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Quantitative prediction and measurement of Piezo's membrane footprint

Christoph A. Haselwandter, Yusong R. Guo, Ziao Fu, Roderick MacKinnon

2022Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences49 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Piezo proteins are mechanosensitive ion channels that can locally curve the membrane into a dome shape [Y. R. Guo, R. MacKinnon, eLife 6, e33660 (2017)]. The curved shape of the Piezo dome is expected to deform the surrounding lipid bilayer membrane into a membrane footprint, which may serve to amplify Piezo’s sensitivity to applied forces [C. A. Haselwandter, R. MacKinnon, eLife 7, e41968 (2018)]. If Piezo proteins are embedded in lipid bilayer vesicles, the membrane shape deformations induced by the Piezo dome depend on the vesicle size. We employ here membrane elasticity theory to predict, with no free parameters, the shape of such Piezo vesicles outside the Piezo dome, and show that the predicted vesicle shapes agree quantitatively with the corresponding measured vesicle shapes obtained through cryoelectron tomography, for a range of vesicle sizes [W. Helfrich, Z. Naturforsch. C 28, 693–703 (1973)]. On this basis, we explore the coupling between Piezo and membrane shape and demonstrate that the features of the Piezo dome affecting Piezo’s membrane footprint approximately follow a spherical cap geometry. Our work puts into place the foundation for deducing key elastic properties of the Piezo dome from membrane shape measurements and provides a general framework for quantifying how proteins deform bilayer membranes.

Topics & Concepts

VesicleMembraneLipid bilayerBilayerElasticity (physics)Mechanosensitive channelsBiophysicsFootprintChemistryMaterials scienceGeometryPhysicsBiologyIon channelMathematicsBiochemistryComposite materialReceptorPaleontologyErythrocyte Function and PathophysiologyLipid Membrane Structure and BehaviorNanopore and Nanochannel Transport Studies
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