Methodological Pitfalls of Investigating Lipid Rafts in the Brain: What Are We Still Missing?

Biomolecules. 2024 Jan 28;14(2):156. doi: 10.3390/biom14020156.

Abstract

The purpose of this review is to succinctly examine the methodologies used in lipid raft research in the brain and to highlight the drawbacks of some investigative approaches. Lipid rafts are biochemically and biophysically different from the bulk membrane. A specific lipid environment within membrane domains provides a harbor for distinct raftophilic proteins, all of which in concert create a specialized platform orchestrating various cellular processes. Studying lipid rafts has proved to be arduous due to their elusive nature, mobility, and constant dynamic reorganization to meet the cellular needs. Studying neuronal lipid rafts is particularly cumbersome due to the immensely complex regional molecular architecture of the central nervous system. Biochemical fractionation, performed with or without detergents, is still the most widely used method to isolate lipid rafts. However, the differences in solubilization when various detergents are used has exposed a dire need to find more reliable methods to study particular rafts. Biochemical methods need to be complemented with other approaches such as live-cell microscopy, imaging mass spectrometry, and the development of specific non-invasive fluorescent probes to obtain a more complete image of raft dynamics and to study the spatio-temporal expression of rafts in live cells.

Keywords: Brij O20; Triton X-100; cholesterol; detergent-resistant membranes; gangliosides; glycosphingolipids; imaging mass spectrometry; neuronal membranes.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Brain
  • Detergents*
  • Membrane Microdomains* / chemistry

Substances

  • Detergents

Grants and funding

This work was supported by research projects funded by the Croatian Science Foundation grant NeuroReact, IP-2016-06-8636 (to S.K.-B.) and grant Raft tuning, IP-2014-09-2324 (to M.H.) which facilitated the smooth execution of this manuscript.