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1.
In the intravesicle scooting mode of interfacial catalysis, the interfacial complex E*S is formed by the interaction of the membrane bound phospholipase A2 (E*) with the substrate monomer (S) in the interface. In the presence of nonhydrolyzable substrate analogs (I) the kinetics of interfacial catalysis is modified. If phospholipase A2 is added to a mixture of the vesicles of L-DMPMe ester and of DTPMe ether or D-DMPMe ester, the extent of hydrolysis, A, decreases and the interfacial scooting rate constant, ki, remains unchanged. On the other hand, when the enzyme is added to the vesicles prepared from premixed L-DMPMe ester with D-DMPMe ester or L-DTPMe ether, ki decreases but A remains constant. Qualitatively, these results are in excellent accord with the Scheme I for interfacial catalysis. However, a quantitative departure has been noted, which suggests that the interfacial dissociation constant for E*S is larger than that for E*I. These results are interpreted to suggest that the catalytic rate constant for decomposition of E*S to E* + P is larger than the rate constant for decomposition of E*S to E* + S. Broader implications of the scooting mode of interfacial catalysis are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Small unilamelar vesicles of anionic phospholipids (SUV), such as 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylglycero-sn-3-phosphoglycerol (POPG), provide an interface where Thermomyces lanuginosa triglyceride lipase (TlL) binds and adopts a catalytically active conformation for the hydrolysis of substrate partitioned in the interface, such as tributyrin or p-nitrophenylbutyrate, with an increase in catalytic rate of more than 100-fold for the same concentration of substrate [Berg et al. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 6615-6627.]. This interfacial activation is not seen with large unilamelar vesicles (LUV) of the same composition, or with vesicles of zwitterionic phospholipids such as 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylglycero-sn-3-phosphocholine (POPC), independently of the vesicle size. Tryptophan fluorescence experiments show that lipase binds to all those types of vesicles with similar affinity, but it adopts different forms that can be correlated with the enzyme catalytic activity. The spectral change on binding to anionic SUV corresponds to the catalytically active, or "open" form of the enzyme, and it is not modified in the presence of substrate partitioned in the vesicles, as demonstrated with inactive mutants. This indicates that the displacement of the lid characteristic of lipase interfacial activation is induced by the anionic phospholipid interface without blocking the accessibility of the active site to the substrate. Experiments with a mutant containing only Trp89 in the lid show that most of the spectral changes on binding to POPG-SUVs take place in the lid region that covers the active site; an increase in Trp anisotropy indicates that the lid becomes less flexible in the active form, and quenching experiments show that it is significantly buried from the aqueous phase. On the other hand, results with a mutant where Trp89 is changed to Leu show that the environment of the structural tryptophans in positions 117, 221, and 260 is somehow altered on binding, although their mobility and solvent accessibility remains the same as in the inactive form in solution. The form of TlL bound to POPC-SUV or -LUV vesicles as well as to LUV vesicles of POPG has the same spectral signatures and corresponds to an inactive or "closed" form of the enzyme. In these interfaces, the lid is highly flexible, and Trp89 remains accessible to solvent. Resonance energy transfer experiments show that the orientation of TlL in the interface is different in the active and inactive forms. A model of interaction consistent with these data and the available X-ray structures is proposed. This is a unique system where the composition and physical properties of the lipid interface control the enzyme activity.  相似文献   

3.
