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Dive into the research topics where Olivier Soubias is active.

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Featured researches published by Olivier Soubias.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Critical fluctuations in domain-forming lipid mixtures

Sarah L. Veatch; Olivier Soubias; Sarah L. Keller; Klaus Gawrisch

Critical fluctuations are investigated in lipid membranes near miscibility critical points in bilayers composed of dioleoylphosphatidylcholine, chain perdeuterated dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine, and cholesterol. Phase boundaries are mapped over the temperature range from 10°C to 60°C by deuterium NMR. Tie-lines and three-phase triangles are evaluated across two-phase and three-phase regions, respectively. In addition, a line of miscibility critical points is identified. NMR resonances are broadened in the vicinity of critical points, and broadening is attributed to increased transverse relaxation rates arising from modulation of chain order with correlation times on a microsecond time scale. We conclude that spectral broadening arises from composition fluctuations in the membrane plane with dimensions of <50 nm and speculate that similar fluctuations are commonly found in cholesterol-containing membranes.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2008

Internal hydration increases during activation of the G-protein-coupled receptor rhodopsin.

Alan Grossfield; Michael C. Pitman; Scott E. Feller; Olivier Soubias; Klaus Gawrisch

Rhodopsin, the membrane protein responsible for dim-light vision, until recently was the only G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) with a known crystal structure. As a result, there is enormous interest in studying its structure, dynamics, and function. Here we report the results of three all-atom molecular dynamics simulations, each at least 1.5 micros, which predict that substantial changes in internal hydration play a functional role in rhodopsin activation. We confirm with (1)H magic angle spinning NMR that the increased hydration is specific to the metarhodopsin-I intermediate. The internal water molecules interact with several conserved residues, suggesting that changes in internal hydration may be important during the activation of other GPCRs. The results serve to illustrate the synergism of long-time-scale molecular dynamics simulations and NMR in enhancing our understanding of GPCR function.


Biophysical Journal | 2010

Contribution of Membrane Elastic Energy to Rhodopsin Function

Olivier Soubias; Walter E. Teague; Kirk G. Hines; Drake C. Mitchell; Klaus Gawrisch

We considered the issue of whether shifts in the metarhodopsin I (MI)-metarhodopsin II (MII) equilibrium from lipid composition are fully explicable by differences in bilayer curvature elastic stress. A series of six lipids with known spontaneous radii of monolayer curvature and bending elastic moduli were added at increasing concentrations to the matrix lipid 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC) and the MI-MII equilibrium measured by flash photolysis followed by recording UV-vis spectra. The average area-per-lipid molecule and the membrane hydrophobic thickness were derived from measurements of the (2)H NMR order parameter profile of the palmitic acid chain in POPC. For the series of ethanolamines with different levels of headgroup methylation, shifts in the MI-MII equilibrium correlated with changes in membrane elastic properties as expressed by the product of spontaneous radius of monolayer curvature, bending elastic modulus, and lateral area per molecule. However, for the entire series of lipids, elastic energy explained the shifts only partially. Additional contributions correlated with the capability of the ethanolamine headgroups to engage in hydrogen bonding with the protein, independent of the state of ethanolamine methylation, with introduction of polyunsaturated sn-2 hydrocarbon chains, and with replacement of the palmitic acid sn-1 chains by oleic acid. The experiments point to the importance of interactions of rhodopsin with particular lipid species in the first layer of lipids surrounding the protein as well as to membrane elastic stress in the lipid-protein domain.


Protein Science | 2005

Expression of human peripheral cannabinoid receptor for structural studies

Alexei A. Yeliseev; Karen K. Wong; Olivier Soubias; Klaus Gawrisch

Human peripheral‐type cannabinoid receptor (CB2) was expressed in Escherichia coli as a fusion with the maltose‐binding protein, thioredoxin, and a deca‐histidine tag. Functional activity and structural integrity of the receptor in bacterial protoplast membranes was confirmed by extensive binding studies with a variety of natural and synthetic cannabinoid ligands. E. coli membranes expressing CB2 also activated cognate G‐proteins in an in vitro coupled assay. Detergent‐solubilized receptor was purified to 80%–90% homogeneity by affinity chromatography followed by ion‐exchange chromatography. By high‐resolution NMR on the receptor in DPC micelles, it was determined that purified CB2 forms 1:1 complexes with the ligands CP‐55,940 and anandamide. The receptor was successfully reconstituted into phosphatidylcholine bilayers and the membranes were deposited into a porous substrate as tubular lipid bilayers for structural studies by NMR and scattering techniques.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2012

