membranes were preincubated with PDE (1–3 µM PDE, 30 min) in the dark to reach an equilibrium between membrane-bound and -soluble PDE. Subsequently, SL-PL were added, and their BSA-extractable portion was followed as described above (Fig. 3). In an alternative protocol, PDE was added to the disk membranes after SL-PL equilibration between both membrane leaflets (Fig. 3, insets).



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FIG. 3.
A–C, influence of PDE binding on extraction of spin-labeled phospholipids from disk vesicles. The kinetics of the non-extractable fraction of SL-PL in the dark at 20 °C is plotted (see Fig. 2A) for the sample with PDE preincubation (3 µM for 30 min; open symbols) and without PDE (filled symbols) in A–C (A, SL-PS; B, SL-PC; C, SL-PE). Insets show the kinetics for a time interval of 50–90 min in an alternative protocol, where PDE was added after SL-PL equilibration in the disk membrane. Spin-labeled analogues (2% of total endogenous phospholipids) were allowed to equilibrate across the disk membranes in Hepes in the dark at 20 °C (see Fig. 2A). At the times indicated, the percentage of non-extractable SL-PL is presented in the dark (filled symbols). After 60 min PDE (1 µM as final concentration) was added to the spin-labeled vesicle suspension in BTP and Hepes and BSA extraction was followed (open symbols) in A–C (see above). Means ± S.D. are given for three independent preparations.

 

Fig. 3 shows the amount of SL-PL that remained in the membranes after BSA extraction, with and without pre-equilibration of the membranes with PDE. As seen in Fig. 3A, PDE had no effect on the extractability of SL-PS and did not affect the asymmetric distribution of PS between leaflets. In contrast to SL-PS, both SL-PC and SL-PE were significantly less extractable in the presence of PDE (Fig. 3, B and C). Under these conditions (3 µM PDE) about 17% less of SL-PC and 12% less of SL-PE were found in the BSA extract. Interestingly, the effect on SL-PL extractability was complete before the first aliquot was taken (i.e. within 1 min, see below). As Fig. 3 shows, both the time course and the magnitude of subsequent transbilayer movement of SL-PC and SL-PE remained unchanged.

When the PDE was added after a stable plateau of SL-PL transbilayer distribution was reached (Fig. 3, insets), SL-PS extraction was not affected (Fig. 3A, insets), but both SL-PC and SL-PE became significantly less extractable. The effect was already recognizable at the first data point, i.e. 1 min after addition of 1 µM PDE (Fig. 3, B and C, insets); 6% of the SL-PC and 4% of the SL-PE resisted the BSA extraction. On a relative scale, this effect is similar to that seen for membranes preincubated with PDE. When the extraction was repeated with different amounts of PDE (preincubation protocol), the membrane-bound non-extractable amount of both SL-PC and SL-PE increased with PDE, whereas no influence of PDE was seen in the case of SL-PS (Fig. 4). The PDE-related non-extractable amount of SL-PC and SL-PE did not saturate within the concentration range investigated. Unfortunately, the onset of membrane aggregation above 3 µM PDE prevented the study of higher PDE concentrations.



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FIG. 4.
Influence of PDE and Gt binding on BSA-mediated extraction of SL-PL. Percentage of PDE-induced non-extractable spin-labeled phospholipid analogues (SL-PS, triangle; SL-PC, circle; SL-PE, square) as a function of the total PDE concentration. Data were taken after spin-labeled analogues (2% of total endogenous phospholipids) were allowed to equilibrate across the disk membranes in the dark at 20 °C (at t = 60 min; see Fig. 2A). Means ± S.D. are presented. (Because no significant differences between the PDE experiments of Fig. 3 were found, all data were included in the figure.)

