Fluid
mosaic model
The fluid
mosaic model explains various observations regarding the structure of
functional cell membranes. The
model, which was devised by SJ
Singer and GL Nicolson in 1972,
describes the cell membrane as a two-dimensional liquid in which
that restrict the lateral diffusion of membrane components. Such
domains are defined by the existence of regions within the membrane with
special lipid and protein composition that promote the formation of lipid
rafts or protein and glycoprotein
complexes. Another
way to define membrane domains is the association of the lipid membrane with
the cytoskeleton
filaments and the extracellular
matrix through membrane proteins. The
current model describes important features relevant to many cellular processes,
including: cell-cell signaling, apoptosis, cell
division, membrane budding, and cell fusion.
|
|
|
Chemically
cell membrane is composed of three components namely:
|
Lipids- Proteins
- Carbohydrates
Experimental evidence
The fluid
property of functional biological membranes had been determined through labeling
experiments, x-ray diffraction, and
calorimetry. These
studies showed that integral membrane proteins diffuse at rates affected by the
viscosity of the
lipid bilayer in which they were embedded, and demonstrated that the molecules
within the cell membrane are dynamic rather than static.
Previous
models of biological membranes included the Robertson Unit
Membrane Model and the Davidson-Danielli Tri-Layer
model. These
models had proteins present as sheets neighboring a lipid layer, rather than
incorporated into the phospholipid bilayer. Other
models described repeating, regular units of protein and lipid. These
models were not well supported by microscopy and thermodynamic data, and did
not accommodate evidence for dynamic membrane properties.
An
important experiment that provided evidence supporting fluid and dynamic
biological was performed by Frye and Edidin. They used
Sendai
virus to force human and mouse cells to fuse and form a heterokaryon. Using antibody
staining, they were able to show that the mouse and human proteins remained
segregated to separate halves of the heterokaryon a short time after cell
fusion. However,
the proteins eventually diffused and over time the border between the two
halves was lost. Lowering
the temperature slowed the rate of this diffusion by causing the membrane
phospholipids to transition from a fluid to a gel phase. Singer
and Nicholson rationalized the results of these experiments using their fluid
mosaic model.
The fluid
mosaic model explains changes in structure and behavior of cell membranes under
different temperatures, as well as the association of membrane proteins with
the membranes. While
Singer and Nicolson had substantial evidence drawn from multiple subfields to
support their model, recent advances in fluorescence
microscopy and structural
biology have validated the fluid mosaic nature of cell membranes.
Subsequent developments
Membrane asymmetry
Additionally,
the two leaflets of biological membranes are asymmetric and divided into
subdomains composed of specific proteins or lipids, allowing spatial
segregation of biological processes associated with membranes. Cholesterol and
cholesterol-interacting
proteins can concentrate into lipid rafts and restrain cell signaling processes
to only these rafts. Another
form of asymmetry was shown by the work of Mouritsen and Bloom in 1984, where
they proposed a Mattress
Model of lipid-protein
interactions to address the biophysical evidence that the membrane can range in
thickness and hydrophobicity of proteins. Phospholipids can be asymmetric through the active translocation of a
phospholipid type from one leaflet of the membrane to the other. This
process is controlled by flippase and scramblase enzymes. A
biological example of this is the segregation of phosphatidylserine to be
highly enriched on the cytosolic side of the plasma membrane. Phosphatidylserine
localization to the outer leaflet can trigger immune
responses.
Non-bilayer
membranes
The
existence of non-bilayer
lipid formations with important biological functions was confirmed subsequent
to publication of the fluid mosaic model. These membrane structures may be
useful when the cell needs to propagate a non bilayer form, which occurs during
cell division and the formation of a gap junction.
Membrane curvature
The
membrane bilayer is not always flat. Local curvature of the membrane
can be caused by the asymmetry and non-bilayer organization of lipids as
discussed above. More
dramatic and functional curvature is achieved through BAR domains, which
bind to phosphatidylinositol on the
membrane surface, assisting in vesicle
formation, organelle
formation and cell division. Curvature development is in constant flux and contributes to the dynamic nature
of biological membranes.
