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1997 Fiscal Year Final Research Report Summary

Study for mechanisms of biogenesis of functional caveolar structure in plasma membrane.

Research Project

Project/Area Number 08458211
Research Category

Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (B)

Allocation TypeSingle-year Grants
Section一般
Research Field Biophysics
Research InstitutionNational Institute for Physiological Sciences

Principal Investigator

MURATA Masayuki  National Institute for Physiological Sciences, Associate Professor, 生理学研究所, 助教授 (50212254)

Project Period (FY) 1996 – 1997
Keywordscaveolae / caveolin / intracellular transport / exocytosis / semi-intact cells / cell polarity / GFP / protein-lipid interactions
Research Abstract

Caveolae are non-clathrin-coated surface invaginations present in many cell types and function as a device to trap glycolipids, cholesterol, and other proteins for potocytosis, endocytosis, transcytosis, and intracellular signal transductions. Caveolin (caveolin-1) is a 21-24 kDa integral membrane protein, which is localized to both caveolae and trans-Golgi derived exocytic vesicles. To investigate the possible lipid interactions of caveolin, we reconstituted Esherichia coil-expressed caveolin into proteoliposomes with various lipid compositions and found that the protein was incorporated into DOPC/cholesterol proteoliposomes only when >30 mole % cholesterol was present in the lipid mixture. We also demonstrated that the protein bound cholesterol specifically. A number of proteins are known to interact with cholesterol, but to our knowledge caveolin is the first "membrane protein" that binds cholesterol. The organizing mechanism for the complexes of caveolin and cholesterol molecules has not yet been elucidated. The finding that cholesterol remained bound to the protein was completely unexpected since the final purification step of dog lung caveolin, which isolated from dog lung using biochemically, was sedimentation through a sucrose gradient containing 0.2% SDS, which should have removed associated lipids. Therefore, the binding of cholesterol to caveolin is markedly stable, suggesting lipid-protein interactions with unusual characteristics. This finding indicates that the protein plays a specific role in membrane microdomain (caveolar-related domains) formation and intracellular cholesterol trafficking.

  • Research Products

    (6 results)

All Other

All Publications (6 results)

  • [Publications] 加納ふみ: "ゴルジ体のバイオジェネシス-極性細胞でのin situ biochemistry & biophysics-" 生物物理. 39巻1号. 29-33 (1999)

    • Description
      「研究成果報告書概要(和文)」より
  • [Publications] 村田昌之: "Caveolin is a cholesterol-binding protein" Proceedings of the Inernational Symposium on Lipoprotein Metabolism and Atherogenesis. in press. (1999)

    • Description
      「研究成果報告書概要(和文)」より
  • [Publications] 大橋正人: "An arrested late endosome-lysosome intermediate aggregate observed in a Chinese hamster ovary cell mutant isolated by novel three-step screening" Journal of Cell Science. in press. (1999)

    • Description
      「研究成果報告書概要(和文)」より
  • [Publications] Fumi Kano: "Biogenesis of the Golgi apparatus" SEIBUTUBUTURI. Vol.39-No.1. 29-33 (1999)

    • Description
      「研究成果報告書概要(欧文)」より
  • [Publications] Maayuki Murata: "Caveolin is a cholesterol-binding protein" Proceedings of the International Symposium on Lipoprotein Metabolism and Atherogenesis. (in press). (1999)

    • Description
      「研究成果報告書概要(欧文)」より
  • [Publications] Masato Ohashi: "An arrested late endosome-lysosome intermediate aggregate observed in a Chinese hamster ovary cell mutant isolated by novel three-step screening." Journal of Cell Science. (in press). (1999)

    • Description
      「研究成果報告書概要(欧文)」より

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Published: 1999-12-08  

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