 

The Effect of PDE Is Reversible—To test the reversibility of the PDE effect, disks were preincubated with 2 µM PDE (30 min in the dark); SL-PC was added, and aliquots were taken after various incubation times for the back-exchange assay (PC control in Fig. 5A). In parallel, aliquots were taken, and the disks were pelleted by centrifugation and treated with low ionic strength buffer to release PDE from membranes (see "Experimental Procedures"). Quantitative removal of PDE was confirmed by analysis of the samples with the centrifugation assay (data not shown). As seen in Fig. 5A, the release of PDE from the disk membranes at low ionic strength resulted in a complete and immediate reversal of the PDE effect on SL-PC extractability. To verify that the washing procedure per se did not affect the extraction of analogues, the pellet of spin-labeled, PDE-bound membranes was washed with isotonic buffer (data not shown); PDE remained membrane-associated, and the amount of extracted analogues could not be reversed to the level of the control. The reversibility of the PDE effect was also seen when the membranes containing the labeled lipid were persistently incubated with BSA with or without PDE (Fig. 5B).



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FIG. 5.
Effect of PDE on SL-PC extraction is reversible. A, spin-labeled lipids (2% of total phospholipids) were added to the disk vesicles and resuspended in sucrose/Hepes buffer (see "Experimental Procedures" and protocol in Fig. 2A). Kinetics of the fraction of non-extractable SL-PC in rod disk membranes in the dark in the presence of PDE (2 µM, white circles), without PDE (black circles), and after removal of PDE from the disk vesicles by washing in buffer with reduced salt concentration (gray circles, see "Experimental Procedures"). The enhanced onset after the kinetics in the presence of PDE reflects the interaction between PDE and SL-PC (see "Discussion"). Data points are from two independent measurements. B, SL-PC (2% of total endogenous phospholipids) was allowed to equilibrate across the disk membranes in the dark at 20 °C (see Fig. 2A). At t = 60 min, PDE (2 µM final concentration; gray triangles) was added. Control, without PDE (black circles). At t = 75 min both samples were mixed with BSA (final concentration 3% (w/v); white circles and triangles, respectively) and incubated further at 20 °C. The amount of non-extractable SL-PC is presented from three independent measurements.

 

Effect of PDE Activation on the Extraction of Spin-labeled Lipids—We asked next whether the simultaneous presence of Gt and PDE and/or their interaction in the active Gt-GTP-PDE complex affected the extraction of SL-PL. By using the protocol of Figs. 2 and 3, Gt, PDE, and GTP{gamma}S were successively added to the membrane suspension (Fig. 6).



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FIG. 6.
A–C, influence of Gt and PDE binding on disk membranes on the SL-PL extraction by BSA from the membrane in the dark and after activation. Spin-labeled analogues (2% of total endogenous phospholipids) were allowed to equilibrate across the disk membranes in the dark at 20 °C (see Fig. 2A) The percentage of non-extractable SL-PL is plotted versus time, for samples after Gt binding (5 µM)(gray symbols), after PDE incubation (1–1.5 µM)(white) in the dark, and after activation with GTP{gamma}S (30 µM)(black-pointed) compared with SL-PL redistribution without protein binding in the dark (black symbols) in A–C (A, SL-PS; B, SL-PC; C, SL-PE; means ± S.D. for at least three independent preparations).

 

Consistent with the results described above addition of Gt resulted in a reduced extraction of SL-PS but not of SL-PE or SL-PC. The subsequent addition of PDE reduced the extract-ability of SL-PC and to a lower degree that of SL-PE but did not influence that of SL-PS. Thus, in the presence of both Gt and PDE, the effect of the respective proteins is simply superimposed, demonstrating that, in their inactive form, the two proteins act independently on the membrane lipids.

Although we observed a reversal of the Gt-SL-PS interaction upon activation of Gt (see above), this was not seen when Gt was activated in the presence of PDE. Under this condition, reduced extractability of SL-PS was not reverted (Fig. 6A), although a significant fraction of active Gt dissociated from the membranes (see above and Fig. 1). Activation of Gt and PDE resulted in a significant further decrease of SL-PC extraction (Fig. 6B), consistent with the enhanced membrane binding of PDE (see above and Fig. 1). Interestingly, the effect was not seen with SL-PE (Fig. 6C).


