首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
The binding of the diterpenoid drug 14-deoxy-14-[(2'-diethylamino-ethyl)-mercaptoacetoxy]-dihydromutilin hydrogen fumarate in the cell of rat liver is mainly to the microsomal fraction. Besides specific binding to cytochrome P-450, where the enzymic degradation of the drug occurs, we observed a very high number of identical sites (site A) with an affinity of approximately 4.2 x 10(3) M(-1) (25 degrees C, PH 7.4). Model investigations demonstrate that these interactions occur almost exclusively with the microsomal phospholipid moiety. Their capacity for the drug was determinated to be of the order of 0.2 mol/mol phospholipid. The specific interaction of the pleuromutilin derivative with cytochrome P-450 gives rise to different spectral changes of the protein. At low concentrations where weak cooperativity of the overall binding to microsomes (sites B) was found, the formation of a type I complex was observed. At increasing concentrations of the drug this interaction vanishes and a spectral change of a different type (modified type II) arises. The affinity for this complex is identical with that of the phospholipid binding sites. The interaction of the drug with the phospholipid moiety might give rise to dual effects. Firstly the very near neighbourhood of a multitude of relatively weak binding sites will facilitate a transport of the drug along the microsomal membranes. Secondly, the loading of the membranes with the drug at high concentrations might influence the binding to cytochrome P-450 so that a qualitatively different interaction takes place.  相似文献   

2.
Results from various surface sensitive characterization techniques suggest a model for the interaction of the piperidinopyrimidine dipyridamole (DIP)--known as a vasodilator and inhibitor of P-glycoprotein associated multidrug resistance of tumor cells--with phospholipid monolayers in which the drug is peripherally associated with the membrane, binding (up to) five phospholipids at a time. These multiple interactions are responsible for a very strong association of the drug with the lipid monolayer even at exceedingly low concentrations (approximately 0.2 mol%). Electrostatic interactions and hydrogen bonding are likely involved in the binding of DIP to DPPC. Cooperative effects among the lipids are invoked to explain the macroscopically measurable changes of lipid monolayer properties even when only one out of 100 DPPC molecules is directly associated with a DIP molecule. A reversal of the observed changes upon drug association with the membrane as the DIP concentration surpasses a threshold concentration (c(crit)approximately 0.5 mol%) may be explained by cooperativity in a different context, the self-aggregation of drug molecules. With its implications for the interaction of DIP with phospholipid films, this work provides a first approach to the explanation of the high sensitivity of cell membranes to piperidinopyrimidine drugs on a molecular level.  相似文献   

3.
The kinetic parameters of bovine prothrombin activation by factor Xa were determined in the absence and presence of factor Va as a function of the phospholipid concentration and composition. In the absence of factor Va, the Km for prothrombin increases proportionally with the phospholipid concentration and correlates well with the affinity of prothrombin for the different membranes. Phospholipid vesicles with a high affinity for prothrombin yield low Km values compared to membranes with less favorable binding parameters. At limited phospholipid concentrations, the Vmax of prothrombin activation correlates with the binding affinity of factor Xa for the various phospholipid vesicles. Membranes with a high affinity for factor Xa have high Vmax values, while for membranes with a low affinity a low Vmax is observed. Extrapolation of double-reciprocal plots of 1/Vmax vs. 1/[phospholipid] to infinite phospholipid concentrations, a condition at which all factor Xa would participate in prothrombin activation, yields a kcat of 2-4 min-1 independent of the type and amount of acidic phospholipid present in the vesicles. Also, in the presence of factor Va the Km for prothrombin varies proportionally with the phospholipid concentration. There is, however, no correlation between the binding parameters and the Km. Factor Va drastically lowers the Km for prothrombin for vesicles that have a low affinity for prothrombin. Vesicles composed of 20 mol % phosphatidylglycerol and 80 mol % phosphatidylcholine have a Km of 0.04 microM when factor Va is present, compared to 2.2 microM determined in the absence of factor Va.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
The interaction of amphotericin B with isolated human erythrocyte ghosts was monitored by circular dichroism at 37 degrees C and 15 degrees C. Although different, these spectra were not concentration dependent over a concentration range covering the inducement of K+ leakage and hemolysis, which suggests the existence of only one bound amphotericin B species. At 15 degrees C, the spectra indicate that amphotericin B is complexed with membrane cholesterol; the complex formation is saturable but not cooperative. At 37 degrees C new spectra are observed, and their existence is conditioned by the presence of membrane proteins. The binding is cooperative but not saturable. The amphotericin B right side-out vesicles complexation is temperature as well as ionic strength dependent: at high ionic strength it is the same as with ghosts, with the same temperature dependence. At low ionic strength it is characteristic of an interaction with cholesterol, regardless of temperature. In the large unilamellar vesicles reconstituted from the total lipid extracts of erythrocyte membranes, amphotericin B is complexed with cholesterol, regardless of temperature and ionic strength. These results indicate that there are two different modes of amphotericin B complexation with erythrocyte membranes, reversible one in the other, depending on the molecular organization of the membrane and the presence of membrane proteins.  相似文献   

