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Dive into the research topics where Jonathan M. Crane is active.

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Featured researches published by Jonathan M. Crane.


Biophysical Journal | 2004

Role of Cholesterol in the Formation and Nature of Lipid Rafts in Planar and Spherical Model Membranes

Jonathan M. Crane; Lukas K. Tamm

Sterols play a crucial regulatory and structural role in the lateral organization of eukaryotic cell membranes. Cholesterol has been connected to the possible formation of ordered lipid domains (rafts) in mammalian cell membranes. Lipid rafts are composed of lipids in the liquid-ordered (l(o)) phase and are surrounded with lipids in the liquid-disordered (l(d)) phase. Cholesterol and sphingomyelin are thought to be the principal components of lipid rafts in cell and model membranes. We have used fluorescence microscopy and fluorescence recovery after photobleaching in planar supported lipid bilayers composed of porcine brain phosphatidylcholine (bPC), porcine brain sphingomyelin (bSM), and cholesterol to map the composition-dependence of l(d)/l(o) phase coexistence. Cholesterol decreases the fluidity of bPC bilayers, but disrupts the highly ordered gel phase of bSM, leading to a more fluid membrane. When mixed with bPC/bSM (1:1) or bPC/bSM (2:1), cholesterol induces the formation of l(o) phase domains. The fraction of the membrane in the l(o) phase was found to be directly proportional to the cholesterol concentration in both phospholipid mixtures, which implies that a significant fraction of bPC cosegregates into l(o) phase domains. Images reveal a percolation threshold, i.e., the point where rafts become connected and fluid domains disconnected, when 45-50% of the total membrane is converted to the l(o) phase. This happens between 20 and 25 mol % cholesterol in 1:1 bPC/bSM bilayers and between 25 and 30 mol % cholesterol in 2:1 bPC/bSM bilayers at room temperature, and at approximately 35 mol % cholesterol in 1:1 bPC/bSM bilayers at 37 degrees C. Area fractions of l(o) phase lipids obtained in multilamellar liposomes by a fluorescence resonance energy transfer method confirm and support the results obtained in planar lipid bilayers.


Current Opinion in Structural Biology | 2003

Membrane fusion: a structural perspective on the interplay of lipids and proteins.

Lukas K. Tamm; Jonathan M. Crane; Volker Kiessling

The fusion of biological membranes is governed by the carefully orchestrated interplay of membrane proteins and lipids. Recently determined structures of fusion proteins, individual domains of fusion proteins and their complexes with regulatory proteins and membrane lipids have yielded much suggestive insight into how viral and intracellular membrane fusion might proceed. These structures may be combined with new knowledge on the fusion of pure lipid bilayer membranes in an attempt to begin to piece together the complex puzzle of how biological membrane fusion machines operate on membranes.


Biophysical Journal | 2001

Rapid Compression Transforms Interfacial Monolayers of Pulmonary Surfactant

Jonathan M. Crane; Stephen B. Hall

Films of pulmonary surfactant in the lung are metastable at surface pressures well above the equilibrium spreading pressure of 45 mN/m but commonly collapse at that pressure when compressed in vitro. The studies reported here determined the effect of compression rate on the ability of monolayers containing extracted calf surfactant at 37 degrees C to maintain very high surface pressures on the continuous interface of a captive bubble. Increasing the rate from 2 A(2)/phospholipid/min (i.e., 3% of (initial area at 40 mN/m)/min) to 23%/s produced only transient increases to 48 mN/m. Above a threshold rate of 32%/s, however, surface pressures reached > 68 mN/m. After the rapid compression, static films maintained surface pressures within +/- 1 mN/m both at these maximum values and at lower pressures following expansion at < 5%/min to > or = 45 mN/m. Experiments with dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine at 37 degrees C produced similar results. These findings indicate that compression at rates comparable to values in the lungs can transform at least some phospholipid monolayers from a form that collapses readily at the equilibrium spreading pressure to one that is metastable for prolonged periods at higher pressures. Our results also suggest that transformation of surfactant films can occur without refinement of their composition.


