Sudhahar C G, Haney R M, Xue Y, Stahelin R V
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Indiana University School of Medicine-South Bend, South Bend, IN 46617, USA.
Curr Drug Targets. 2008 Aug;9(8):603-13. doi: 10.2174/138945008785132420.
Interdisciplinary research focused on biological membranes has revealed them as signaling and trafficking platforms for processes fundamental to life. Biomembranes harbor receptors, ion channels, lipid domains, lipid signals, and scaffolding complexes, which function to maintain cellular growth, metabolism, and homeostasis. Moreover, abnormalities in lipid metabolism attributed to genetic changes among other causes are often associated with diseases such as cancer, arthritis and diabetes. Thus, there is a need to comprehensively understand molecular events occurring within and on membranes as a means of grasping disease etiology and identifying viable targets for drug development. A rapidly expanding field in the last decade has centered on understanding membrane recruitment of peripheral proteins. This class of proteins reversibly interacts with specific lipids in a spatial and temporal fashion in crucial biological processes. Typically, recruitment of peripheral proteins to the different cellular sites is mediated by one or more modular lipid-binding domains through specific lipid recognition. Structural, computational, and experimental studies of these lipid-binding domains have demonstrated how they specifically recognize their cognate lipids and achieve subcellular localization. However, the mechanisms by which these modular domains and their host proteins are recruited to and interact with various cell membranes often vary drastically due to differences in lipid affinity, specificity, penetration as well as protein-protein and intramolecular interactions. As there is still a paucity of predictive data for peripheral protein function, these enzymes are often rigorously studied to characterize their lipid-dependent properties. This review summarizes recent progress in our understanding of how peripheral proteins are recruited to biomembranes and highlights avenues to exploit in drug development targeted at cellular membranes and/or lipid-binding proteins.
专注于生物膜的跨学科研究表明,它们是生命基本过程的信号传导和运输平台。生物膜含有受体、离子通道、脂类结构域、脂质信号和支架复合物,其功能是维持细胞生长、代谢和稳态。此外,除其他原因外,由基因变化引起的脂质代谢异常通常与癌症、关节炎和糖尿病等疾病相关。因此,有必要全面了解膜内和膜上发生的分子事件,以此作为掌握疾病病因和确定药物开发可行靶点的一种手段。在过去十年中,一个迅速发展的领域集中在理解外周蛋白的膜募集过程。这类蛋白质在关键的生物过程中以空间和时间的方式与特定脂质可逆地相互作用。通常,外周蛋白被募集到不同细胞位点是由一个或多个模块化脂质结合结构域通过特定的脂质识别介导的。对这些脂质结合结构域的结构、计算和实验研究已经证明了它们如何特异性识别其同源脂质并实现亚细胞定位。然而,由于脂质亲和力、特异性、穿透力以及蛋白质-蛋白质和分子内相互作用的差异,这些模块化结构域及其宿主蛋白被募集到各种细胞膜并与之相互作用的机制往往有很大不同。由于外周蛋白功能的预测数据仍然匮乏,因此经常对这些酶进行深入研究以表征其脂质依赖性特性。本综述总结了我们在理解外周蛋白如何被募集到生物膜方面的最新进展,并强调了在针对细胞膜和/或脂质结合蛋白的药物开发中可利用的途径。