Action of pig pancreatic phospholipase A2 on vesicles and micelles of homologous anionic phospholipids is examined in the absence of additives. As shown elsewhere (Jain et al. (1986) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 860, 435-447), hydrolysis of anionic vesicles occurs by interfacial catalysis in the scooting mode, i.e., the catalytic turnover is fast relative to the off-rate of the enzyme from the interface. When the rate of intervesicle exchange of the enzyme is negligibly slow, it hydrolyses only the substrate molecules in the outer monolayer of the vesicle to which it is bound. Interfacial catalysis in the scooting mode with a high processivity occurs on vesicles of anionic phospholipids, and under these conditions the dynamics and order of the substrate in the interface influences the catalytic turnover only moderately, i.e., about 2- to 10-fold. Similarly, anomalous kinetic effects of the thermotropic gel-fluid phase transition or of a change in the general disorder of the bilayer organization (fluidity) has a minor effect on the kinetics of hydrolysis in the scooting mode. Similarly, higher unsaturation and shorter acyl chains in the substrate modestly increase the rate of catalytic turnover by the low-calcium form of the enzyme without noticeably influencing the affinity of the enzyme for the interface. On the other hand, perturbation of the charge distribution in the substrate interface can shift the proportion of the bound enzyme by several orders of magnitude. For example, the membrane perturbing amphiphiles (e.g., mepacrine, indomethacin, compound 48/80, aristolochic acid, local anesthetics, and the products of hydrolysis) do not influence the catalytic turnover of the bound enzyme but the proportion of the bound enzyme. Short-chain anionic phospholipids are readily hydrolyzed by phospholipase A2. Now no anomalous increase in the rate of hydrolysis is observed at the critical micelle as is the case with the zwitterionic analogs. This is because with anionic (but not with zwitterionic) substrates the enzyme forms an aggregated complex below the cmc of the monomer. The stability of these micellar complexes does not appear to change noticeably with the acyl chain length of the monomers. These observations show that the factors regulating the quality of interface substantially influence the binding of the enzyme, but not the catalytic turnover in the interface.  相似文献   

4.
F Ghomashchi  B Z Yu  O Berg  M K Jain  M H Gelb 《Biochemistry》1991,30(29):7318-7329
The binding equilibrium of phospholipase A2 (PLA2) to the substrate interface influences many aspects of the overall kinetics of interfacial catalysis by this enzyme. For example, the interpretation of kinetic data on substrate specificity was difficult when there was a significant kinetic contribution from the interfacial binding step to the steady-state catalytic turnover. This problem was commonly encountered with vesicles of zwitterionic phospholipids, where the binding of PLA2 to the interface was relatively poor. The action of PLA2 on phosphatidylcholine (PC) vesicles containing a small amount of anionic phospholipid, such as phosphatidic acid (PA), was studied. It was shown that the hydrolysis of these mixed lipid vesicles occurs in the scooting mode in which the enzyme remains tightly bound to the interface and only the substrate molecules present on the outer monolayer of the target vesicle became hydrolyzed Thus the phenomenon of scooting mode hydrolysis was not restricted to the action of PLA2 on vesicles of pure anionic phospholipids, but it was also observed with vesicles of zwitterionic lipids as long as a critical amount of anionic compound was present. Under such conditions, the initial rate of hydrolysis of PC in the mixed PC/PA vesicles was enhanced more than 50-fold. Binding studies of PLA2 to vesicles and kinetic studies in the scooting mode demonstrated that the enhancement of PC hydrolysis in the PC/PA covesicles was due to the much higher affinity of the enzyme toward covesicles compared to vesicles of pure PC phospholipids. A novel and technically simple protocol for accurate determination of the substrate specificity of PLA2 at the interface was also developed by using a double-radiolabel approach. Here, the action of PLA2 in the scooting mode was studied on vesicles of the anionic phospholipid 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphomethanol that contained small amounts of 3H- and 14C-labeled phospholipids. From an analysis of the 3H and 14C radioactivity in the released fatty acid products, the ratio of substrate specificity constants (kcat/KMS) was obtained for any pair of radiolabeled substrates. These studies showed that the PLA2s from pig pancreas and Naja naja naja venom did not discriminate between phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine phospholipids or between phospholipids with saturated versus unsaturated acyl chains and that the pig enzyme had a slight preference for anionic phospholipids (2-3-fold). The described protocol provided an accurate measure of the substrate specificity of PLA2 without complications arising from the differences in binding affinities of the enzyme to vesicles composed of pure phospholipids.  相似文献   

5.
