Interaction of ostreolysin, a cytolytic protein from the edible mushroom Pleurotus ostreatus, with lipid membranes and modulation by lysophospholipids
Hemolysi
570
Erythrocytes
Tumor Cell
Lipid Bilayers
Fungal Protein
Antineoplastic Agents
Pleurotus
Hemolysis
Antineoplastic Agent
Dose-Response Relationship
Fungal Proteins
Hemolysin Proteins
03 medical and health sciences
Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared
Tumor Cells, Cultured
Animals
Humans
Spectroscopy
Lysophospholipid
0303 health sciences
Cultured
Sheep
Dose-Response Relationship, Drug
Animal
Hemolysin Protein
Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
Fluoresceins
Erythrocyte
Fourier Transform Infrared
Lipid Bilayer
Fluorescein
Cattle
Drug
Lysophospholipids
Pleurotu
Human
DOI:
10.1046/j.1432-1033.2003.03480.x
Publication Date:
2004-12-23T02:53:30Z
AUTHORS (6)
ABSTRACT
Ostreolysin is a 16‐kDa cytolytic protein specifically expressed in primordia and fruiting bodies of the edible mushroom Pleurotus ostreatus. To understand its interaction with lipid membranes, we compared its effects on mammalian cells, on vesicles prepared with either pure lipids or total lipid extracts, and on dispersions of lysophospholipids or fatty acids. At nanomolar concentrations, the protein lysed human, bovine and sheep erythrocytes by a colloid‐osmotic mechanism, compatible with the formation of pores of 4 nm diameter, and was cytotoxic to mammalian tumor cells. A search for lipid inhibitors of hemolysis revealed a strong effect of lysophospholipids and fatty acids, occurring below their critical micellar concentration. This effect was distinct from the capacity of ostreolysin to bind to and permeabilize lipid membranes. In fact, permeabilization of vesicles occurred only when they were prepared with lipids extracted from erythrocytes, and not with lipids extracted from P. ostreatus or pure lipid mixtures, even if lysophospholipids or fatty acids were included. Interaction with lipid vesicles, and their permeabilization, correlated with an increase in the intrinsic fluorescence and α‐helical content of the protein, and with aggregation, which were not detected with lysophospholipids. It appears that either an unknown lipid acceptor or a specific lipid complex is required for binding, aggregation and pore formation. The inhibitory effect of lysophospholipids may reflect a regulatory role for these components on the physiological action of ostreolysin and related proteins during fruiting.
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