Lipid movement within the membrane
During the
decade of 1970, it was acknowledged that individual lipid molecules undergo
free lateral diffusion within each of the layers of the lipid membrane. Diffusion occurs at a high speed, with an average lipid molecule diffusing
~2 µm, approximately the length of a large bacterial cell, in
about 1 second. It has
also been observed that individual lipid molecules rotate rapidly around their
own axis. Moreover, phospholipid molecules can, although they seldom do, migrate from one
side of the lipid bilayer to the other (a process known as flip-flop). However,
flip-flop
might be enhanced by flippase enzymes. The processes described above
influence the disordered nature of lipid molecules and interacting proteins in
the lipid membranes, with consequences to membrane fluidity, signaling,
trafficking and function.
Restrictions to bilayer fluidity
There are
restrictions to the lateral mobility of the lipid and protein components in the
fluid membrane imposed by the formation of subdomains within the lipid bilayer. These
subdomains arise by several processes e.g. binding
of membrane components to the extracellular matrix, nanometric membrane regions
with a particular biochemical composition that promote the formation of lipid
rafts and protein complexes mediated by protein-protein
interactions. Furthermore, protein-cytoskeleton associations mediate the formation of “cytoskeletal
fences”, corrals
wherein lipid and membrane proteins can diffuse freely, but that they can
seldom leave. Restriction on lateral diffusion rates of membrane components is very important
because it allows the functional specialization of particular regions within
the cell membranes.
Lipid rafts
Lipid rafts are
membrane nanometric platforms with a particular lipid and protein composition
that laterally diffuse, navigating on the liquid bilipid layer. Sphingolipids
and cholesterol are important building blocks of the lipid rafts.
Protein complexes
Cell
membrane proteins and glycoproteins do not exist as single elements of the
lipid membrane, as first proposed by Singer and Nicholson in 1972. Rather,
they occur as diffusing complexes within the membrane. The
assembly of single molecules into these macromolecular complexes has important
functional consequences for the cell; such as ion
and metabolite transport, signaling, cell adhesion, and migration.
Cytoskeletal fences (corrals) and
binding to the extracellular matrix
Some
proteins embedded in the bilipid layer interact with the extracellular matrix
outside the cell, cytoskeleton filaments inside the cell, and septin ring-like structures. These
interactions have a strong influence on shape and structure, as well as on compartmentalization. Moreover,
they impose physical constraints that restrict the free lateral diffusion of
proteins and at least some lipids within the bilipid layer.
When integral
proteins of the lipid bilayer are tethered to the extracellular matrix, they
are unable to diffuse freely. Proteins with a long
intracellular domain may collide with a fence formed by cytoskeleton filaments. Both
processes restrict the diffusion of proteins and lipids directly involved, as
well as of other interacting components of the cell membranes.
S.cerevisiae septins
Septin ring-like structures (in green) can pinch cell membranes and split them into subdomains.
Septin ring-like structures (in green) can pinch cell membranes and split them into subdomains.
Septins are a
family of GTP-binding
proteins highly conserved among eukaryotes. Prokaryotes
have similar proteins called paraseptins. They form compartmentalizing ring-like
structures strongly associated with the cell membranes. Septins
are involved in the formation of structures such as, cilia and flagella,
dendritic spines, and yeast buds.
Historical Timeline
- 1895 - Ernest Overton hypothesized that cell membranes are made out of lipids.
- 1925 - Evert Gorter and François Grendel found that red blood cell membranes are formed by a fatty layer two molecules thick, i.e. they described the bilipid nature of the cell membrane.
- 1935 - Hugh Davson and James Danielli proposed that lipid membranes are layers composed by proteins and lipids with pore-like structures that allow specific permeability for certain molecules. Then, they suggested a model for the cell membrane, consisting of a lipid layer surrounded by protein layers at both sides of it.
- 1957 - J. David Robertson, based on electron microscopy studies, establishes the “Unit Membrane Hypothesis”. This, states that all membranes in the cell, i.e. plasma and organelle membranes, have the same structure: a bilayer of phospholipids with monolayers of proteins at both sides of it.
- 1972 - SJ Singer and GL Nicolson proposed the Fluid Mosaic Model as an explanation for the data and latest evidence regarding the structure and thermodynamics of cell membranes.
No comments:
Post a Comment