The effect of anions and deuterated water on the kinetics of action of pig pancreatic phospholipase A2 is examined to elaborate the role of ionic interactions in binding of the enzyme to the substrate interface. Anions and deuterated water have no significant effect on the hydrolysis of monomeric substrates. Hydrolysis of vesicles of DMPMe (ester) is completely inhibited in deuterated water. The shape of the reaction progress curve is altered in the presence of anions. The nature and magnitude of the effect of anions depends upon the nature of the substrate as well as of the anion. Substantial effects of anions on the reaction progress curve are observed even at concentrations below 0.1 M and the sequence of effectiveness for DMPMe vesicles is sulfate greater than chloride greater than thiocyanate. Apparently, anions in the aqueous phase bind to the enzyme, and thus compete with the anionic interface for binding to the enzyme. Binding of the enzyme to anionic groups on the interface results in activation and increased accessibility of the catalytic site possibly via hydrogen bonding network involving water molecule. In order to elaborate the role of the N-terminus region in interfacial anchoring, the action of several semisynthetic pancreatic phospholipase A2s is examined on vesicles of anionic and zwitterionic phospholipids. The first-order rate constant for the hydrolysis of DMPMe in the scooting mode by the various semisynthetic enzymes is in a narrow range: 0.7 +/- 0.15 per min for phospholipase A2 derived from pig pancreas and 0.8 +/- 0.4 per min for the enzymes derived from bovine pancreas. In all cases a maximum of about 4300 substrate molecules are hydrolyzed by each phospholipase A2 molecule. If anions are added at the end of the first-order reaction progress curve, a pseudo-zero-order reaction progress curve is observed due to an increased intervesicle exchange of the bound enzyme. These rates are found to be considerably different for different enzymes in which one or more amino acids in the N-terminus region have been substituted. Steady-state and fluorescence life-time data for these enzymes in water, 2H2O and in the presence of lipids is also reported. The kinetic and binding results are interpreted to suggest that the N-terminus region of phospholipase A2 along with some other cationic residues are involved in anchoring of phospholipase A2 to the interface, and the catalytically active enzyme in the interface is monomeric.  相似文献   

6.
F Ghomashchi  T O'Hare  D Clary  M H Gelb 《Biochemistry》1991,30(29):7298-7305
The kinetics of hydrolysis of phospholipid vesicles by phospholipase A2 (PLA2) in the scooting mode can be described by the Michaelis-Menten formalism for the action of the enzyme in the interface (E*). E* + S in equilibrium E*S in equilibrium E*P in equilibrium E* + Products The values of the interfacial rate constants cannot be obtained by classical methods because the concentration of the substrate within the lipid bilayer is not easily manipulated. In the present study, carbonyl-carbon heavy atom isotope effects for the hydrolysis of phospholipids have been measured in both vesicles and in mixed micelles in which the phospholipid was present in the nonionic detergent Triton X-100. A large [14C]carbonyl carbon isotope effect of 1.12 +/- 0.02 was measured for the cobra venom PLA2-catalyzed hydrolysis of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine in Triton X-100. In contrast, no isotope effect (1.01 +/- 0.01) was measured for the action of the porcine pancreatic and cobra venom enzymes on vesicles of dimyristoylphosphatidylmethanol in the scooting mode. In a second experiment, the hydrolysis of vesicles was carried out in oxygen-18 enriched water. Analysis of the released fatty acid product by mass spectrometry showed that it contained only a single oxygen-18. All of these results were used to estimate both the forward and reverse commitments to catalysis. The lack of doubly labeled fatty acid demonstrated that the product is released from the E*P complex faster than the reverse of the esterolysis step. The small isotope effect in vesicles demonstrated that the E*S complex goes on to products faster than substrate is released from the enzyme. The relevance of these results to an understanding of substrate specificity and inhibition of PLA2 is discussed. In addition, the conditions placed on the values of the rate constants obtained in the present study together with results obtained in the other studies described in this series of papers have led to the evaluation of most of the interfacial rate constants for the hydrolysis of phospholipid vesicles by PLA2.  相似文献   

7.
