Membrane Fluidity Regulation: From C. elegans to mammalian cells
Abstract
Biological membranes are primarily an assembly of lipids and proteins. Collectively, these constituents within a phospholipid bilayer determine the physical membrane properties such as fluidity, viscosity, thickness, packing and permeability. Maintenance of membrane properties within acceptable margins, i.e. membrane homeostasis, is fundamentally important for cellular processes. For example, it is a well-established phenomenon that poikilothermic organisms, that cannot control their body temperature, constantly adapt their membrane lipid composition in order to maintain optimal membrane fluidity for membrane functions in spite of variation in ambient temperatures. Regulatory mechanisms must also exist in mammals to maintain membrane lipid heterogeneity across the secretory pathway and to compensate for dietary lipid variation. However, the molecular mechanisms of such an adaptive response in mammals remain poorly understood. Here, using systematic genetics, lipidomics and membrane property assays, we have established that the PAQR-2/IGLR-2 complex in C. elegans and AdipoR2 (a PAQR-2 homolog) in mammalian cells specifically respond to the toxic membrane-rigidifying effects of dietary saturated fatty acids (SFAs) and promote fatty acid desaturation to restore membrane composition and fluidity.
In an attempt to understand other mechanisms essential to prevent SFA-mediated cellular toxicity, we also performed an unbiased forward genetic screen in C. elegans. Strikingly, this screen for SFA-tolerance genes led only to the isolation of novel paqr-2 and iglr-2 alleles; this strongly indicates that paqr-2 and iglr-2 are important genes specifically essential to respond to toxic effects of dietary saturated fats. In particular, we noted that in worms and cells that lack PAQR-2/AdipoR2 function, exogenous SFAs becomes rapidly incorporated into membrane phospholipids, leading to membrane rigidification. This was accompanied by an abnormal transcriptional response, impaired mitochondrial respiration and increased ER-UPR as measured in HEK293 cells. Interestingly, we noticed that the toxic effects of exogenous SFAs can be completely mitigated by supplying the cultured cells with small amounts of membrane fluidizing unsaturated fatty acids (UFAs). Consistently, we also found that facilitating the accumulation of UFAs either with mutations in fld-1 in worms or silencing the fld-1 mammalian homologs TLCD1/2, which normally function to limit the incorporation of polyunsaturated fatty acids in membrane phospholipids, is protective and able to attenuate SFA-mediated cellular toxicity. Altogether, these results suggest that maintenance of an optimal SFA/UFA ratio is crucial for normal cellular function and that the PAQR-2/AdipoR2 proteins essentially act as “guardians of membrane homeostasis”.
Parts of work
I) Svensk E, Devkota R, Ståhlman M, Ranji P, Rauthan M, Magnusson F, et al. Caenorhabditis elegans PAQR-2 and IGLR-2 Protect against Glucose Toxicity by Modulating Membrane Lipid Composition. PLOS Genet. 2016;12. ::doi::10.1371/journal.pgen.1005982 II) Devkota R, Svensk E, Ruiz M, Ståhlman M, Borén J, Pilon M. The adiponectin receptor AdipoR2 and its Caenorhabditis elegans homolog PAQR-2 prevent membrane rigidification by exogenous saturated fatty acids. PLoS Genet. 2017;13. ::doi::10.1371/journal.pgen.1007004 III) Bodhicharla R, Devkota R, Ruiz M, Pilon M. Membrane Fluidity Is Regulated Cell Non-autonomously by Caenorhabditis elegans PAQR-2 and Its Mammalian Homolog AdipoR2. Genetics. 2018. ::doi::10.1534/genetics.118.301272 IV) Ruiz M, Bodhicharla R, Svensk E, Devkota R, Busayavalasa K, Palmgren H, et al. Membrane fluidity is regulated by the C. elegans transmembrane protein FLD-1 and its human homologs TLCD1/2. Elife. 2018;7. ::doi::10.7554/eLife.40686 V) Busayavalasa K, Ruiz M, Devkota R, Ståhlman M, Bodhicharla R, Svensk E, et al. Leveraging a gain-of-function allele of Caenorhabditis elegans paqr-1 to elucidate membrane homeostasis by PAQR proteins. PLoS Genet. 2020;16. ::doi::10.1371/journal.pgen.1008975 Appendix: Devkota R, Pilon M. FRAP: A Powerful Method to Evaluate Membrane Fluidity in Caenorhabditis elegans. BIO-PROTOCOL. 2018;8. ::doi::10.21769/bioprotoc.2913
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Science
Institution
Department of Chemistry and Molecular Biology ; Institutionen för kemi och molekylärbiologi
Disputation
Fredagen den 18 september 2020, kl. 15:00, Gösta Sandels, Medicinaregatan 9B
Date of defence
2020-09-18
ranjan.devkota@gu.se
Date
2020-08-12Author
Devkota, Ranjan
Keywords
PAQR-2
adiponectin receptors
IGLR-2
saturated fats
membrane fluidity
fatty acid desaturation
unsaturated fatty acid
membrane homeostasis
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-7833-984-6
978-91-7833-985-3
Language
eng