Mutual modulation between membrane-embedded receptor clustering and ligand binding in lipid membrane

Author:  ["Salvador Tomas","Lilia Milanesi"]

Publication:  Nature Chemistry

CITE.CC academic search helps you expand the influence of your papers.

Tags:     Chemistry

Abstract

Thanks largely to a cooperative chelate effect, clustered membrane-embedded proteins favourably bind to multivalent ligands in solution and, conversely, a multivalent receptor can induce the clustering of membrane-embedded proteins. Here, we use a chemical model to show that the binding of a monovalent ligand and the clustering of a membrane-embedded receptor are closely related processes that modulate each other without the contribution of any apparent multivalence effect. Clearly, the confinement of the receptor within the surface reveals cooperative effects between clustering and binding that are too weak to detect in bulk-solution systems. This work shows that for membrane-embedded receptors that undergo some degree of spontaneous clustering, analyses based on multivalence-mediated cooperativity are insufficient to describe fully the molecular recognition events induced by ligands in solution. Instead, a binding–clustering thermodynamic cycle is proposed for the analysis of the interaction of any kind of ligand with membrane-embedded receptors. Using a chemical model, the binding of a monovalent ligand and the clustering of a membrane-embedded receptor are shown to be closely related processes that modulate each other without the contribution of any apparent multivalence effect.

Cite this article

Tomas, S., Milanesi, L. Mutual modulation between membrane-embedded receptor clustering and ligand binding in lipid membranes. Nature Chem 2, 1077–1083 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1038/nchem.892

View full text

>> Full Text:   Mutual modulation between membrane-embedded receptor clustering and ligand binding in lipid membrane

Surface-assisted cyclodehydrogenation provides a synthetic route towards easily processable and chem

The effect of isotopic substitution on the chirality of a self-assembled helix