Manoalogue, a synthetic analogue of the sea sponge-derived manoalide, has been previously shown to partially inactivate the phospholipase A2 from cobra venom (Reynolds, L. J., Morgan, B. P., Hite, E. D., Mihelich, E. D., & Dennis, E. A. (1988) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 110, 5172) by reacting with enzyme lysine residues. In the present study, the inactivation of the phospholipases A2 from pig pancreas, bee venom, and cobra (Naja naja naja) venom by manoalogue was studied in detail. Manoalogue-treated enzymes were examined in the scooting mode on vesicles of 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphomethanol. Here the native enzymes bound irreversibly to the vesicles and hydrolyzed all of the phospholipids in the outer monolayer without leaving the surface of the interface. All three manoalogue-treated enzymes showed reduced catalytic turnover for substrate hydrolysis in the scooting mode, and the modified enzymes did not hop from one vesicle to another. Thus, inactivation by manoalogue is not due to the decrease in the fraction of enzyme bound to the substrate interface. This result was also confirmed by fluorescence studies that directly monitored the binding of phospholipase A2 to vesicles. A chemically modified form of the pig pancreatic phospholipase A2 in which all of the lysine epsilon-amino groups have been amidinated was not inactivated by manoalogue, indicating that the modification of lysine residues and not the amino-terminus is required for the inactivation. Several studies indicated that the manoalogue-modified enzymes contain a functional active site. For example, studies that monitored the protection by ligands of the active site from attack by a alkylating agent showed that manoalogue-modified pig phospholipase A2 was capable of binding calcium, a substrate analogue, lipolysis products, and a competitive inhibitor. Furthermore, relative to native enzymes, manoalogue-modified enzymes retained significantly higher catalytic activities when acting on water-soluble substrates than when acting on vesicles in the scooting mode. Intact manoalogue had no affinity for the catalytic site on the enzyme as it did not inhibit the enzyme in the scooting mode and it did not protect the active site from alkylation. Pig pancreatic phospholipase A2 bound to micelles of 2-hexadecyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine was resistant to inactivation by manoalogue, suggesting that the modification of lysine residues on the interfacial recognition surface of the enzyme was required for inactivation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
The peripheral membrane ATPase MinD is a component of the Min system responsible for correct placement of the division site in Escherichia coli cells. By rapidly migrating from one cell pole to the other, MinD helps to block unwanted septation events at the poles. MinD is an amphitropic protein that is localized to the membrane in its ATP-bound form. A C-terminal domain essential for membrane localization is predicted to be an amphipathic alpha-helix with hydrophobic residues interacting with lipid acyl chains and cationic residues on the opposite face of the helix interacting with the head groups of anionic phospholipids (Szeto, T. H., Rowland, S. L., Rothfield, L. I., and King, G. F. (2002) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 99, 15693-15698). To investigate whether E. coli MinD displays a preference for anionic phospholipids, we first examined the localization dynamics of a green fluorescent protein-tagged derivative of MinD expressed in a mutant of E. coli that lacks phosphatidylethanolamine. In these cells, which contain only anionic phospholipids (phosphatidylglycerol and cardiolipin), green fluorescent protein-MinD assembled into dynamic focal clusters instead of the broad zones typical of cells with normal phospholipid content. In experiments with liposomes composed of only zwitterionic, only anionic, or a mixture of anionic and zwitterionic phospholipids, purified MinD bound to these liposomes in the presence of ATP with positive cooperativity with respect to the protein concentration and exhibited Hill coefficients of about 2. Oligomerization of MinD on the liposome surface also was detected by fluorescence resonance energy transfer between MinD molecules labeled with different fluorescent probes. The affinity of MinD-ATP for anionic liposomes as well as liposomes composed of both anionic and zwitterionic phospholipids increased 9- and 2-fold, respectively, relative to zwitterionic liposomes. The degree of acyl chain unsaturation contributed positively to binding strength. These results suggest that MinD has a preference for anionic phospholipids and that MinD oscillation behavior, and therefore cell division site selection, may be regulated by membrane phospholipid composition.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Grant GA 《Biochemistry》2011,50(14):2900-2906
