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Structural determination of lipid-bound ApoA-I using fluorescence resonance energy transfer. J Biol Chem 2000 Nov 24;275(47):37048-54

Date

08/25/2000

Pubmed ID

10956648

DOI

10.1074/jbc.M005336200

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-0034711217 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   84 Citations

Abstract

Based on the x-ray crystal structure of lipid-free Delta43 apoA-I, two monomers of apoA-I were suggested to bind to a phospholipid bilayer in an antiparallel paired dimer, or "belt orientation." This hypothesis challenges the currently held model in which each of the two apoA-I monomers fold as antiparallel alpha-helices or "picket fence orientation." When apoA-I is bound to a phospholipid disc, the first model predicts that the glutamine at position 132 on one apoA-I molecule lies within 16 A of glutamine 132 in the second monomer, whereas, the second model predicts glutamines at position 132 to be 104 A apart. To distinguish between these models, glutamine at position 132 was mutated to cysteine in wild-type apoA-I to produce Q132C apoA-I, which were labeled with thiol-reactive fluorescent probes. Q132C apoA-I was labeled with either fluorescein (donor probe) or tetramethylrhodamine (acceptor probe) and then used to make recombinant phospholipid discs (recombinant high density lipoprotein (rHDL)). The rHDL containing donor- and acceptor-labeled Q132C apoA-I were of similar size, composition, and lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase reactivity when compared to rHDL-containing human plasma apoA-I. Analysis of donor probe fluorescence showed highly efficient quenching in rHDL containing one donor- and one acceptor-labeled Q132C apoA-I. rHDL containing only acceptor probe-labeled Q132C apoA-I showed rhodamine self-quenching. Both of these observations demonstrate that position 132 in two lipid-bound apoA-I monomers were in close proximity, supporting the "belt conformation" hypothesis for apoA-I on rHDL.

Author List

Li H, Lyles DS, Thomas MJ, Pan W, Sorci-Thomas MG

Authors

Mary Sorci Thomas PhD Professor in the Medicine department at Medical College of Wisconsin
Michael J. Thomas PhD Professor in the Pharmacology and Toxicology department at Medical College of Wisconsin




MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Apolipoprotein A-I
Crystallography, X-Ray
Fluorescence Polarization
Humans
Lipids
Protein Conformation
Structure-Activity Relationship