5.
The interaction of propranolol with model phospholipid membranes was studied using various experimental techniques. The partition coefficient of propranolol in the negatively charged membranes of vesicles prepared from phosphatidylserine and phosphatidic acid was found to be more than 20-times higher than in neutral phosphatidylcholine membranes. Preferential interaction of propranolol with acidic phospholipid membranes was confirmed using the monolayer compression isotherm technique and the spin-labelling method. Phosphatidylserine monolayers were markedly expanded even at a relatively low drug concentration (5 . 10(-6) M). In contrast, the effect of propranolol on phosphatidylcholine monolayers was much smaller, being detectable only at a higher concentration of the drug (1 . 10(-4) M). Spin-labeling experiments show that propranolol exerts marked ordering effect on bilayers prepared from acidic phospholipids and does not change the order parameter of phosphatidylcholine membranes. The dependence of the propranolol fluorescence spectrum on the polarity of the solvent allowed us to identify the intercalation region of the drug in the membrane. The fluorophore moiety of propranolol was found to be localized in the lipid polar head groups region of the bilayer. The role of electrostatic and hydrophobic effects in propranolol-membrane interaction is discussed and the effect of propranolol on the ordering of phospholipid bilayers is compared with the effects of other anesthetic-like molecules.  相似文献   

6.
A simple centrifugation technique has been developed to study the interaction of human coagulation Factors IXa and X with phospholipid membranes. In the presence of Ca2+, equimolar phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine membranes form tight complexes with Factor X (KD = 2.8 X 10(-8) M); the KD is independent of the phospholipid concentration. Binding sites are available for about 2 mmol of Factor X/mol of phospholipid. Factor IXa has a slightly higher affinity for the phospholipid membrane (KD = 1.2 X 10(-8)M), and competes with Factor X for binding. The experimentally observed competition between Factor X and Factor IXa is in agreement with a model that describes the binding of two distinct ligands to a single class of independent binding sites.  相似文献   

7.
The binding of polymyxin-B to charged dipalmitoyl phosphatidic acid membranes has been studied as function of the external pH and of the ionic strength of the buffer solution. The phase transition curves were obtained by measuring the fluorescence depolarization of diphenyl hexatriene incorporated into the membrane with temperature. The molecular process of polymyxin binding was elucidated: 1. At an ionic strength of I greater than or equal to 0.1 mol/l a three step phase transition curve is found. A high-temperature step corresponds to the non-bound lipid. A lowered phase transition concerns to protein-bound lipid domains. This again is splitted into two steps. An inner core of the domain is characterized by a lipid-protein complex which is stabilized through hydrophobic and electrostatic interactions between polymyxin and the charged lipid. This core is surrounded by an outer belt of only hydrophobically bound molecules. This part shows a lower phase transition temperature than the inner core. 2. The binding curves of polymyxin to phosphatidic acid membranes depend strongly on the ionic strength of the water phase. The cooperativity of the binding process increases with increasing ionic strength and reaches a constant value at I greater than 0.2 mol/l. The maximum fraction of bound lipid decreases with increasing ionic strength. 3. The pH of the water phase strongly influences the cooperative binding process. At pH 6 a loss of cooperativity is observed at low ionic strength. Increasing the ion concentration to I = 0.3 mol/l recuperates the cooperativity of the binding process. At pH 3.0 no cooperative binding is obtained even at high ionic strength.  相似文献   

