• Hassing Kane posted an update 3 months, 1 week ago

    Giant plasma membrane vesicles (GPMVs) are a widely used experimental platform for biochemical and biophysical analysis of isolated mammalian plasma membranes (PMs). A core advantage of these vesicles is that they maintain the native lipid and protein diversity of the PM while affording the experimental flexibility of synthetic giant vesicles. In addition to fundamental investigations of PM structure and composition, GPMVs have been used to evaluate the binding of proteins and small molecules to cell-derived membranes and the permeation of drug-like molecules through them. An important assumption of such experiments is that GPMVs are sealed, i.e., that permeation occurs by diffusion through the hydrophobic core rather than through hydrophilic pores. Here, we demonstrate that this assumption is often incorrect. We find that most GPMVs isolated using standard preparations are passively permeable to various hydrophilic solutes as large as 40 kDa, in contrast to synthetic giant unilamellar vesicles. We attribute this leakiness to stable, relatively large, and heterogeneous pores formed by rupture of vesicles from cells. Finally, we identify preparation conditions that minimize poration and allow evaluation of sealed GPMVs. These unexpected observations of GPMV poration are important for interpreting experiments utilizing GPMVs as PM models, particularly for drug permeation and membrane asymmetry. Membrane interactions of amyloidogenic proteins constitute central determinants both in protein aggregation as well as in amyloid cytotoxicity. Most reported studies of amyloid peptide-membrane interactions have employed model membrane systems combined with application of spectroscopy methods or microscopy analysis of individual binding events. Here, we applied for the first time, to our knowledge, imaging flow cytometry for investigating interactions of representative amyloidogenic peptides, namely, the 106-126 fragment of prion protein (PrP(106-126)) and the human islet amyloid polypeptide (hIAPP), with giant lipid vesicles. Imaging flow cytometry was also applied to examine the inhibition of PrP(106-126)-membrane interactions by epigallocatechin gallate, a known modulator of amyloid peptide aggregation. We show that imaging flow cytometry provided comprehensive population-based statistical information upon morphology changes of the vesicles induced by PrP(106-126) and hIAPP. Specifically, the experiments reveal that both PrP(106-126) and hIAPP induced dramatic transformations of the vesicles, specifically disruption of the spherical shapes, reduction of vesicle circularity, lobe formation, and modulation of vesicle compactness. Interesting differences, however, were apparent between the impact of the two peptides upon the model membranes. The morphology analysis also showed that epigallocatechin gallate ameliorated vesicle disruption by PrP(106-126). Overall, this study demonstrates that imaging flow cytometry provides powerful means for disclosing population-based morphological membrane transformations induced by amyloidogenic peptides and their inhibition by aggregation modulators. Many single-molecule biophysical techniques rely on nanometric tracking of microbeads to obtain quantitative information about the mechanical properties of biomolecules such as chromatin fibers. Their three-dimensional (3D) position can be resolved by holographic analysis of the diffraction pattern in wide-field imaging. Fitting this diffraction pattern to Lorenz-Mie scattering theory yields the bead’s position with nanometer accuracy in three dimensions but is computationally expensive. Real-time multiplexed bead tracking therefore requires a more efficient tracking method, such as comparison with previously measured diffraction patterns, known as look-up tables. Here, we introduce an alternative 3D phasor algorithm that provides robust bead tracking with nanometric localization accuracy in a z range of over 10 μm under nonoptimal imaging conditions. The algorithm is based on a two-dimensional cross correlation using fast Fourier transforms with computer-generated reference images, yielding a processing rate of up to 10,000 regions of interest per second. We implemented the technique in magnetic tweezers and tracked the 3D position of over 100 beads in real time on a generic CPU. The accuracy of 3D phasor tracking was extensively tested and compared to a look-up table approach using Lorenz-Mie simulations, avoiding experimental uncertainties. Its easy implementation, efficiency, and robustness can improve multiplexed biophysical bead-tracking applications, especially when high throughput is required and image artifacts are difficult to avoid. RNA molecules perform a variety of biological functions for which the correct three-dimensional structure is essential, including as ribozymes where they catalyze chemical reactions. Metal ions, especially Mg2+, neutralize these negatively charged nucleic acids and specifically stabilize RNA tertiary structures as well as impact the folding landscape of RNAs as they assume their tertiary structures. Specific binding sites of Mg2+ in folded conformations of RNA have been studied extensively; however, the full range of interactions of the ion with compact intermediates and unfolded states of RNA is challenging to investigate, and the atomic details of the mechanism by which the ion facilitates tertiary structure formation is not fully known. Here, umbrella sampling combined with oscillating chemical potential Grand Canonical Monte Carlo/molecular dynamics simulations are used to capture the energetics and atomic-level details of Mg2+-RNA interactions that occur along an unfolding pathway of the Twister ribozyme. The free energy profiles reveal stabilization of partially unfolded states by Mg2+, as observed in unfolding experiments, with this stabilization being due to