Chicken C A, Sharom F J
Biochim Biophys Acta. 1984 Jul 11;774(1):110-8. doi: 10.1016/0005-2736(84)90281-5.
The interaction of the human erythrocyte concanavalin A receptor (a subpopulation of Band 3) with phospholipids has been investigated using differential scanning microcalorimetry of reconstituted vesicles prepared by detergent dialysis. The mean diameter of dialyzed phospholipid vesicles jumps dramatically on inclusion of the concanavalin A receptor and then increases linearly with the fraction of protein in the bilayer. The glycoprotein has a dramatic effect on the phospholipid gel to liquid-crystalline phase transition, and delta H decreases linearly with increasing mole fraction of protein up to a protein/lipid mole ratio of around 1:1160. Extrapolation of this data indicates that each concanavalin A receptor is able to perturb about 685 molecules of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine, withdrawing them from the main phase transition. The cooperativity of phospholipid melting is profoundly disrupted by small amounts of glycoprotein, with the cooperative unit dropping to less than half its initial values at a protein/lipid mole ratio of 1:3800. A break occurs in the delta H curve as the protein/lipid mole ratio is increased above 1:1160, and delta H then increases linearly with increasing amounts of concanavalin A receptor in the bilayer. This phenomenon may be interpreted in terms of protein-protein aggregation which occurs in the phospholipid bilayer above a certain critical mole fraction of concanavalin A receptor, resulting in perturbed phospholipids being returned to the phase transition. In addition, the hydrophilic domains of the glycoprotein may exist in two different conformations depending on the protein concentration in the bilayer, and these may differ in their ability to interact with phospholipid headgroups at the membrane surface.