8.
The combined use of the membrane surface potential fluorescent sensor fluorescein phosphatidylethanolamine (FPE) and the membrane dipole potential fluorescent sensor di-8-ANEPPS to characterize the interaction of molecules with model and cellular membranes and to asses the influence of the dipole potential on the interaction is reported. The study of the human immunodeficiency virus protease inhibitor saquinavir with Caco-2 cells and phospholipid membranes reveals that the compound interacts with the lipidic bilayer of model membranes with a simple hyperbolic binding profile but with Caco-2 cells in a cooperative way involving membrane receptors. Additional studies indicated that colchicine acts as a competitor ligand to saquinavir and suggests, in agreement with other reports, that the identity of the saquinavir "receptor" could be P-glycoprotein or the multiple drug resistance-associated protein. The modification of the magnitude of the membrane dipole potential using compounds such as cholesterol, phloretin, and 6-ketocholestanol influences the binding capacity of saquinavir. Furthermore, removal of cholesterol from the cell membrane using methyl-beta-cyclodextrin significantly decreases the binding capacity of saquinavir. Because removal of cholesterol from the cell membrane has been reported to disrupt membrane domains known as "rafts," our observations imply that the membrane dipole potential plays an important role as a modulator of molecule-membrane interactions in these membrane structures. Such a role is suggested to contribute to the altered behavior of receptor-mediated signaling systems in membrane rafts.  相似文献   

9.
The interaction of phosphatidylserine (PS) synthase from Escherichia coli with lipid membranes was studied with a recently developed variant of the surface plasmon resonance technique, referred to as coupled plasmon-waveguide resonance spectroscopy. The features of the new technique are increased sensitivity and spectral resolution, and a unique ability to directly measure the structural anisotropy of lipid and proteolipid films. Solid-supported lipid bilayers with the following compositions were used: 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC); POPC-1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphate (POPA) (80:20, mol/mol); POPC-POPA (60:40, mol/mol); and POPC-1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-[phospho-rac-(1-glycerol)] (POPG) (75:25, mol/mol). Addition of either POPA or POPG to a POPC bilayer causes a considerable increase of both the bilayer thickness and its optical anisotropy. PS synthase exhibits a biphasic interaction with the bilayers. The first phase, occurring at low protein concentrations, involves both electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions, although it is dominated by the latter, and the enzyme causes a local decrease of the ordering of the lipid molecules. The second phase, occurring at high protein concentrations, is predominantly controlled by electrostatic interactions, and results in a cooperative binding of the enzyme to the membrane surface. Addition of the anionic lipids to a POPC bilayer causes a 5- to 15-fold decrease in the protein concentration at which the first binding phase occurs. The results reported herein lend experimental support to a previously suggested mechanism for the regulation of the polar head group composition in E. coli membranes.  相似文献   

