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Below the melting point temperature of lipids, artificial lipid membranes usually exist in the ordered gel phase. Above these temperatures lipid acyl chains become fluid and disordered (liquid-crystalline phase). Depending on the chemical composition of artificial membranes, phase separation may occur, leading to the formation of transient or stable membrane domains. A similar phase separation of lipids into ordered and disordered domains has been observed in natural membranes at physiological temperature range. Moreover, it has been reported that certain proteins prefer certain organization of lipids, as for example glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored proteins or Src family of tyrosine kinases. The aim of present review is to discuss the possibility that some lipid microdomains are induced or stabilized by lipid-binding proteins that under certain conditions, for example due to a rise of cytosolic Ca2+ or pH changes, may attach to the membrane surface, inducing clustering of lipid molecules and creation of ordered lipid microdomains. These domains may than attract other cytosolic proteins, either enzymes or regulatory proteins. It is, therefore, postulated that lipid microdomains play important roles within a cell, in signal transduction and enzymatic catalysis, and also in various pathological states, as Alzheimer's disease, anti-phosphatidylserine syndrome, or development of multidrug resistance of cancer cells.
Annexins IV and VI were found to interact with human erythrocyte membrane in a calcium-dependent manner. Chemical and enzymatic modification of the membrane constituents pointed to phosphatidylserine as a target membrane molecule responsible for the interaction of the annexin/Ca complexes with the membrane. The membrane-associated annexins were shown to form clusters reflecting, perhaps, the presence of PS microdomains in a lateral plane of membrane.
The paradigm of annexins as phospholipid-binding proteins interacting with membranes in a calcium-dependent manner has been recently questioned in light of observations that some annexin isoforms may behave like membrane integral proteins or remain associated with their target membranes at low, resting, concentrations of Ca2+ in the cytoplasm. In addition, an evidence has been presented that some annexins (annexins I, VI and VII) bind in vitro ATP and GTP, and upon binding the nucleotide the in vitro activity of these proteins is modified. However, annexins do not contain Walker A and B consensus sequences for ATP/GTP binding. This review presents the hypothesis that a new ATP-binding motif exists within the annexin molecules and that ATP may play a role of functional ligand for annexins also in vivo
Liver is an epithelial organ which removes many substances from the blood, metabolizes them, and secretes back into circulation or directly into the bile. Liver parenchymal cells (hepatocytes) are involved in the overall detoxification of the organism through the bile. These highly polarized cells are unique among others due to the domain structure of their plasma membrane, organization of their cytoskeleton connected to the canalicular region of plasmalemma, and the specific distribution of various transport systems involved in detoxification phase III. In this mini-review the possible influence of canalicular motility modulated by cytoskeleton on the bile flow is discussed. In addition, the role of annexins, calcium- and phospholipid-binding proteins exhibiting high expression level in liver, in vesicular trafficking leading to the transport of some of biliary components is also postulated.
Annexins, calcium- and membrane-binding multifunctional proteins, have been implicated in N-ethylmaleimide (NEM)-independent fusion of vesicular structures involved in membrane traffic. This view is based on intracellular localization of annexins, which frequently associated with endosomes, chromaffin granules, caveolae, clathrin-coated pits, and other membrane compartments, engaged in endo- and exocytosis. Moreover, annexins were found to modulate budding and aggregation of vesicle membranes, to interact with cytoskeletal proteins, and, upon binding to membranes, to change the structure of lipid bilayer, leading to membrane fusion. In addition, some annexins are substrates for various protein kinases and, in membrane-bound form, reveal calcium channel activity. Recently, annexins were observed to interact in vitro and in vivo with nucleotides, ATP, GTP or cAMP, which are potent mediators of membrane traffic processes. In addition, annexin VII showed hydrolytic activity towards GTP, and similarities in the mechanism of action to that of small GTP-binding proteins were found. The aim of the present review is to summarize the observations implying annexins as possible effectors in endo- and exocytosis and to compare them with well known complexes of cytosolic and membrane proteins forming the true membrane fusion machinery within a cell, conserved from yeast to the neurons of humans.
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