In Escherichia colid-3-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase, the amino acid sequences G294-G295 and G336-G337 are found between structural domains and appear to function as hinge regions. Mutagenesis studies of these sequences showed that bulky side chains had significant effects on the kinetic properties of the enzyme. Placement of a tryptophanyl residue near the serine binding site (W139F/E360W) allows serine binding to be monitored by fluorescence quenching analysis. Pre-steady-state analysis has demonstrated that serine binds to two forms of the free enzyme, E and E*. Conversion of Gly-336 to valine has its main effect on the Kd of serine binding to one form of the free enzyme (E) while maintaining the cooperativity of binding observed in the native enzyme. Conversion of Gly-294 to valine eliminates a rate limiting conformational change that follows serine binding to E. The conformational change between the two forms of free enzyme is maintained, but the Hill coefficient for cooperativity is significantly lowered. The data indicate that the cooperative transmission induced by serine binding is transmitted through the Gly294-Gly295 hinge region to the opposite serine binding interface and that this is most likely propagated by way of the substrate binding domain-regulatory domain interface. In the G294 mutant enzyme, both serine bound species, E·Ser and E*·Ser, are present in significant amounts indicating that cooperativity of serine binding does not result from the binding to two different forms. The data also suggest that the E* form may be inactive even when serine is not bound.  相似文献   

11.
Lipase from the fungi Thermomyces (formerly Humicola) lanuginosa (TlL) is widely used in industry. This interfacial enzyme is inactive under aqueous conditions, but catalytic activation is induced on binding to a lipid-water interface. In order for protein engineering to design more efficient mutants of TlL for specific applications, it is important to characterize its interfacial catalysis. A complete analysis of steady-state kinetics for the hydrolysis of a soluble substrate by TlL has been developed using an interface different from the substrate. Small vesicles of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylglycero-sn-3-phosphoglycerol (POPG) or other anionic phospholipids are a neutral diluent interface for the partitioning of substrate and enzyme. TlL binds to these interfaces in an active or open form, thus implying a displacement of the helical lid away from the active site. A study of the influence of substrate and diluent concentration dependence of the rate of hydrolysis provides a basis for the determination of the primary interfacial catalytic parameters. The interfacial activation is not supported by zwitterionic vesicles or by large anionic vesicles of 100 nm diameter, although TlL binds to these interfaces. Using a combination of fluorescence-based techniques applied to several mutants of TlL with different tryptophan residues we have shown that TlL binds to phospholipid vesicles in different forms rendering different catalytic activities, and that the open lid conformation is achieved and stabilized by a combination of electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions between the enzyme's lipid-binding face and the interface.  相似文献   

12.
M K Jain  W J Tao  J Rogers  C Arenson  H Eibl  B Z Yu 《Biochemistry》1991,30(42):10256-10268
More than 100 amphiphilic phosphoesters, possible tetrahedral transition-state analogues capable of coordinating to the calcium ion at the active site of phospholipase A2, were designed, synthesized, and tested as inhibitors for the hydrolysis of 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphomethanol vesicles in the scooting mode. This assay system permits the study of structurally diverse inhibitors with phospholipase A2S from different sources, and it is not perturbed by factors that change the quality of the interface. As a prototype, 1-hexadecyl-3-trifluoroethylglycero-2-phosphomethanol (MJ33) was investigated in detail. Only the (S)-(+) analogue of MJ33 is inhibitory, and it is as effective as the sn-2 phosphonate or the sn-2 amide analogues of sn-3 phospholipids. The inhibitory potencies of the various phosphoesters depended strongly on the stereochemical and structural features, and the mole fractions of inhibitors required for 50% inhibition, X1(50), ranged from more than 1 to less than 0.001 mole fraction. The affinity of certain inhibitors for enzymes from different sources differed by more than 200-fold. The inhibitors protected the catalytic site residue His-48 from alkylation in the presence of calcium but not barium as expected if the formation of the EI complex is supported only by calcium. The equilibrium dissociation constant for the inhibitor bound to the enzyme at the interface was correlated with the XI(50) values, which were different if the inhibition was monitored in the pseudo-zero-order or the first-order region of the progress curve. These results show that the inhibitors described here interfered only with the catalytic turnover by phospholipase A2's bound to the interface, their binding to the enzyme occurred through calcium, and the inhibitors did not have any effect on the dissociation of the enzyme bound to the interface.  相似文献   

13.
