Grant Duration
08/09 – 03/21
This project expressed and purified recombinant dysferlin proteins (full-length, fragmentary, and mutant), and studied their behavior using an assortment of biochemical, biophysical, and microscopy assays to better understand how dysferlin regulates membrane structure and membrane fusion. Major findings:
- Dysferlin has the ability to bind to and cause aggregation of phospholipid vesicles in a calcium-dependent manner. This ability exists for all known dysferlin isoforms, and is retained for isolated portions of the dysferlin molecule (e.g., the three N-terminal C2 domains, the four C-terminal C2 domains). Missense mutations, however, generally cause dysferlin to completely lose its vesicle binding and aggregation ability.
- Small molecule “chaperones” are able to partially restore the lipid binding and aggregation of some (but not all) dysferlin mutants with missense mutations in the C2 domains.
- Dysferlin dimerizes, as shown by the appearance of GFP-tagged mutant dysferlin, which is unable to bind lipids, appearing at vesicles if (unlabeled) wild type dysferlin is also present. Experiments with split-GFP labeling indicate that dysferlin can dimerize in a parallel geometry (the two N-termini and C-termini are bound together), although other dimerization geometries may also exist.