    DISCUSSION
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 
We have examined the interaction with membrane phospholipids of two proteins involved in visual signal transduction, namely, the G-protein transducin (Gt) and the effector, a cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase (PDE). In the native, osmotically intact disk vesicles, each rhodopsin molecule is surrounded by about 65 lipids (34). With the membrane composition (35) and the asymmetry of the membrane (Fig. 2A), an average of 7 PS, 16 PC, and 16 PE per rhodopsin is found in the outer leaflet (to which Gt and PDE anchor). A BSA back-exchange technique was applied to assess and quantify lipid-protein interaction in native membrane preparations. To this end, the different amount of extracted spin-labeled phospholipid analogue in the presence or absence of the respective protein was taken as a measure. Disk membranes were reconstituted with Gt and PDE, alone or in combination, and in their active or inactive states. The salient result of the work is that the lipid interactions of the two proteins are lipid head group-specific and depend on the activation state of the protein. We find an interaction of Gt only with the negatively charged SL-PL phosphatidylserine, and of the PDE only with the zwitterionic SL-PL phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine. The two proteins differ not only in the type but also in the amount of lipids they can bind.

The Gt Heterotrimer Is Anchored in a Small Cluster of Phosphatidylserine Molecules—Binding of Gt to rod disk membranes causes a reduced extraction of spin-labeled PS by BSA. This was not seen in the case of SL-PC and SL-PE, indicating a head group-specific lipid interaction of Gt. Under our conditions, 5% of the total SL-PS incorporated into disk membranes could not be extracted by BSA after membrane binding of Gt. This result was obtained in both the absence and presence of 1 mM MgCl2. Given the fraction and (asymmetric) distribution of PS in the disk membrane, the 5% effect on total lipid translates into 0.7 mol % of PS. Gt heterotrimer is acylated on the {alpha}-subunit and prenylated on the {gamma}-subunit, and membrane association of the inactive protein is primarily due to the penetration of both of these lipophilic modifications into the hydrocarbon region of the membrane (4). Because only the outer leaflet can contribute to anchoring, the effect of Gt on SL-PS would account for three molecules of outer leaflet SL-PS bound to Gt.

How do the specific properties of Gt anchoring fit to such a selective lipid interaction? It is known that the highly unsaturated lipid environment of the disks favors transducin binding (14, 36). In bovine disk membranes, phospholipids contain a very high level of polyunsaturated fatty acids; PS has the highest level (37). More importantly, calculations based on the crystal structure of Gt{beta}{gamma} have led to the conclusion that the negatively charged Gt{beta}{gamma} subunit complex is highly polarized and displays a region of positive electrostatic potential surrounding the site of farnesylation. This may explain why Gt{beta}{gamma} binds strongly to vesicles consisting of acidic phosphatidylserine (5, 38) and to negatively charged monolayers, whereas the Gt{alpha}-subunit does not show electrostatic attraction (6, 38). The attached protein should be oriented in such a way that the farnesyl moiety can be fully inserted into the membrane with a negatively charged surface enhancing the membrane partitioning of transducin (7). So the electrostatic interaction of Gt{beta}{gamma} with negative charges of the membrane surface may lead to an orientation of Gt heterotrimer and synergistically favor its anchoring. Evidence has been provided (6) that in the Gt holoprotein, myristoyl and farnesyl modifications on Gt{alpha} and Gt{gamma}, respectively, are sufficiently close to one another to act as one hydrophobic anchor. We can now propose that 3 ± 1 molecules of PS accommodate this myristoyl/farnesyl anchor, making optimized dual use of electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions.

The permanent activation of transducin by GTP{gamma}S leads to Gt{alpha} and Gt{beta}{gamma} dissociation from the membrane (24), which explains the absence of the effect on PS extraction.