The changes in the microenvironment of the Trp-3 on the i-face of pig pancreatic IB phospholipase A2 (PLA2) provide a measure of the tight contact (Ramirez and Jain, Protein Sci. 9, 229-239, 1991) with the substrate interface during the processive interfacial turnover. Spectral changes from the single Trp-substituent at position 1, 2, 6, 10, 19, 20, 31, 53, 56 or 87 on the surface of W3F PLA2 are used to probe the Trp-environment. Based on our current understanding only the residue 87 is away from i-face, therefore all other mutants are well suited to report modest differences along the i-face. All Trp-mutants bind tightly to anionic vesicles. Only those with Trp at 1, 2 or 3 near the rim of the active site on the i-face cause significant perturbation of the catalytic functions. Most other Trp-mutants showed < 3-fold change in the interfacial processive turnover rate and the competitive inhibition by MJ33. Binding of calcium to the enzyme in the aqueous phase had modest effect on the Trp-emission intensity. However, on the binding of the enzyme to the interface the fluorescence change is large, and the rate of oxidation of the Trp-substituent with N-bromosuccinimide depends on the location of the Trp-substituent. These results show that the solvation environment of the Trp-substituents on the i-face is shielded in the enzyme bound to the interface. Additional changes are noticeable if the active site of the bound enzyme is also occupied, however, the catalytically inert zymogen of PLA2 (proPLA2) does not show such changes. Significance of these results in relation to the changes in the solvent accessibility and desolvation of the i-face of PLA2 at the interface is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
The changes in the microenvironment of the Trp-3 on the i-face of pig pancreatic IB phospholipase A2 (PLA2) provide a measure of the tight contact (Ramirez and Jain, Protein Sci. 9, 229-239, 1991) with the substrate interface during the processive interfacial turnover. Spectral changes from the single Trp-substituent at position 1, 2, 6, 10, 19, 20, 31, 53, 56 or 87 on the surface of W3F PLA2 are used to probe the Trp-environment. Based on our current understanding only the residue 87 is away from i-face, therefore all other mutants are well suited to report modest differences along the i-face. All Trp-mutants bind tightly to anionic vesicles. Only those with Trp at 1, 2 or 3 near the rim of the active site on the i-face cause significant perturbation of the catalytic functions. Most other Trp-mutants showed < 3-fold change in the interfacial processive turnover rate and the competitive inhibition by MJ33. Binding of calcium to the enzyme in the aqueous phase had modest effect on the Trp-emission intensity. However, on the binding of the enzyme to the interface the fluorescence change is large, and the rate of oxidation of the Trp-substituent with N-bromosuccinimide depends on the location of the Trp-substituent. These results show that the solvation environment of the Trp-substituents on the i-face is shielded in the enzyme bound to the interface. Additional changes are noticeable if the active site of the bound enzyme is also occupied, however, the catalytically inert zymogen of PLA2 (proPLA2) does not show such changes. Significance of these results in relation to the changes in the solvent accessibility and desolvation of the i-face of PLA2 at the interface is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
M K Jain  J Rogers  O Berg  M H Gelb 《Biochemistry》1991,30(29):7340-7348
Polymyxin B (Px), a cyclic cationic peptide, was shown to act as a potent activator of interfacial catalysis by phospholipase A2 (PLA2) acting on dimyristoylphosphatidylmethanol vesicles in the scooting mode. A 7-fold increase in the initial enzymatic velocity was seen with the pig pancreatic PLA2 in the presence of 1 microM Px. Initial experiments including the dependency of the degree of activation by Px on the source of the PLA2 suggested that Px bound to a cationic binding site on the enzyme. However, numerous additional observations led to the conclusion that activation by Px was due to its effects on the substrate interface. For example, the activation by Px was only seen when the PLA2 acted on small vesicles rather than larger ones, and all of the available substrate was eventually hydrolyzed in the presence of a small mole fraction of Px. Px did not promote the intervesicle exchange of PLA2, and it did not alter the binding of the evidence led to the conclusion that Px activated interfacial catalysis by promoting the replenishment of substrate in the enzyme-containing vesicles. When PLA2 