Abstract
It is increasingly apparent that lipids function not only in the membranous compartmentalization of cell components, but also in the regulation of activities of soluble proteins involved in key cellular events. There are several mechanisms by which membranes and their component lipids affect protein function. Certain proteins are activated by a conformational change that occurs upon association with lipid bilayers. Others appear to be influenced by being recruited to membranes so that they can interact with regulatory factors, or by being sequestered at membranes and thus incapable of interacting with soluble proteins or factors necessary for their function. Finally, membranes regulate many proteins by mechanisms yet to be elucidated. In addition to the lipids in membrane bilayers, products of glycerophospholipid and sphingolipid metabolism, functioning as second messengers, influence certain cytosolic proteins involved in cellular signal signaling pathways. This form of regulation, while important, is not the focus of this review and will only briefly be discussed.