10.
Equilibrium binding studies on the interaction between the anthracycline daunomycin and plasma membrane fractions from daunomycin-sensitive and -resistant murine leukemia P-388 cells are presented. Drug binding constants (KS) are 15,000 and 9800 M-1 for plasma membranes from drug-sensitive and drug-resistant cells, respectively. Drug binding to the membranes is not affected by either (i) thermal denaturation of membrane proteins or (ii) proteolytic treatment with trypsin, thus suggesting that the protein components of the membranes do not have a major role in determining the observed drug binding. Also, fluorescence resonance energy transfer between tryptophan and daunomycin in the membranes indicates that interaction of protein components with the drug should not be responsible for the observed differences in drug binding exhibited by plasma membranes from drug-sensitive and -resistant cells. Plasma membranes from drug-sensitive cells contain more phosphatidylserine and slightly less cholesterol than membranes from drug-resistant cells. Differences in the content of the acidic phospholipid between the two plasma membranes seem to produce a different ionic environment at membrane surface domains, as indicated by titration of a membrane-incorporated, pH-sensitive fluorescence probe. The possible role of membrane lipids in modulating drug binding to the membranes was tested in equilibrium binding studies using model lipid vesicles made from phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylserine, and cholesterol in different proportions. The presence of phosphatidylserine greatly increases both the affinity and the stoichiometry of daunomycin binding to model lipid vesicles. The similarity between the effects of phosphatidylserine and other negatively charged compounds such as dicetyl phosphate, cardiolipin, or phosphatidic acid suggests that electrostatic interactions are important in the observed binding of the drug.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
1. 1-5 mM n-hexanol added to the outer (mucosal) medium of isolated skin of the frog Rana temporaria increases the short circuit current (Isc) across it. 2. This effect shows a saturable dependency on the outer sodium concentration, also when NaCl is replaced by Na2SO4. 3. n-Hexanol at a concentration of 1 mM, and cold acclimation of the frogs, which increases the fluidity of epidermal cell membranes, do not affect the sensitivity of Isc to the inhibiting effect of amiloride. 4. n-Hexanol at a concentration (5 mM) which causes a fluidization of cell membrane preparations from isolated frog epidermis also increases the sensitivity of Isc to amiloride. 5. The effects of low concentrations of n-hexanol and of cold acclimation probably depend on an increase of the permeability of apical membranes of epidermal cells to sodium caused by membrane fluidization. At higher concentrations of n-hexanol, a further disordering of the membrane structure occurs with a better access of amiloride to its action sites.  相似文献   

12.
In vitro channel activity of the C-terminal colicin E1 channel polypeptide under conditions of variable electrostatic interaction with synthetic lipid membranes showed distinct maxima with respect to pH and membrane surface potential. The membrane binding energy was determined from fluorescence quenching of the intrinsic tryptophans of the channel polypeptide by liposomes containing N-trinitrophenyl-phosphatidylethanolamine. Maximum in vitro colicin channel activity correlated with an intermediate magnitude of the electrostatic interaction. For conditions associated with maximum activity (40% anionic lipid, I = 0.12 M, pH 4.0), the free energy of binding was delta G approximately -9 kcal/mol, with nonelectrostatic and electrostatic components, delta Gnel approximately -5 kcal/mol and delta Gel approximately -4 kcal/mol, and an effective binding charge of +7 at pH 4.0. Binding of the channel polypeptide to negative membranes at pH 8 is minimal, whereas initial binding at pH 4 followed by a shift to pH 8 causes only 3-10% reversal of binding, implying that it is kinetically trapped, probably by a hydrophobic interaction. It was inferred that membrane binding and insertion involves an initial electrostatic interaction responsible for concentration and binding to the membrane surface. This is followed by insertion into the bilayer driven by hydrophobic forces, which are countered in the case of excessive electrostatic binding.  相似文献   

13.
The diacylglycerol (DG)/phorbol ester-dependent translocation of conventional protein kinase C (PKC) isozymes is mediated by the C1 domain, a membrane-targeting module that also selectively binds phosphatidylserine (PS). Using stopped-flow spectroscopy, we dissect the contribution of DG/phorbol esters (C1 ligand) and PS in driving the association and dissociation of the C1 domain from membranes. Specifically, we examine the binding to membranes of the C1B domain of PKCbeta with a substituted Trp (Y123W) whose fluorescence is quenched upon binding to membranes. Binding of this construct (C1Bbeta-Y123W) to phospholipid vesicles is cooperative with respect to PS content and dependent on C1 ligand, as previously characterized. Stopped-flow analysis reveals that the apparent association rate (k(on)(app)), but not the apparent dissociation rate (k(off)(app)), is highly sensitive to PS content: the 60-fold increase in membrane affinity for vesicles containing no PS compared with 40 mol % PS results primarily from a robust (30-fold) increase in k(on)(app) with little effect (2-fold) on k(off)(app). Membrane affinity is also controlled by the content and structure of the C1 ligand. In contrast to PS, these ligands markedly alter k(off)(app) with smaller effects on k(on)(app). We also show that the affinity for phorbol ester-containing membranes is 2 orders of magnitude higher than that for DG-containing membranes primarily resulting from differences in k(off)(app). Our data are consistent with a model in which the C1 domain is recruited to the membrane via an initial weak electrostatic interaction with PS, followed by a rapid two-dimensional search for ligand, the binding of which retains the domain at the membrane. Thus, PS drives the initial encounter, and DG/phorbol esters retain the domain on membranes. The decreased effectiveness of DG compared with phorbol esters in retaining the C1 domain on membranes contributes to the molecular dichotomy of the rapid, transient nature of DG-dependent PKC signaling versus the chronic hyperactivity of phorbol ester-activated PKC.  相似文献   

