APS Logo

Molecular mechanism of selective partitioning of medicinal lipids into lipid droplets

ORAL

Abstract

In guiding lipid droplets (LDs) to serve as storage vessels that insulate high-value lipophilic compounds in cells, we demonstrate that chain flexibility of lipids determines their selective migration in intracellular LDs. Focusing on commercially important medicinal lipids with biogenetic similarity but structural dissimilarity, we have recently validated computationally and experimentally that LD remodeling should be differentiated between overproduction of structurally flexible squalene and that of rigid zeaxanthin and β-carotene. In this talk, we present a molecular dynamics simulation study revealing that worm-like flexible squalene is readily deformed to move through intertwined chains of triacylglycerols in the LD core, whereas rod-like rigid zeaxanthin is trapped on the LD surface due to a high free energy barrier in diffusion. The simulation was consistent with experimental observation that intracellular storage of squalene significantly increases with LD volume expansion, but that of zeaxanthin and β-carotene is enhanced through LD surface broadening; as visually evidenced, the outcomes represent internal penetration of squalene and surface localization of zeaxanthin and β-carotene. Our study shows the computational and experimental validation of selective lipid migration into a phase-separated organelle and reveals LD dynamics and functionalization.

Publication: Chain flexibility of medicinal lipids determines their selective partitioning into lipid droplets, Nature Communications, 13, 3612 (2022)

Presenters

  • Chang Yun Son

    Pohang Univ of Sci & Tech

Authors

  • Chang Yun Son

    Pohang Univ of Sci & Tech