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  • Fluorescence signaling of ligand binding and assembly in metal-chelating lipid membranes.

Fluorescence signaling of ligand binding and assembly in metal-chelating lipid membranes.

Chemistry & biology (1996-03-01)
K Maloney, D Shnek, D Sasaki, F Arnold
ABSTRACT

Chemical information is sometimes transmitted across cell membranes by ligand-induced assembly of receptors. We have previously designed a series of lipids with metal-chelating headgroups that can serve as general receptors for proteins containing accessible histidines. Such lipids can also be derivatized with pyrene, a fluorescent probe that has a different emission maximum when it is aggregated (excimer fluorescence) from that seen for the monomer. We set out to examine whether lipids of this kind would produce a signal in response to ligand binding. A model ligand, poly-L-histidine (poly(His)), bound specifically to pyrene-labeled Cu(II)-iminodiacetate lipid (Cu-PSIDA) within a membrane matrix. Binding of poly(His) induces the redistribution of Cu-PSIDA, so that it forms pyrene-rich domains that are detectable by the increased ratio of excimer to monomer fluorescence. Using rhodamine-labeled poly(His), we have shown that the receptor lipid domains correspond to poly(His)-rich domains below the lipid interface. The Cu-PSIDA receptor signals binding of the macromolecular ligand through its excimer fluorescence and allows the resulting domains formed by ligand assembly to be imaged. Fluorescent Cu-PSIDA can thus serve as an optical reporter of ligand-induced lipid reorganization.