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Direct Observation of Cholesterol Dimers and Tetramers in Lipid Bilayers
Author(s) -
Matthew R. Elkins,
Asanga Bandara,
George A. Pantelopulos,
John E. Straub,
Mei Hong
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
the journal of physical chemistry. b
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.864
H-Index - 392
eISSN - 1520-6106
pISSN - 1520-5207
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jpcb.0c10631
Subject(s) - membrane , cholesterol , sphingomyelin , phospholipid , chemistry , nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy , molecular dynamics , crystallography , lipid bilayer , lipid raft , biophysics , biochemistry , stereochemistry , biology , computational chemistry
Cholesterol is a ubiquitous component of mammalian cell membranes and affects membrane protein function. Although cholesterol-mediated formation of ordered membrane domains has been extensively studied, molecular-level structural information about cholesterol self-association has been absent. Here, we combine solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy with all-atom molecular dynamics simulations to determine the oligomeric structure of cholesterol in phospholipid bilayers. Two-dimensional 13 C- 13 C correlation spectra of differentially labeled cholesterol indicate that cholesterol self-associates in a face-to-face fashion at membrane concentrations from 17 to 44 mol %. 2D 13 C and 19 F spin-counting experiments allowed us to measure the average oligomeric number of these cholesterol clusters. At low cholesterol concentrations of ∼20%, the average cluster size is centered on dimers. At a high cholesterol concentration of 44%, which is representative of virus lipid envelopes and liquid-ordered domains of cell membranes, both dimers and tetramers are observed. The cholesterol dimers are found in both phase-separated membranes that contain sphingomyelin and in disordered and miscible membranes that are free of sphingomyelin. Molecular dynamics simulations support these experimental observations and moreover provide the lifetimes, stabilities, distributions, and structures of these nanoscopic cholesterol clusters. Taken together, these NMR and MD data strongly suggest that dimers are the basic structural unit of cholesterol in phospholipid bilayers. The direct observation of cholesterol dimers and tetramers provides a revised framework for studying cholesterol interactions with membrane proteins to regulate protein functions and for understanding the pathogenic role of cholesterol in diseases.

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