Issue 7, 2016

The impact of physiological crowding on the diffusivity of membrane bound proteins

Abstract

Diffusion of transmembrane and peripheral membrane-bound proteins within the crowded cellular membrane environment is essential to diverse biological processes including cellular signaling, endocytosis, and motility. Nonetheless we presently lack a detailed understanding of the influence of physiological levels of crowding on membrane protein diffusion. Utilizing quantitative in vitro measurements, here we demonstrate that the diffusivities of membrane bound proteins follow a single linearly decreasing trend with increasing membrane coverage by proteins. This trend holds for homogenous protein populations across a range of protein sizes and for heterogeneous mixtures of proteins of different sizes, such that protein diffusivity is controlled by the total coverage of the surrounding membrane. These results demonstrate that steric exclusion within the crowded membrane environment can fundamentally limit the diffusive rate of proteins, regardless of their size. In cells this “speed limit” could be modulated by changes in local membrane coverage, providing a mechanism for tuning the rate of molecular interaction and assembly.

Graphical abstract: The impact of physiological crowding on the diffusivity of membrane bound proteins

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
16 Oct 2015
Accepted
04 Jan 2016
First published
05 Jan 2016

Soft Matter, 2016,12, 2127-2134

The impact of physiological crowding on the diffusivity of membrane bound proteins

J. R. Houser, D. J. Busch, D. R. Bell, B. Li, P. Ren and J. C. Stachowiak, Soft Matter, 2016, 12, 2127 DOI: 10.1039/C5SM02572A

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