increased sampling of simultaneous interactions of Mg2+ with two or more nonsequential phosphate groups. Notably, these results indicate a push-pull mechanism in which the Mg2+-RNA interactions actually lead to destabilization of specific nonsequential phosphate-phosphate interactions (i.e., pushed apart), whereas other interactions are stabilized (i.e., pulled together), a balance that stabilizes unfolded states and facilitates the folding of Twister, including the formation of hydrogen bonds associated with the tertiary structure. This study establishes a better understanding of how Mg2+-ion interactions contribute to RNA structural properties and stability. In cell membranes, the functional constituents such as peptides, proteins, and polysaccharides diffuse in a sea of lipids as single molecules and molecular aggregates. Thus, the fluidity of the heterogeneous multicomponent membrane is important for understanding the roles of the membrane in cell functionality. Recently, Henle and Levine described the hydrodynamics of molecular diffusion in a spherical membrane. A tangential point force at the north pole induces a pair of vortices whose centers lie on a line perpendicular to the point force and are symmetrical with respect to the point force. The position of the vortex center depends on ηm/Rηw, where R is the radius of the spherical membrane, and ηm and ηw are the viscosities of the membrane and the surrounding medium, respectively. Based on this theoretical prediction, we applied a point force to a phase-separated spherical vesicle composed of 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine/1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine/cholesterol by means of a microinjection technique. The pathlines were visualized by trajectories of microdomains. We determined the position of the vortex center and estimated the membrane viscosity using the dependence of the position of the vortex center on ηm/Rηw. The obtained apparent membrane viscosities for various compositions are mapped on the phase diagram. The membrane viscosity is almost constant in the range of 0  less then φLo ≤ 0.5 (φLo area fraction of the liquid ordered phase), whereas that in the range of 0.5 ≤ φLo  less then 1.0 exponentially increases with increase of φLo. The obtained viscosity landscape provides a basic understanding of the fluidity of heterogeneous multicomponent membranes. Escherichia coli lipoprotein precursors at the inner membrane undergo three maturation stages before transport by the Lol system to the outer membrane. Here, we develop a pipeline to simulate the membrane association of bacterial lipoproteins in their four maturation states. This has enabled us to model and simulate 81 of the predicted 114 E. coli lipoproteins and reveal their interactions with the host lipid membrane. As part of this set we characterize the membrane contacts of LolB, the lipoprotein involved in periplasmic translocation. We also consider the means and bioenergetics for lipoprotein localization. Our calculations uncover a preference for LolB over LolA and therefore indicate how a lipoprotein may be favorably transferred from the inner to outer membrane. Finally, we reveal that LolC has a role in membrane destabilization, thereby promoting lipoprotein transfer to LolA. We present here the results of a first-in-human, first-in-child trial for patients with relapsed/refractory solid tumors using Celyvir, an advanced therapy medicine that combines autologous mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) carrying an oncolytic adenovirus. Celyvir was manufactured from a bone marrow aspirate and then given intravenously. Patients received weekly infusions for 6 weeks at a dose of 2 × 106 cells/kg (children) or 0.5-1 × 106 cells/kg (adults), 2 × 104 viral particles per cell. Fifteen pediatric and 19 adult patients were recruited, but 18 were screen failures, mainly because rapid disease progression before Celyvir was available. No grade 2-5 toxicities were reported. Adenoviral replication detected by PCR was found in all but 2 pediatric patient and in none of the adult ones. Absolute numbers of circulating leukocytes suffered minor changes along therapy, but some subsets showed differences comparing the pediatric versus the adult cohorts. Two patients with neuroblastoma showed disease stabilization, and one of them continued on treatment for up to 6 additional weeks. Celyvir, the combination of MSCs and oncolytic adenovirus, is safe and warrants further evaluation in a phase 2 setting. The use of MSCs may be a strategy to increase the amount of oncolytic virus administered to patients, minimizing toxicities and avoiding direct tumor injections. Caspase-8, a well-characterized initiator of apoptosis, has also been found to play non-apoptotic roles in cells. In this study, we reveal that caspase-8 can induce cell death in a special way, which does not depend on activation of caspases and mitochondrial initiation. Instead, we prove that caspase-8 can cause lysosomal deacidification and thus lysosomal membrane permeabilization. V-ATPase is a multi-subunit proton pump that acidifies the lumen of lysosome. Our results demonstrate that caspase-8 can bind to the V0 domain of lysosomal Vacuolar H+-ATPase (V-ATPase), but not the V1 domain, to block the assembly of functional V-ATPase and alkalinize lysosomes. We further demonstrate that the C-terminal of caspase-8 is mainly responsible for the interaction with V-ATPase and can suffice to inhibit survival of cancer cells. Interestingly, regardless of the protein level, it is the expression rate of caspase-8 that is the major cause of cell death. Taken together, we identify a previously unrevealed caspase-8-mediated cell death pathway different form typical apoptosis, which could render caspase-8 a particular physiological function and may be potentially applied in treatments for apoptosis-resistant cancers.