The role of the lipid matrix for structure and function of the GPCR rhodopsin

Olivier Soubias; Klaus Gawrisch

Photoactivation of rhodopsin in lipid bilayers results within milliseconds in a metarhodopsin I (MI)-metarhodopsin II (MII) equilibrium that is very sensitive to the lipid composition. It has been well established that lipid bilayers that are under negative curvature elastic stress from incorporation of lipids like phosphatidylethanolamines (PE) favor formation of MII, the rhodopsin photointermediate that is capable of activating G protein. Furthermore, formation of the MII state is favored by negatively charged lipids like phosphatidylserine and by lipids with longer hydrocarbon chains that yield bilayers with larger membrane hydrophobic thickness. Cholesterol and rhodopsin-rhodopsin interactions from crowding of rhodopsin molecules in lipid bilayers shift the MI-MII equilibrium towards MI. A variety of mechanisms seems to be responsible for the large, lipid-induced shifts between MI and MII: adjustment of the thickness of lipid bilayers to rhodopsin and adjustment of rhodopsin helicity to the thickness of bilayers, curvature elastic deformations in the lipid matrix surrounding the protein, direct interactions of PE headgroups and polyunsaturated hydrocarbon chains with rhodopsin, and direct or lipid-mediated interactions between rhodopsin molecules. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Membrane protein structure and function.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Evidence for Specificity in Lipid-Rhodopsin Interactions

Olivier Soubias; Walter E. Teague; Klaus Gawrisch

The interaction of bovine rhodopsin with poly- and monounsaturated lipids was studied by 1H MAS NMR with magnetization transfer from rhodopsin to lipid. Experiments were conducted on bovine rod outer segment (ROS) disks and on recombinant membranes containing lipids with polyunsaturated, docosahexaenoyl (DHA) chains. Poly- and monounsaturated lipids interact specifically with different sites on the rhodopsin surface. Rates of magnetization transfer from protein to DHA are lipid headgroup-dependent and increased in the sequence PC < PS < PE. Boundary lipids are in fast exchange with the lipid matrix on a time scale of milliseconds or shorter. All rhodopsin photointermediates transferred magnetization preferentially to DHA-containing lipids, but highest rates were observed for Meta-III rhodopsin. The experiments show clearly that the surface of rhodopsin has sites for specific interaction with lipids. Current theories of lipid-protein interaction do not account for such surface heterogeneity.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Lipid-rhodopsin hydrophobic mismatch alters rhodopsin helical content.

Olivier Soubias; Shui-Lin Niu; Drake C. Mitchell; Klaus Gawrisch

The ability of photoactivated rhodopsin to achieve the enzymatically active metarhodopsin II conformation is exquisitely sensitive to bilayer hydrophobic thickness. The sensitivity of rhodopsin to the lipid matrix has been explained by the hydrophobic matching theory, which predicts that lipid bilayers adjust elastically to the hydrophobic length of transmembrane helices. Here, we examined if bilayer thickness adjusts to the length of the protein or if the protein alters its conformation to adapt to the bilayer. Purified bovine rhodopsin was reconstituted into a series of mono-unsaturated phosphatidylcholines with 14-20 carbons per hydrocarbon chain. Changes of hydrocarbon chain length were measured by (2)H NMR, and protein helical content was quantified by synchrotron radiation circular dichroism and conventional circular dichroism. Experiments were conducted on dark-adapted rhodopsin, the photo-intermediates metarhodopsin I/II/III, and opsin. Changes of bilayer thickness upon rhodopsin incorporation and photoactivation were mostly absent. In contrast, the helical content of rhodopsin increased with membrane hydrophobic thickness. Helical content did not change measurably upon photoactivation. The increases of bilayer thickness and helicity of rhodopsin are accompanied by higher metarhodopsin II/metarhodopsin I ratios, faster rates of metarhodopsin II formation, an increase of tryptophan fluorescence, and higher temperatures of rhodopsin denaturation. The data suggest a surprising adaptability of this G protein-coupled membrane receptor to properties of the lipid matrix.


