Experimental and Computational Evidence for Self-Assembly of Mitochondrial UCP2 in Lipid Bilayers

2019 
Uncoupling proteins (UCPs) are members of the mitochondrial carrier family (MCF) that transport protons across the inner mitochondrial membrane, thereby uncoupling electron transport from ATP synthesis. The stoichiometry of UCPs, and the possibility of co-existence of this protein as monomeric and associated forms in lipid membranes remain an intriguing open question. In the current study, the tertiary structure of UCP2 was analyzed both experimentally and through molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. After recombinant expression of UCP2 in the inner membrane of E. coli, the protein was directly extracted from the bacterial membranes with a non-denaturing detergent and purified both as a pure monomer and as a mixture of monomers, dimers and tetramers. Both protein preparations were reconstituted in egg yolk lipid vesicles. Gel electrophoresis, circular dichroism spectroscopy and fluorescence methods were used to characterize the structure and the proton transport function of protein. UCP2 showed unique stable tetrameric forms in lipid bilayers. MD simulations using membrane lipids and principal component analysis support the experimental results and provided new molecular insights into the nature of non-covalent interactions in oligomeric UCP2. MD simulations indicate that UCP2 tetramers are asymmetric dimers of dimers, in which the interactions between the monomers forming the dimer are stronger than the interactions between the dimers within the tetramer. It is also shown that UCP2 has a specific tendency to form functional tetramers in lipid bilayers, capable of proton transport. The asymmetric nature of the UCP2 tetramer could act as a scaffold for regulating the activity of the monomeric units through cooperative intercommunication between these subunits. Under similar experimental conditions, the structurally comparable ADP/ATP carrier protein did not form tetramers in vesicles, implying that spontaneous tetramerization cannot be generalized to all MCF members.
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