The PDE Tetramer Binds a Cushion of about 70 PC and PE Phospholipids—Studies of the equilibrium between soluble and membrane-bound native PDE found in rod outer segments suggested that PDE is associated to the disk membrane through anchoring to phospholipids (39). Based on the effect of PDE on BSA extraction of SL-PL, and along the same lines as discussed above for the G-protein, the PDE preferentially interacts with the phospholipids PC and PE. With the PDE no significant influence was found on the extraction of the negatively charged phospholipid SL-PS. The resistance to BSA extraction of SL-PC and SL-PE was shown to increase in a linear proportion to the amount of PDE added, with a maximal effect of 17 and 12% for SL-PC and SL-PE, respectively. In consideration of the native concentration of PDE (rhodopsin/PDE = 50:1) and the incomplete membrane binding under the conditions of our experiments (70% of added PDE was membrane-bound, see above), the native density of PDE on the membrane surface was reached after adding ~1 µM PDE. Under these conditions extraction of analogues by BSA was reduced by about 6 and 4% of total spin-labeled PC and PE analogues, respectively, as compared with control membranes. With the known molar ratio to rhodopsin of each of the two lipids and of the PDE, one arrives at the conclusion that about 40 molecules of PC and 30–40 of PE are excluded from BSA extraction per molecule of membrane-bound PDE (Table I).


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TABLE I
Comparison of non-extractable phospholipid analogues by BSA after Gt or PDE addition to washed disk membranes

 

These results exclude artifacts like membrane aggregation, which could reduce the overall access of BSA to the membranes, thus reducing extraction of SL-PL. Such effects would affect all three lipids. The effects are of a remarkable distinct specificity, i.e. PDE does not affect PS and Gt does not affect PC or PE. Moreover, we can state that, despite the specificity, the effect does not result from tight binding of the label to the protein at least for PDE. If this were the case, removal of PDE would co-extract label (i.e. would act like BSA) which was not seen. This is consistent with the observation that prolonged incubation with BSA allows us to extract SL-PC even in the presence of bound PDE to the same extent as observed for control samples (absence of PDE, see Fig. 5B).

The onset of the SL-PL redistribution curve and its entire time course in the presence of PDE is shifted toward higher values (Fig. 3), indicating that the lipid-PDE interaction is present from the very beginning of the extraction. Several reasons argue that this fast kinetics reflects a recruitment of analogues to PDE, and not a PDE-induced translocation of the analogues to the inner membrane leaflet. The linearity of the dose-response curve (Fig. 4) is also consistent with a direct effect, in which each molecule of PDE bound to the membrane surface exerts the same relative effect. We therefore assume that the lipid analogues (and presumably also the native phospholipids PC and PE) interact directly with the PDE.

PDE Activation and Formation of Signaling Phospholipid Complexes—The exchange of GDP for GTP or GTP{gamma}S in the nucleotide-binding site of Gt{alpha} leads to separation of Gt{alpha} and Gt{beta}{gamma}. To fully activate the PDE holoprotein, two copies of the activated Gt{alpha}-GTP{gamma}S must bind to the PDE (40). Native PDE is anchored to the disk membrane by isoprenylation and carboxymethylation of the C termini of its PDE{alpha}- and PDE{beta}-subunits. It is well documented that the ability of Gt to activate the PDE is sensitively dependent on the presence and/or composition of membranes (14, 39), and several studies (28, 39) have shown that PDE is more tightly membrane-bound when activated by Gt. The interaction between Gt{alpha}-GTP and PDE{alpha}{beta} causes a fast change in the light scattering of the membrane, which precedes the enzymatic activity (23).

The conclusion from these previous studies that the activation of PDE both requires the presence of the disk membrane and affects its properties is supported and expanded by our results. It was found that the formation of the PDE-Gt{alpha}-GTP{gamma}S complex generates a fraction of spin-labeled phospholipids non-accessible to BSA extraction, as compared with the PDE and Gt{alpha} constituents. Notably, however, the specifics of phospholipid interaction with the complex (Fig. 6) does not simply reflect the properties of the constituents. The complex does not bind any PS (as does the inactive Gt holoprotein) and displays a preference for PC, which may explain why activated PDE binds tighter to the membrane.

