Khelashvili, George; Mondal, Sayan; Andersen, Olaf S.; Weinstein, Harel
Cholesterol Modulates the Membrane Effects and Spatial Organization of Membrane-Penetrating Ligands for G-Protein Coupled Receptors
JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B, 114:12046-12057, SEP 23 2010

The ligands of certain G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) are membrane soluble and reach their target from the lipid bilayer. Lipid composition and dynamics will therefore modulate the activity of these receptors, but specific roles of lipid components, including the ubiquitous cholesterol (Chol), are not clear. We have probed the organization and dynamics of such a lipid-bilayer-penetrating ligand, the endogeneous ligand for the kappa-opioid receptor (KOR) dynorphin A (1-17) (DynA), using molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of DynA in cholesterol-depleted and cholesterol-enriched model membranes. DynA is found to penetrate deep inside fluid dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) bilayers, and resides with its N-terminal helix at similar to 6 angstrom. away from the bilayer midplane, in a tilted orientation, at an similar to 50 degrees angle with respect to the membrane normal. In contrast, DynA inside DMPC/Chol membranes with 20% cholesterol (DMPC/Chol) is situated with its helical segment similar to 5 angstrom higher, i.e., closer to the lipid/water interface and in a relatively vertical orientation. The DMPC membrane shows greater thinning around the insertion and permits a stronger influx of water inside the hydrocarbon core than the DMPC/Chol membranes. Relating these results to data about key GPCR residues that have been implicated in interactions with membrane-inserting GPCR ligands, we conclude that the position of DynA in DMPC/Chol, but not in pure DMPC, correlates with generally proposed GPCR ligand entry pathways. Our predictions provide a possible mechanistic explanation as to why DynA binding to KOR, and the subsequent activation of the receptor, is facilitated in cholesterol-enriched environments. A quantitative description of DynA-induced membrane deformations is obtained with a continuum theory of membrane deformations (CTMD) that is based on hydrophobic matching. Comparison with the MD data reveals the significance of the lipid tail packing energy contribution in the DMPC/Chol mixtures in predicting equilibrium membrane shape around DynA. On this basis, specific corrections are introduced to this energy term within the CTMD framework, thereby extending the applicability of the CTMD framework to lipid raft mixtures and their interactions with GPCR proteins and their ligands.

DOI:10.1021/jp106373r

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