14.
The interaction of bee venom melittin with erythrocyte membrane ghosts has been investigated by means of fluorescence quenching of membrane tryptophan residues, fluorescence polarization and ESR spectroscopy. It has been revealed that melittin induces the disorders in lipid-protein matrix both in the hydrophobic core of bilayer and at the polar/non-polar interface of melittin complexed with erythrocyte membranes. The peptide has been found to act most efficiently at the concentration of the order of 10(-10) mol/mg membrane protein. The apparent distance separating the membrane tryptophan and bound 1-anilino-8-naphthalenesulphonate (ANS) molecules is decreased upon melittin binding, which results in a significant increase of the maximum energy transfer efficiency. Significant changes in the fluorescence anisotropy of both 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene and 1-anilino-8-naphthalenesulphonate bound to erythrocyte ghosts, which have been observed in the presence of melittin and crude venom, indicate membrane lipid bilayer rigidization. The effect of crude honey bee venom has been found to be of similar magnitude as the effect of pure melittin at the concentration of 10(-10) mol/mg membrane protein. Using two lipophilic spin labels, methyl 5-doxylpalmitate and 16-doxylstearic acid, we found that melittin at its increasing concentrations induces a well marked rigidization in the deeper regions of lipid bilayer, whereas the effect of rigidization near the membrane surface maximizes at the melittin concentration of 10(-10) mol/mg (10(-4) mol melittin per mole of membrane phospholipid). The decrease in the ratio hw/hs of maleimide and the rise in relative rotational correlation time (tau c) of iodacetamid spin label, indicate that melittin effectively immobilizes membrane proteins in the plane of the lipid bilayer. We conclude that melittin-induced rigidization of the lipid bilayer may induce a reorganization of lipid assemblies as well as the rearrangements in membrane protein pattern and consequently the alterations in lipid-protein interactions. Thus, the interaction of melittin with erythrocyte membranes is supposed to produce local conformational changes in membranes, which are discussed in the connection with their significance during the synergistic action of melittin and phospholipase of bee venom on red blood cells.  相似文献   

15.
The interaction of propranolol with model phospholipid membranes was studied using various experimental techniques. The partition coefficient of propranolol in the negatively charged membranes of vesicles prepared from phosphatidylserine and phosphatidic acid was found to be more than 20-times higher than in neutral phosphatidylcholine membranes. Preferential interaction of propranolol with acidic phospholipid membranes was confirmed using the monolayer compression isotherm technique and the spin-labeling method. Phosphatidylserine monolayers were markedly expanded even at a relatively low drug concentration (5 · 10?6 M). In contrast, the effect of propranolol on phosphatidylcholine monolayers was much smaller, being detectable only at a higher concentration of the drug (1 · 10?4 M). Spin-labeling experiments show that propranolol exerts marked ordering effect on bilayers prepared from acidic phospholipids and does not change the order parameter of phosphatidylcholine membranes. The dependence of the propranolol fluorescence spectrum on the polarity of the solvent allowed us to identify the intercalation region of the drug in the membrane. The fluorophore moiety of propranolol was found to be localized in the lipid polar head groups region of the bilayer. The role of electrostatic and hydrophobic effects in propranolol-membrane interaction is discussed and the effect of propranolol on the ordering of phospholipid bilayers is compared with the effects of other anesthetic-like molecules.  相似文献   

