Steady state analysis of influx and transbilayer distribution of ergosterol in the yeast plasma membrane

Abstract Background The transbilayer sterol distribution between both plasma membrane (PM) leaflets has long been debated. Recent studies in mammalian cells and in yeast show that the majority of sterol resides in the inner PM leaflet. Since sterol flip-flop in model membranes is rapid and energy-in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Daniel Wüstner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-08-01
Series:Theoretical Biology and Medical Modelling
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12976-019-0108-2
id doaj-b13fc5a731434bb3b14c3dbe2e184148
record_format Article
spelling doaj-b13fc5a731434bb3b14c3dbe2e1841482020-11-25T03:30:26ZengBMCTheoretical Biology and Medical Modelling1742-46822019-08-0116112610.1186/s12976-019-0108-2Steady state analysis of influx and transbilayer distribution of ergosterol in the yeast plasma membraneDaniel Wüstner0Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, VILLUM Center for Bioanalytical Sciences, University of Southern DenmarkAbstract Background The transbilayer sterol distribution between both plasma membrane (PM) leaflets has long been debated. Recent studies in mammalian cells and in yeast show that the majority of sterol resides in the inner PM leaflet. Since sterol flip-flop in model membranes is rapid and energy-independent, a mechanistic understanding for net enrichment of sterol in one leaflet is lacking. Import of ergosterol in yeast can take place via the ABC transporters Aus1/Pdr11 under anaerobic growth conditions, eventually followed by rapid non-vesicular sterol transport to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Little is known about how these transport steps are dynamically coordinated. Methods Here, a kinetic steady state model is presented which considers sterol import via Aus1/Pdr11, sterol flip-flop across the PM, bi-molecular complex formation and intracellular sterol release followed by eventual transport to and esterification of sterol in the ER. The steady state flux is calculated, and a thermodynamic analysis of feasibility is presented. Results It is shown that the steady state sterol flux across the PM can be entirely controlled by irreversible sterol import via Aus1/Pdr11. The transbilayer sterol flux at steady state is a non-linear function of the chemical potential difference of sterol between both leaflets. Non-vesicular release of sterol on the cytoplasmic side of the PM lowers the attainable sterol enrichment in the inner leaflet. Including complex formation of sterol with phospholipids or proteins can explain several puzzling experimental observations; 1) rapid sterol flip-flop across the PM despite net sterol enrichment in one leaflet, 2) a pronounced steady state sterol gradient between PM and ER despite fast non-vesicular sterol exchange between both compartments and 3) a non-linear dependence of ER sterol on ergosterol abundance in the PM. Conclusions A steady state model is presented that can account for the observed sterol asymmetry in the yeast PM, the strong sterol gradient between PM and ER and threshold-like expansion of ER sterol for increasing sterol influx into the PM. The model also provides new insight into selective uptake of cholesterol and its homeostasis in mammalian cells, and it provides testable predictions for future experiments.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12976-019-0108-2SterolCholesterolErgosterolFlip-flopPlasma membraneFlux
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daniel Wüstner
spellingShingle Daniel Wüstner
Steady state analysis of influx and transbilayer distribution of ergosterol in the yeast plasma membrane
Theoretical Biology and Medical Modelling
Sterol
Cholesterol
Ergosterol
Flip-flop
Plasma membrane
Flux
author_facet Daniel Wüstner
author_sort Daniel Wüstner
title Steady state analysis of influx and transbilayer distribution of ergosterol in the yeast plasma membrane
title_short Steady state analysis of influx and transbilayer distribution of ergosterol in the yeast plasma membrane
title_full Steady state analysis of influx and transbilayer distribution of ergosterol in the yeast plasma membrane
title_fullStr Steady state analysis of influx and transbilayer distribution of ergosterol in the yeast plasma membrane
title_full_unstemmed Steady state analysis of influx and transbilayer distribution of ergosterol in the yeast plasma membrane
title_sort steady state analysis of influx and transbilayer distribution of ergosterol in the yeast plasma membrane
publisher BMC
series Theoretical Biology and Medical Modelling
issn 1742-4682
publishDate 2019-08-01
description Abstract Background The transbilayer sterol distribution between both plasma membrane (PM) leaflets has long been debated. Recent studies in mammalian cells and in yeast show that the majority of sterol resides in the inner PM leaflet. Since sterol flip-flop in model membranes is rapid and energy-independent, a mechanistic understanding for net enrichment of sterol in one leaflet is lacking. Import of ergosterol in yeast can take place via the ABC transporters Aus1/Pdr11 under anaerobic growth conditions, eventually followed by rapid non-vesicular sterol transport to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Little is known about how these transport steps are dynamically coordinated. Methods Here, a kinetic steady state model is presented which considers sterol import via Aus1/Pdr11, sterol flip-flop across the PM, bi-molecular complex formation and intracellular sterol release followed by eventual transport to and esterification of sterol in the ER. The steady state flux is calculated, and a thermodynamic analysis of feasibility is presented. Results It is shown that the steady state sterol flux across the PM can be entirely controlled by irreversible sterol import via Aus1/Pdr11. The transbilayer sterol flux at steady state is a non-linear function of the chemical potential difference of sterol between both leaflets. Non-vesicular release of sterol on the cytoplasmic side of the PM lowers the attainable sterol enrichment in the inner leaflet. Including complex formation of sterol with phospholipids or proteins can explain several puzzling experimental observations; 1) rapid sterol flip-flop across the PM despite net sterol enrichment in one leaflet, 2) a pronounced steady state sterol gradient between PM and ER despite fast non-vesicular sterol exchange between both compartments and 3) a non-linear dependence of ER sterol on ergosterol abundance in the PM. Conclusions A steady state model is presented that can account for the observed sterol asymmetry in the yeast PM, the strong sterol gradient between PM and ER and threshold-like expansion of ER sterol for increasing sterol influx into the PM. The model also provides new insight into selective uptake of cholesterol and its homeostasis in mammalian cells, and it provides testable predictions for future experiments.
topic Sterol
Cholesterol
Ergosterol
Flip-flop
Plasma membrane
Flux
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12976-019-0108-2
work_keys_str_mv AT danielwustner steadystateanalysisofinfluxandtransbilayerdistributionofergosterolintheyeastplasmamembrane
_version_ 1724575655945830400