Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume 290, Issue 52, 25 December 2015, Pages 31101-31112
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Molecular Biophysicse
Analysis of Perforin Assembly by Quartz Crystal Microbalance Reveals a Role for Cholesterol and Calcium-independent Membrane Binding*Perforin Binding and Rearrangements Assessed by QCM-D

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Perforin is an essential component in the cytotoxic lymphocyte-mediated cell death pathway. The traditional view holds that perforin monomers assemble into pores in the target cell membrane via a calcium-dependent process and facilitate translocation of cytotoxic proteases into the cytoplasm to induce apoptosis. Although many studies have examined the structure and role of perforin, the mechanics of pore assembly and granzyme delivery remain unclear. Here we have employed quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring (QCM-D) to investigate binding and assembly of perforin on lipid membranes, and show that perforin monomers bind to the membrane in a cooperative manner. We also found that cholesterol influences perforin binding and activity on intact cells and model membranes. Finally, contrary to current thinking, perforin efficiently binds membranes in the absence of calcium. When calcium is added to perforin already on the membrane, the QCM-D response changes significantly, indicating that perforin becomes membranolytic only after calcium binding.

calcium
cellular immune response
cholesterol
membrane bilayer
protein self-assembly
MACPF
perforin
quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring
Streptolysin O
pore

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*

This work was supported by grants from the National Health and Medical Research Council (Australia) (to P. I. B. and J. C. W.) and by grants from the Australian Research Council (to L. L. M., R. F. T., and J. C. W.). The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest with the contents of this article.