Relationship to Lipid Rafts—Our finding that protein-lipid interaction depends on the activation state of the proteins involved emphasizes the role of membrane plasticity and the temporary formation of lateral lipid domains in signal transduction. The question arises as to how these domains relate to the preformed microdomains, known as rafts, which are identified as detergent-insoluble fractions. The current data do not allow us to decide whether the PDE binds to preformed rafts or protein binding to the membrane induces a lateral inhomogeneity in the lipid distribution. Recent analyses (41, 42) have suggested that both Gt and PDE change their localization within the disk membrane between rafts and the surrounding bulk fluid membrane in a state-dependent manner. For Gt, such behavior would fit into the more general notion that G-proteins, including those of the Gi family (to which Gt belongs), tend to enrich in rafts (43). Reduced activation was seen under conditions of Gt recruitment to rafts, consistent with a reduction in the diffusion speed, and thus with the diffusional encounter frequency between the proteins, which limits the activation process (44). Therefore, by taking into account our results on Gt-PS interaction, we may anticipate that an optimal activation/deactivation cycle of the G-protein requires the time-ordered binding of the protein to different lipid microdomains. Indeed, it is possible and even experimentally supported in the case of Gt (42) that the proteins are translocated to rafts in the deactivation phase of the rod phototransduction. The future combination of our approach with illumination protocols may provide insight into how the sets of interacting phospholipid identified here are involved in these processes.

Phospholipid Footprints of Peripherally Membrane-attached Signaling Proteins—This study brings up a new aspect of visual signal transduction, namely that the two key signaling proteins use very specific sets of phospholipids to interact with the membrane. We have found that the amount of labeled lipid that resisted extraction by BSA did not exceed the number required to cover the likely footprint of the protein on the membrane. The G-protein is anchored by only a few molecules of PS. Based on known structural details, a likely arrangement of the negatively charged PS head groups can be envisaged (Fig. 7). In the case of the PDE effector, membrane association is mediated by a more extended interaction with both PC and PE. Although the structure of PDE holoprotein is unknown, we propose that its footprint on the membrane is much larger, comprising about 70 molecules of PC and PE. These differences between anchor- and cushion-like phospholipid interaction may reflect the specifics of interaction during signal transduction. One may speculate that a small anchor leaves Gt sufficient freedom for the necessary rapid (1 ms at 34 °C) and reliable multiple interaction of many Gt with the activated receptor. On the other hand, the time delay of interaction between Gt and PDE is on the order of 5 ms (23), allowing a longer time for stoichiometric interaction. The detailed mechanisms of these membrane-protein interactions remain to be elucidated, but it can be expected that they will make a significant contribution to the optimized function of the G-protein-coupled transduction pathway in rods.



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FIG. 7.
Model for Gt and PDE membrane interaction in the inactive state. Models of rhodopsin (left), Gt (middle), and PDE (right) and their putative interaction with the respective phospholipids (see Table I). Note that the structures in lower part (rhodopsin, Protein Data Bank code 1HZX [PDB] ; Gt, Protein Data Bank code 1GOT [PDB] ) are not to scale.

 


    FOOTNOTES
 
* This work was supported in part by Deutsche Forschungsgemein-schaft Grant SFB 366 (to K. P. H. and A. H.). The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact. Back

§ To whom correspondence may be addressed. Tel.: 49-30-450-524111; Fax: 49-30-450-524952; E-mail: elke.hessel{at}charite.de.

|| To whom correspondence may be addressed. Tel.: 49-30-450-524111; Fax: 49-30-450-524952; E-mail: kph{at}charite.de.

1 The abbreviations used are: Gt, transducin; BSA, fatty acid-free bovine serum albumin; BTP, 1,3-bis[tris(hydroxymethyl)methylamino]-propane buffer; Gt{alpha}, {alpha}-subunit of transducin; Gt{beta}{gamma}, {beta}{gamma} heterodimer subunit of transducin; GTP{gamma}S, guanosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) bound; PC, phosphatidylcholine; PE, phosphatidylethanolamine; PS, phosphatidylserine; PDE, cGMP-phosphodiesterase; ROS, rod outer segment; SL-PC, 1-palmitoyl-2-(4-doxylpentanoyl) phosphatidylcholine; SL-PE, 1-palmitoyl-2-(4-doxylpentanoyl) phosphatidylethanolamine; SL-PS, 1-palmitoyl-2-(4-doxylpentanoyl) phosphatidylserine; SL-PL, spin-labeled phospholipids. Back


    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 
We thank S. Schiller (Institut für Biologie/Biophysik, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin) for the synthesis of spin-labeled phospholipid analogues and I. Semjonow (Institut für Med. Physik und Biophysik, Charité) for technical assistance.



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