Biophysical Journal | 1999

Persistence of Phase Coexistence in Disaturated Phosphatidylcholine Monolayers at High Surface Pressures

Jonathan M. Crane; Günther Putz; Stephen B. Hall

Prior reports that the coexistence of the liquid-expanded (LE) and liquid-condensed (LC) phases in phospholipid monolayers terminates in a critical point have been compromised by experimental difficulties with Langmuir troughs at high surface pressures and temperatures. The studies reported here used the continuous interface of a captive bubble to minimize these problems during measurements of the phase behavior for monolayers containing the phosphatidylcholines with the four different possible combinations of palmitoyl and/or myristoyl acyl residues. Isothermal compression produced surface pressure-area curves for dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) that were indistinguishable from previously published data obtained with Langmuir troughs. During isobaric heating, a steep increase in molecular area corresponding to the main LC-LE phase transition persisted for all four compounds to 45 mN/m, at which collapse of the LE phase first occurred. No other discontinuities to suggest other phase transitions were apparent. Isobars for DPPC at higher pressures were complicated by collapse of the monolayer, but continued to show evidence up to 65 mN/m for at least the onset of the LC-LE transition. The persistence of the main phase transition to high surface pressures suggests that a critical point for these monolayers of disaturated phospholipids is either nonexistent or inaccessible at an air-water interface.


Biophysical Journal | 2003

Metastability of a supercompressed fluid monolayer.

Ethan C. Smith; Jonathan M. Crane; Ted Laderas; Stephen B. Hall

Previous studies showed that monomolecular films of extracted calf surfactant collapse at the equilibrium spreading pressure during quasi-static compressions but become metastable at much higher surface pressures when compressed faster than a threshold rate. To determine the mechanism by which the films become metastable, we studied single-component films of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl phosphatidylcholine (POPC). Initial experiments confirmed similar metastability of POPC if compressed above a threshold rate. Measurements at different surface pressures then showed that rates of collapse, although initially increasing above the equilibrium spreading pressure, reached a sharply defined maximum and then slowed considerably. When heated, rapidly compressed films recovered their ability to collapse with no discontinuous change in area, arguing that the metastability does not reflect transition of the POPC film to a new phase. These observations indicate that in several respects, the supercompression of POPC monolayers resembles the supercooling of three-dimensional liquids toward a glass transition.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2007

Fluorescence Microscopy to Study Domains in Supported Lipid Bilayers

Jonathan M. Crane; Lukas K. Tamm

Fluorescence microscopy of model membranes is a powerful tool for identifying the nature and extent of coexisting phases in biologically relevant lipid mixtures. Planar supported bilayers offer the advantage over spherical model membranes in that both overall composition and lipid asymmetry can be controlled. In addition, the membrane can be easily accessed by perfusion of soluble components. Here, the necessary techniques for reconstituting bilayers of complex composition and phase behavior in planar systems are outlined. Effective methods for the formation of both symmetric and asymmetric bilayers are described. Considerations that must be taken into account in choosing suitable lipid compositions, effective fluorescent lipid dyes, and adequate microscope setups are discussed.


Biophysical Journal | 2006

Transbilayer Effects of Raft-Like Lipid Domains in Asymmetric Planar Bilayers Measured by Single Molecule Tracking

Volker Kiessling; Jonathan M. Crane; Lukas K. Tamm


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2001

Peptide mimics of SNARE transmembrane segments drive membrane fusion depending on their conformational plasticity

Dieter Langosch; Jonathan M. Crane; Bettina Brosig; Andrea Hellwig; Lukas K. Tamm; Jennifer Reed


Langmuir | 2005

Measuring Lipid Asymmetry in Planar Supported Bilayers by Fluorescence Interference Contrast Microscopy

Jonathan M. Crane; and Volker Kiessling; Lukas K. Tamm


Langmuir | 2004

Persistence of metastability after expansion of a supercompressed fluid monolayer.

Ethan C. Smith; Ted Laderas; Jonathan M. Crane; Stephen B. Hall

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Jennifer Reed

German Cancer Research Center

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