16.
Using a modified hygroscopic desorption method (HDM) the binding of chlorpromazine (CPZ) to human blood cells was investigated in the concentration range from 0.01 to 100 μmol/1. For erythrocytes and ghosts the ratio between cell bound and free drug concentration was constant up to 60 μmol/1 CPZ. Saturable binding, however, was observed for lymphocytes, granulocytes and less pronounced for platelets. In contrast to red cells, CPZ binding to white cells and platelets was strongly dependent on pH. For all blood cells a sharp decrease in binding occurred at drug concentrations higher than 60 μmol/1. This can hardly represent a true saturation of binding sites, since membrane damaging effects occur at these concentrations. Our results suggest that binding of CPZ to erythrocytes represents an interaction at the water-membrane interphase. For the different binding pattern of white cells, the cell organelles, the cytoplasma and the different composition of the membranes might be of importance.  相似文献   

17.
This paper addresses the cooperative interaction of two phenothiazine drugs, viz. trifluoperazine (TFP) and chlorpromazine (CPZ), with phospholipid monolayers as the model membrane system. Surface pressure and surface potential isotherms were obtained for mixed Langmuir monolayers of either dipalmitoyl-phosphatidyl-choline (DPPC) or dipalmitoyl-phosphatidyl-glycerol (DPPG) co-spread with TFP or CPZ. The changes in monolayer behavior caused by incorporation of a few molar ratio of drug molecules were practically within the experimental dispersion for the zwitterionic DPPC, and therefore a more refined analysis will be required to probe the interactions in an unequivocal way. For the charged DPPG, on the other hand, the surface pressure and the dipole moment were significantly affected even for TFP or CPZ concentrations as low as 0.002 molar ratio. Overall, the effects from CPZ and TFP are similar, but small differences exist which are probably due to the different protonation properties of the two drugs. For both drugs, changes are more prominent at the liftoff of the surface pressure, i.e. at the gas-condensed phase transition, with the surface pressure and surface potential isotherms becoming more expanded with the drug incorporation. With DPPG/CPZ monolayers, in particular, an additional phase transition appears at higher CPZ concentrations, which resembles the effects from increasing the subphase temperature for a pure DPPG monolayer. The dipole moment for DPPG/CPZ and DPPG/TFP monolayers decreases with the drug concentration, which means that the effects from the charged drugs are not associated with changes in the double-layer potential. Otherwise, the effective dipole moment should increase with the drug concentration. The changes caused in surface pressure and dipole moment by small concentrations of TFP or CPZ can only be explained by some cooperative effect through which the contribution from DPPG molecules changes considerably, i.e. even DPPG molecules that are not neighbor to a CPZ or TFP molecule are also affected. Such changes may occur either through a significant reorientation of the DPPG molecules or to a change in their hydration state. We discuss the cooperativity semi-quantitatively by estimating the number of lipid molecules affected by the drug interaction. CPZ and TFP also affect the morphology of DPPG monolayers, which was confirmed with Brewster angle microscopy. The biological implications from the cooperative, non-specific interaction of CPZ and TFP with membranes are also commented upon.  相似文献   

18.
The interaction of the bile salt cholate with unilamellar vesicles was studied. At low cholate content, equilibrium binding measurements with egg yolk lecithin membranes suggest that cholate binds to the outer vesicle leaflet. At increasing concentrations, further bile salt binding to the membrane is hampered. Before the onset of membrane solubilization, diphenylhexatriene fluorescence anisotropy decreases to a shallow minimum. It then increases to the initial value in the cholate concentration range of membrane solubilization. At still higher cholate concentrations, a drop in fluorescence anisotropy indicates the transformation of mixed disk micelles into spherical micelles. Perturbation of the vesicle membranes at molar ratios of bound cholate/lecithin exceeding 0.15 leads to a transient release of oligosaccharides from intravesicular space. The cholate concentrations required to induce the release depend on the size of the entrapped sugars. Cholesterol stabilizes the membrane, whereas, in spite of enhanced membrane order, sphingomyelin destabilizes the membrane against cholate. Freeze-fracture electron microscopy and phosphorus-31 nuclear magnetic resonance (31P NMR) also reflect a change in membrane structure at maximal cholate binding to the vesicles. In 31P NMR spectra, superimposed on the anisotropic line typically found in phospholipid bilayers, an isotropic peak was found. This signal is most probably due to the formation of smaller vesicles after addition of cholate. The results were discussed with respect to bile salt/membrane interactions in the liver cell. It is concluded that vesicular bile salt transport in the cytoplasm is unlikely and that cholate binding is restricted to the outer leaflet of the canalicular part of the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

