Login / Signup

Altered Membrane Mechanics Provides a Receptor-Independent Pathway for Serotonin Action.

Simli DeyDayana SurendranOskar EngbergAnkur GuptaSashaina E FanibundaAnirban DasBarun Kumar MaityArpan DeyVicky VisvakarmaMamata KallianpurHolger A ScheidtGilbert WalkerVidita A VaidyaDaniel HusterSudipta Maiti
Published in: Chemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2021)
Serotonin, an important signaling molecule in humans, has an unexpectedly high lipid membrane affinity. The significance of this finding has evoked considerable speculation. Here we show that membrane binding by serotonin can directly modulate membrane properties and cellular function, providing an activity pathway completely independent of serotonin receptors. Atomic force microscopy shows that serotonin makes artificial lipid bilayers softer, and induces nucleation of liquid disordered domains inside the raft-like liquid-ordered domains. Solid-state NMR spectroscopy corroborates this data at the atomic level, revealing a homogeneous decrease in the order parameter of the lipid chains in the presence of serotonin. In the RN46A immortalized serotonergic neuronal cell line, extracellular serotonin enhances transferrin receptor endocytosis, even in the presence of broad-spectrum serotonin receptor and transporter inhibitors. Similarly, it increases the membrane binding and internalization of oligomeric peptides. Our results uncover a mode of serotonin-membrane interaction that can potentiate key cellular processes in a receptor-independent fashion.
Keyphrases
  • atomic force microscopy
  • binding protein
  • fatty acid
  • ionic liquid
  • high resolution
  • subarachnoid hemorrhage
  • big data
  • capillary electrophoresis