• Cholesterol's effects on cellular membra

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Tue Sep 8 21:30:30 2020
    Cholesterol's effects on cellular membranes

    Date:
    September 8, 2020
    Source:
    Virginia Tech
    Summary:
    New findings have far-reaching implications in the general
    understanding of disease, the design of drug delivery methods,
    and many other biological applications that require specific
    assumptions about the role of cholesterol in cell membranes.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    For more than a decade, scientists have accepted that cholesterol --
    a key component of cell membranes -- did not uniformly affect membranes
    of different types. But a new study led by Assistant Professor Rana
    Ashkar of the Virginia Tech Department of Physics finds that cholesterol actually does adhere to biophysical principles.


    ==========================================================================
    The findings, published recently in the Proceedings of the National
    Academy of Sciences, have far-reaching implications in the general understanding of disease, the design of drug delivery methods, and many
    other biological applications that require specific assumptions about
    the role of cholesterol in cell membranes.

    "Cholesterol is known to promote tighter molecular packing in cell
    membranes, but reports about how it stiffens membranes have been so conflicting," said Ashkar, who is a faculty member in the Virginia Tech
    College of Science. "In this work, we show that, at the nanoscale level, cholesterol indeed causes membrane stiffening, as predicted by physical
    laws. These findings affect our understanding of the biological function
    of cholesterol and its role in health and disease." According to the
    study, cell membranes are thin layers of fatty molecules that define
    cell boundaries and regulate various biological functions, including
    how viruses spread and how cells divide. To enable such functions,
    membranes should be able to bend and permit shape changes. This bending propensity is determined by how packed the molecular building blocks are; tighter packing results in stiffer membranes that cannot bend so easily,
    Ashkar added.

    Cholesterol's impact on cell membranes at the molecular level Cholesterol
    is found in high quantities in bacon, egg, cheese, and many other comfort foods. While too much cholesterol can harm the body, regulated amounts
    of cholesterol in cell membranes are absolutely necessary for the normal function of cells. Anomalies in cholesterol amounts are often associated
    with various disease conditions.



    ========================================================================== Besides cholesterol, our cell membranes are primarily formed of lipids,
    which are small, fatty molecules that self-assemble into bilayer
    structures when present in water -- and nearly 60 percent of the human
    body is made of water.

    Together, lipids and cholesterol form the barriers that define our cells
    and regulate the cellular exchange of nutrients.

    At the molecular level, cholesterol possesses a slick and rigid
    structure. When it interacts with our cell membranes, it jams itself
    right in between lipids, which results in a more densely packed
    membrane. According to structure- property relations, this would naturally result in a stiffer membrane.

    Yet, for the past 10 or so years, physicists and biologists have assumed
    that cholesterol had nearly no effect on the stiffness of membranes formed
    of cis- unsaturated lipids, a common type of lipid found in our cells,
    despite its well-documented effect on lipid packing.

    "It defied our understanding of what cholesterol does to cell membranes," Ashkar said. "It also contradicts standard structure-property
    relationships in self-assembled materials." These perceptions are
    important because in ideal circumstances, cell membranes should maintain a semi-rigid structure: rigid enough to keep its form, but flexible enough
    to allow for the dynamic movement of signaling proteins and functional
    domains. Misconceptions about how cholesterol stiffens cell membranes
    impact our understanding of membrane function.



    ==========================================================================
    The data initially made little sense, but as she probed deeper, Ashkar
    found a clear case of how soft materials can "apparently" exhibit
    different properties, depending on the parameters of the observation
    method. She found that over short length and time scales over which
    important signaling events occur - - we're talking nanometers and
    nanoseconds -- the added cholesterol induces membrane stiffening that
    one would expect.

    Proving her point To contradict an established doctrine in science
    requires more than just one set of data points. "We found these results a
    while back, but they were met with skepticism because they're so against
    the existing notions," Ashkar said.

    Ashkar's first tests used neutron spin-echo spectroscopy, a unique probe
    that enables the study of materials on the nanoscale. These experiments
    were performed at the two major neutron scattering facilities in the
    United States, the NIST Center for Neutron Research and the Spallation
    Neutron Source at Oak Ridge National Laboratory.

    Ashkar bolstered her evidence with computer modeling simulations,
    in collaboration with George Khelashvilli, an assistant professor at
    the Weill Cornell Medicine Department of Physiology & Biophysics, and
    further validated the experimental findings with recent nuclear magnetic resonance measurements, in collaboration with Michael Brown, a professor
    of chemistry and biochemistry at the University of Arizona. The data consistency in all three methods provided thorough evidence for Ashkar's hypothesis and confirmed standard structure-property relations in lipid membranes.

    "These results call for a reassessment of existing constructs of how cholesterol affects lipid membranes," Ashkar said. "If we don't have
    the right assumptions, we cannot make the right predictions, and we
    will not have the right design for the treatment of viruses, diseases,
    or other biological anomalies."

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Virginia_Tech. Original written by
    Andrew Tie. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Saptarshi Chakraborty, Milka Doktorova, Trivikram R. Molugu,
    Frederick A.

    Heberle, Haden L. Scott, Boris Dzikovski, Michihiro Nagao,
    Laura-Roxana Stingaciu, Robert F. Standaert, Francisco
    N. Barrera, John Katsaras, George Khelashvili, Michael F. Brown,
    Rana Ashkar. How cholesterol stiffens unsaturated lipid
    membranes. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2020;
    202004807 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2004807117 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/09/200908122542.htm

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