was acting on small vesicles in the scooting mode, the observed initial velocity was lower than that measured with large vesicles because the surface concentration of substrate decreased relatively rapidly in the small vesicles. Px promoted the transfer of phospholipids between the vesicles and functioned as an activator by keeping the mole fraction of substrate in the enzyme-containing vesicles close to 1. This effect of Px was consistent with the ability of polycationic peptides to induce the intervesicle mixing of anionic phospholipids in vesicles [Bondeson, J., & Sundler, R. (1990) Biochim. Biophys. Act 1026, 186-194]. Activation by substrate replenishment was quantitatively predicted by the theory of interfacial catalysis on vesicles in the scooting mode. The role of substrate replenishment in the kinetics of interfacial catalysis in phospholipid micelles was discussed. Finally, the protocols developed in this paper were outlined in view of their utility in the analysis of activators of interfacial catalysis.  相似文献   

16.
To investigate the mechanisms by which vesicles of pulmonary surfactant adsorb to an air-liquid interface, we measured the effect of different phospholipids and of their concentration both in the subphase and at the interface on this process. Adsorbing vesicles contained the hydrophobic surfactant proteins mixed with the following four sets of surfactant phospholipids that varied the content of anionic headgroups and mixed acyl chains independently: the complete set of purified phospholipids (PPL) from calf surfactant; modified PPL (mPPL) from which the anionic phospholipids were removed; a mixture of dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and dipalmitoyl phosphatidylglycerol (DPPG) (9:1, mol:mol); and DPPC alone. The initial reduction in surface tension depended strongly on the anionic phospholipids and the subphase concentration. The acyl groups had no effect. Adsorption beyond the initial stage depended more on the mixed acyl groups, became increasingly independent of subphase concentration, and was determined instead by the interfacial concentration of the surface film. The different constituents produced the same effects in vesicles adsorbing to a clean interface or in a preexisting film to which vesicles of SP:DPPC adsorbed. Adsorption for vesicles of SP:PPL adsorbing to DPPC or of SP:DPPC to PPL above a certain threshold surface concentration followed exactly the same isotherm. Our results fit best with a two-step model for adsorption. The anionic phospholipids first promote the initial juxtaposition of vesicles to the interface. Compounds with mixed acyl constituents at the point of contact between vesicle and interface then facilitate fusion with the surface.  相似文献   

17.
Catalytic action of phospholipase A2 is appreciably influenced by the organization and dynamics of bilayers of glycerophosphocholines (Apitz-Castro et al. (1988) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 688, 341-348). However, such effects of the quality of the interface are not observed with bilayers of glycerophosphoryl methanol and other anionic phospholipids (Jain et al. (1986) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 860, 435-447). Such differences between the catalytic susceptibility of zwitterionic versus anionic bilayers are due to a large difference in the affinity of the enzyme for these interfaces. Binding to phospholipase A2 to zwitterionic interfaces can be promoted in the presence of certain anionic additives. For example in the pre-steady-state phase of hydrolysis, segregation of the nacently produced products of hydrolysis could promote binding of phospholipase A2 to regions of higher anionic charge density in the zwitterionic interface. In this paper we show that the dynamics of segregation of the nacently produced products of hydrolysis in zwitterionic bilayers can be readily followed by monitoring the fluorescence intensity of the cationic dye NK-529 (Yu and Jain (1989) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 980, 15-22). The fluorescence emission characteristics of NK-529 change appreciably due to self-quenching of the bound dye molecules as the fatty acid molecules segregate in the bilayer. The kinetics of segregation of fatty acids during the course of hydrolysis of bilayers of zwitterionic phospholipids by phospholipase A2 exhibits an unequivocal correlation with a variety of phenomena that are observed during the transition from the pre-steady-state phase to the steady-state phase of hydrolysis in the reaction progress curves as a function of temperature and in the presence of lipophilic additives.  相似文献   

18.
