Justin Gullingsrud and Klaus Schulten.
Lipid bilayer pressure profiles and mechanosensitive channel gating.
Biophysical Journal, 86:3496-3509, 2004.
(PMC: 1304254)
GULL2004
The function of membrane proteins often depends on the proteins interaction with their lipid environment, spectacularly so in the case
of mechanosensitive channels, which are gated through tension mediated
by the surrounding lipids. Lipid bilayer tension is distributed quite
inhomogeneously, but neither the scale at which relevant variation
takes place nor the effect of varying lipid composition or tension have
yet been investigated in atomic detail. We calculated lateral pressure
profile distributions in lipid bilayers of various composition from
all-atom molecular dynamics simulations totaling 110.5 ns in length.
Reproducible pressure profile features at the 1 length scale were
determined. Lipids with PC headgroups were found to shift the lateral
pressure out of the hydrophobic core and into the headgroup region by
an amount that is independent of area per lipid. POPE bilayers
simulated at areas smaller than optimal exerted dramatically higher
lateral pressure in a narrow region at the start of the aliphatic
chain. Stretching of POPC bilayers increased tension predominantly in
the same region. A simple geometric analysis for the gating of the
mechanosensitive channel MscL suggests that pressure profiles affect
its gating through the second moment of the profile in a tension
independent manner.
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