Chemistry and Physics of Lipids | 2008

Structure and dynamics of polyunsaturated hydrocarbon chains in lipid bilayers – significance for GPCR function

Klaus Gawrisch; Olivier Soubias

This review summarizes results of our recent solid-state NMR investigations on polyunsaturated 18:0-22:6n3-PC/PE/PS and 18:0-22:5n6-PC bilayers. Data on structure and dynamics of the polyunsaturated docosahexaenoyl (DHAn3, 22:6n3) and docosapentaenoyl chains (DPAn6, 22:5n6), investigated at physiological conditions, are reported. Lipid-protein interaction was studied on reconstituted bilayers containing the G-protein coupled membrane receptor (GPCR) rhodopsin as well as on rod outer segment (ROS) disk membranes prepared from bovine retinas. Results reveal surprisingly rapid conformational transitions of polyunsaturated chains and existence of weakly specific interactions of DHAn3 with spatially distinct sites on rhodopsin.


Prostaglandins Leukotrienes and Essential Fatty Acids | 2008

Insights from biophysical studies on the role of polyunsaturated fatty acids for function of G-protein coupled membrane receptors.

Klaus Gawrisch; Olivier Soubias; Mihaela Mihailescu

The composition of the lipid matrix is critical for function of membrane proteins. Perhaps one of the best studied examples is the function of the G-protein-coupled membrane receptor (GPCR) rhodopsin which is located in membranes with high content of phospholipids with polyunsaturated docosahexaenoic acid chains (DHA, 22:6n-3). Technological advances enabled a more detailed study of structure and dynamics of DHA chains and their interaction with rhodopsin. It was established that polyunsaturated DHA differs from saturated and monounsaturated hydrocarbon chains by far more rapid structural conversions. Furthermore, DHA chains tend to have higher density near the lipid/water interface while density of saturated chains is higher in the bilayer center. The interface of rhodopsin has a small number of sites for tighter interaction with DHA. Polyunsaturated phosphatidylethanolamines accumulate preferentially near the protein. Surprisingly, the high conformational freedom of most DHA chains is not measurably reduced upon interaction with rhodopsin. While some observations point at an involvement of continuum elastic properties of membranes in modulation of rhodopsin function, there is growing evidence for a role of weakly specific DHA-rhodopsin interactions.


Protein Science | 2005

Fusogenic Alzheimer's peptide fragment AΒ (29-42) in interaction with lipid bilayers : Secondary structure, dynamics, and specific interaction with phosphatidyl ethanolamine polar heads as revealed by solid-state NMR

Stéphanie Ravault; Olivier Soubias; Annick Thomas; Robert Brasseur; Alain Milon

The interaction of the native Alzheimers peptide C‐terminal fragment Aβ (29–42), and two mutants (G33A and G37A) with neutral lipid bilayers made of POPC and POPE in a 9:1 molar ratio was investigated by solid‐state NMR. This fragment and the lipid composition were selected because they represent the minimum requirement for the fusogenic activity of the Alzheimers peptide. The chemical shifts of alanine methyl isotropic carbon were determined by MAS NMR, and they clearly demonstrated that the major form of the peptide equilibrated in membrane is not in a helical conformation. 2H NMR, performed with acyl chain deuterated POPC, demonstrated that there is no perturbation of the acyl chains dynamics and of the lipid phase transition temperature. 2H NMR, performed with alanine methyl‐deuterated peptide demonstrated that the peptide itself has a limited mobility below and above the lipid phase transition temperature (molecular order parameter equal to 0.94). MAS 31P NMR revealed a specific interaction with POPE polar head as seen by the enhancement of POPE phosphorus nuclei T2 relaxation. All these results are in favor of a β‐sheet oligomeric association of the peptide at the bilayer interface, preferentially recruiting phosphatidyl ethanolamine polar heads.

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Klaus Gawrisch

National Institutes of Health

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Kirk G. Hines

National Institutes of Health

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Alexei A. Yeliseev

National Institutes of Health

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Drake C. Mitchell

National Institutes of Health

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Alain Milon

University of Toulouse

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John K. Northup

National Institutes of Health

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Alexander J. Sodt

National Institutes of Health

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John Katsaras

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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