19.
The role of basolateral membrane fluidity in regulating Na-K ATPase activity along the crypt-villus axis in rabbit distal small intestine was assessed. Basolateral membranes were prepared from isolated villus and crypt enterocytes at 24- to 28-fold enhancement. Villus basolateral membranes were significantly (p < 0.001) more fluid than crypt basolateral membranes as measured by 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene. No difference was seen between the two groups as measured by either 2-(9-anthroyloxy)-stearic fatty acid or 16-(9-anthroyloxy)-palmitic acid. Fluidity alterations were accompanied by an increased phospholipid content in villus membranes, which resulted in a decreased cholesterol:phospholipid ratio and an increased lipid:protein molar ratio. Na-K ATPase activity was significantly (p < 0.01) greater in villus basolateral membranes than in crypt membranes, and demonstrated a greater sensitivity to ouabain inhibition. Ouabain inhibition curves calculated from villus data fit well (p < 0.001) with a two binding site model, with a high affinity (Ki 16 nM) and a low affinity (Ki 4.2 microM) ouabain binding site. In crypt basolateral membranes, only a low affinity site was apparent (Ki 3.0 microM). Fluidizing crypt basolateral membranes in vitro with benzyl alcohol to levels seen in villus basolateral membranes resulted in the appearance of a high affinity ouabain binding site (Ki 110 nM) and an increased sensitivity of Na-K ATPase to ouabain inhibition. The fluidization of villus basolateral membranes eliminated the binding associated with the high affinity site. Treatment with methanol, as a control, did not alter Na-K ATPase activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
The lipid distribution in binary mixed membranes containing charged and uncharged lipids and the effect of Ca2+ and polylysine on the lipid organization was studied by the spin label technique. Dipalmitoyl phosphatidic acid was the charged, and spin labelled dipalmitoyl lecithin was the uncharged (zwitterionic) component. The ESR spectra were analyzed in terms of the spin exchange frequency, Wex. By measuring Wex as a function of the molar percentage of labelled lecithin a distinction between a random and a heterogeneous lipid distribution could be made. It is established that mixed lecithin-phosphatidic acid membranes exhibit lipid segregation (or a miscibility gap) in the fluid state. Comparative experiments with bilayer and monolayer membranes strongly suggest a lateral lipid segregation. At low lecithin concentration, aggregates containing between 25% and 40% lecithin are formed in the fluid phosphatidic acid membrane. This phase separation in membranes containing charged lipids is understandable on the basis of the Gouy-Chapman theory of electric double layers. In dipalmitoyl lecithin and in dimyristoyl phosphatidylethanolamine membranes the labelled lecithin is randomly distributed above the phase transition and has a coefficient of lateral diffusion of D = 2.8-10(-8) cm2/s at 59 degrees C. Addition of Ca2+ dramatically increases the extent of phase separation in lecithin-phosphatidic acid membranes. This chemically (and isothermally) induced phase separation is caused by the formation of crystalline patches of the Ca2+-bound phosphatidic acid. Lecithin is squeezed out from these patches of rigid lipid. The observed dependence of Wex on the Ca2+ concentration could be interpreted quantitatively on the basis of a two-cluster model. At low lecithin and Ca2+ concentration clusters containing about 30 mol % lecithin are formed. At high lecithin or Ca2+ concentrations a second type of precipitation containing 100% lecithin starts to form in addition. A one-to-one binding of divalent ions and phosphatidic acid at pH 9 was assumed. Such a one-to-one binding at pH 9 was established for the case of Mn2+ using ESR spectroscopy. Polylysine leads to the same strong increase in the lecithin segregation as Ca2+. The transition of the phosphatidic acid bound by the polypeptide is shifted from Tt = 47.5 degrees to Tt = 62 degrees C. This finding suggests the possibility of cooperative conformational changes in the lipid matrix and in the surface proteins in biological membranes.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号