posted on 2017-02-13, 00:00authored byAnirban Polley, Adam Orłowski, Reinis Danne, Andrey A. Gurtovenko, Jorge Bernardino de la Serna, Christian Eggeling, Simon J. Davis, Tomasz Róg, Ilpo Vattulainen
Proteins
embedded in the plasma membrane mediate interactions with
the cell environment and play decisive roles in many signaling events.
For cell–cell recognition molecules, it is highly likely that
their structures and behavior have been optimized in ways that overcome
the limitations of membrane tethering. In particular, the ligand binding
regions of these proteins likely need to be maximally exposed. Here
we show by means of atomistic simulations of membrane-bound CD2, a
small cell adhesion receptor expressed by human T-cells and natural
killer cells, that the presentation of its ectodomain is highly dependent
on membrane lipids and receptor glycosylation acting in apparent unison.
Detailed analysis shows that the underlying mechanism is based on
electrostatic interactions complemented by steric interactions between
glycans in the protein and the membrane surface. The findings are
significant for understanding the factors that render membrane receptors
accessible for binding and signaling.