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Award ID contains: 1807455

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  1. Phosphatidic acid (PA) is a signaling lipid that is produced enzymatically from phosphatidylcholine (PC), lysophosphatidic acid, or diacylglycerol. Compared to PC, PA lacks a choline moiety on the headgroup, making the headgroup smaller than that of PC and PA, and PA has a net negative charge. Unlike the cylindrical geometry of PC, PA, with its small headgroup relative to the two fatty acid tails, is proposed to support negatively curved membranes. Thus, PA is thought to play a role in a variety of biological processes that involve bending membranes, such as the formation of intraluminal vesicles in multivesicular bodies and membrane fusion. Using supported tubulated lipid bilayers (STuBs), the extent to which PA localizes to curved membranes was determined. STuBs were created via liposome deposition with varying concentrations of NaCl (500 mM to 1 M) on glass to form supported bilayers with connected tubules. The location of fluorescently labeled lipids relative to tubules was determined by imaging with total internal reflection or confocal fluorescence microscopy. The accumulation of various forms of PA (with acyl chains of 16:0-6:0, 16:0-12:0, 18:1-12:0) were compared to PC and the headgroup labeled phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), a lipid that has been shown to accumulate at regions of curvature. PA and PE accumulated more at tubules and led to the formation of more tubules than PC. Using large unilamellar liposomes in a dye-quenching assay, the location of the headgroup labeled PE was determined to be mostly on the outer, positively curved leaflet, whereas the tail labeled PA was located more on the inner, negatively curved leaflet. This study demonstrates that PA localizes to regions of negative curvature in liposomes and supports the formation of curved, tubulated membranes. This is one way that PA could be involved with curvature formation during a variety of cell processes. 
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