Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5533347 Journal of Molecular Biology 2016 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

•The mechanism by which membrane cholesterol facilitates DR5 signaling is unknown.•Ligand-DR5 clustering does not depend on membrane cholesterol.•Cholesterol depletion reduces ligand-induced, disulfide-linked DR5 dimerization.•Simulations suggest that dimerization is influenced by transmembrane domain helicity.

Death receptor 5 (DR5) is an apoptosis-inducing member of the tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily, whose activity has been linked to membrane cholesterol content. Upon ligand binding, DR5 forms large clusters within the plasma membrane that have often been assumed to be manifestations of receptor co-localization in cholesterol-rich membrane domains. However, we have recently shown that DR5 clusters are more than just randomly aggregated receptors. Instead, these are highly structured networks held together by receptor dimers. These dimers are stabilized by specific transmembrane helix-helix interactions, including a disulfide bond in the long isoform of the receptor. The complex relationships among DR5 network formation, transmembrane helix dimerization, membrane cholesterol, and receptor activity has not been established. It is unknown whether the membrane itself plays an active role in driving DR5 transmembrane helix interactions or in the formation of the networks. We show that cholesterol depletion in cells does not inhibit the formation of DR5 networks. However, the networks that form in cholesterol-depleted cells fail to induce caspase cleavage. These results suggest a potential structural difference between active and inactive networks. As evidence, we show that cholesterol is necessary for the covalent dimerization of DR5 transmembrane domains. Molecular simulations and experiments in synthetic vesicles on the DR5 transmembrane dimer suggest that dimerization is facilitated by increased helicity in a thicker bilayer.

Graphical AbstractDownload high-res image (258KB)Download full-size image

Related Topics
Life Sciences Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Cell Biology
Authors
, , , , , , ,