Synergistic and competitive lipid interactions in the serotonin1A receptor microenvironment

TitleSynergistic and competitive lipid interactions in the serotonin1A receptor microenvironment
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2022
AuthorsMohole, M, Sengupta, D, Chattopadhyay, A
JournalACS Chemical Neuroscience
Volume13
Issue23
Pagination3403-3415
Date PublishedDEC
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN1948-7193
KeywordsGPCR, lipid crosstalk, Martini coarse-grain simulations, Membrane cholesterol, neuronal membranes
Abstract

The interaction of lipids with G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) has been shown to modulate and dictate several aspects of GPCR organization and function. Diverse lipid interaction sites have been identified from structural biology, bioinformatics, and molecular dynamics studies. For example, multiple cholesterol interaction sites have been identified in the serotonin1A receptor, along with distinct and overlapping sphingolipid interaction sites. How these lipids interact with each other and what is the resultant effect on the receptor is still not clear. In this work, we have analyzed lipid-lipid crosstalk at the receptor of the serotonin1A receptor embedded in a membrane bilayer that mimics the neuronal membrane composition by long coarse-grain simulations. Using a set of similarity coefficients, we classified lipids that bind at the receptor together as synergistic cobinding, and those that bind individually as competitive. Our results show that certain lipids interact with the serotonin1A receptor in synergy with each other. Not surprisingly, the ganglioside GM1 and cholesterol show a synergistic cobinding, along with the relatively uncommon GM1-phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) and cholesterol-PE synergy. In contrast, certain lipid pairs such as cholesterol and sphingomyelin appear to be in competition at several sites, despite their coexistence in lipid nanodomains. In addition, we observed intralipid competition between two lipid tails, with the receptor exhibiting increased interactions with the unsaturated lipid tails. We believe our work represents an important step in understanding the diversity of GPCR-lipid interactions and exploring synergistic cobinding and competition in natural membranes.

DOI10.1021/acschemneuro.2c00422
Type of Journal (Indian or Foreign)

Foreign

Impact Factor (IF)

5.780

Divison category: 
Physical and Materials Chemistry
Database: 
Web of Science (WoS)

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