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Viscous control of cellular respiration by membrane lipid composition.

Itay BudinTristan de RondYan ChenLeanne Jade G ChanChristopher J PetzoldJay D Keasling
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2018)
Lipid composition determines the physical properties of biological membranes and can vary substantially between and within organisms. We describe a specific role for the viscosity of energy-transducing membranes in cellular respiration. Engineering of fatty acid biosynthesis in Escherichia coli allowed us to titrate inner membrane viscosity across a 10-fold range by controlling the abundance of unsaturated or branched lipids. These fluidizing lipids tightly controlled respiratory metabolism, an effect that can be explained with a quantitative model of the electron transport chain (ETC) that features diffusion-coupled reactions between enzymes and electron carriers (quinones). Lipid unsaturation also modulated mitochondrial respiration in engineered budding yeast strains. Thus, diffusion in the ETC may serve as an evolutionary constraint for lipid composition in respiratory membranes.
Keyphrases
  • fatty acid
  • escherichia coli
  • oxidative stress
  • physical activity
  • high resolution
  • cell wall
  • genome wide
  • respiratory tract
  • staphylococcus aureus
  • solar cells
  • pseudomonas aeruginosa
  • antibiotic resistance genes