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Home NEWS Science News Chemistry

Breaking bad barriers through a molecular vacuum cleaner

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
October 25, 2023
in Chemistry
Reading Time: 2 mins read
0
Lars Schäfer and Dario De Vecchis
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A molecular vacuum cleaner

Lars Schäfer and Dario De Vecchis

Credit: RUB, Marquard

A molecular vacuum cleaner

Triglycerides are the form in which fat energy is stored in our tissue. “Mycobacteria also accumulate triglycerides,” explains Lars Schäfer. “But in addition to store energy, these molecules are also a key component that contributes to seal their cellular barrier.” This high-energy molecule needs to be transported from inside the bacterial cell (the cytoplasmic space) through the membrane, to be ultimately deposited in the mycobacterial barrier. Until now, the precise details of this molecular journey were not known. “By teaming up with structural biologists Professor Markus Seeger and Dr. Sille Remm at Zurich, we used computer simulations to reveal how triglycerides are hunted from the transmembrane protein RV1410 that, akin to a vacuum cleaner, extracts them from the bacterial membrane via lateral portals in the protein structure.”

The relay race of the Trojan horse

But how are the triglycerides ultimately transported from the membrane and deposited to the barrier? Here comes the second intermediate actor LprG, a periplasmic protein which is anchored to the membrane and browses its surface chasing for triglycerides. LprG has a water-repellent (hydrophobic) pocket that once paired with RV1410 creates a greasy tunnel where the “baton” triglyceride is handed off in a relay race to ultimately reach the barrier. “We simulated the RV1410-LprG system embedded in a realistic mycobacterial membrane and describe this triglyceride-relay-race in atomistic detail,” says Dario De Vecchis. “One could think about the mycobacterial membrane as the Troy battlefield, were the scientists are trying to conquer the pathogen’s ramparts by exploiting the RV1410-LprG system as the Trojan horse,” portrays Dario De Vecchis. Revealing the molecular pathway of triglycerides could open new strategies to target the RV1410-LprG system, weaken the mycobacterial barrier, enhance antimicrobial permeability, and ultimately lead to more effective therapies against tuberculosis.



Journal

Nature Communications

DOI

10.1038/s41467-023-42073-0

Method of Research

Experimental study

Subject of Research

Cells

Article Title

Structural basis for triacylglyceride extraction from mycobacterial inner membrane by MFS transporter Rv1410

Article Publication Date

13-Oct-2023

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