Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.135, No.6, 2164-2171, 2013
Binding of Serotonin to Lipid Membranes
Serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine, 5-HT) is a prevalent neurotransmitter throughout the animal kingdom. It exerts its effect through the specific binding to the serotonin receptor, but recent research has suggested that neural transmission may also be affected by its nonspecific interactions with the lipid matrix of the synaptic membrane. However, membrane 5-HT interactions remain controversial and superficially investigated. Fundamental knowledge of this interaction appears vital in discussions of putative roles of 5-HT, and we have addressed this by thermodynamic measurements and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. 5-HT was found to interact strongly with lipid bilayers (partitioning coefficient similar to 1200 in mole fraction units), and this is highly unusual for a hydrophilic solute like 5-HT which has a bulk, oil-water partitioning coefficient well below unity. It follows that membrane affinity must rely on specific interactions, and the MD simulations identified the salt-bridge between the primary amine of 5-HT and the lipid phosphate group as the most important interaction. This interaction anchored cationic 5-HT in the membrane interface with the aromatic ring system pointing inward and a prevailing residence between the phosphate and the carbonyl groups of the lipid. The unprotonated form of 5-HT shows the opposite orientation, with the primary amine pointing toward the membrane core. Partitioning of 5-HT was found to decrease lipid chain order. These distinctive interactions of 5-HT and model membranes could be related to nonspecific effects of this neurotransmitter.