Nuclease type colicins and related bacteriocins possess the unprecedented ability to translocate an enzymatic polypeptide chain across the Gram-negative cell envelope. Here we use the rRNase domain of the cytotoxic ribonuclease colicin E3 to examine the structural changes on its interaction with the membrane. Using phospholipid vesicles as model membranes we show that anionic membranes destabilize the nuclease domain of the rRNase type colicin E3. Intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence and circular dichroism show that vesicles consisting of pure DOPA act as a powerful protein denaturant toward the rRNase domain, although this interaction can be entirely prevented by the addition of salt. Binding of E3 rRNase to DOPA vesicles is an endothermic process (DeltaH=24 kcal mol-1), reflecting unfolding of the protein. Consistent with this, binding of a highly destabilized mutant of the E3 rRNase to DOPA vesicles is exothermic. With mixed vesicles containing anionic and neutral phospholipids at a ratio of 1:3, set to mimic the charge of the Escherichia coli inner membrane, destabilization of E3 rRNase is lessened, although the melting temperature of the protein at pH 7.0 is greatly reduced from 50 degrees C to 30 degrees C. The interaction of E3 rRNase with 1:3 DOPA:DOPC vesicles is also highly dependent on both ionic strength and temperature. We discuss these results in terms of the likely interaction of the E3 rRNase and the related E9 DNase domains with the E. coli inner membrane and their subsequent translocation to the cell cytoplasm.  相似文献   

19.
Human group IIA phospholipase A(2) (hGIIA) is secreted from a number of cells during inflammation and is known to interact strongly with anionic membranes and to exhibit potent Gram-positive bactericidal activity. This protein contains 23 cationic residues, which are scattered over its entire surface, resulting in a high pI of 9.39. To understand the molecular basis for the selective binding of hGIIA to anionic membranes, 14 single-site, spin-labeled hGIIA proteins were analyzed in the presence and absence of vesicles of anionic phospholipid by time domain and continuous wave electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spin relaxant techniques. Surprisingly, for hGIIA bound to anionic vesicles, all of the spin labels were highly protected from water-soluble spin relaxants. Together with light scattering studies, these EPR results suggest the formation of a supramolecular aggregate involving clusters of hGIIA molecules bridging together multiple vesicles. This anomalous mode of binding of hGIIA to anionic phospholipid explains previous data in which charge reversal mutation of a few cationic residues on multiple faces of hGIIA leads to a comparable and modest reduction in affinity of the protein for anionic vesicles. In the presence of mixed micelles composed of 10% anionic phospholipids in Triton X-100 a monodisperse protein-lipid complex is formed. Under these conditions, the EPR methods were used to map the surface of hGIIA that constitutes the interfacial binding site (IBS). The IBS of hGIIA consists of the highly hydrophobic surface that surrounds the opening to the active site slot.  相似文献   

20.
Lipid-protein interactions with purified membranous intestinal alkaline phosphatase have been studied by using rat intestine. The enzyme was incorporated equally well into neutral lecithin and anionic liposomes, including those made from phosphatidic acid alone. It could not be solubilized with chaotropic salts nor by phospholipases C and D from either native membranes or phospholipid vesicles. Detergents effected nearly complete release of enzyme from the vesicles. Phosphatase activity was lost upon treatment with phospholipase D alone. The activity was restored with free choline, or choline containing phospholipids, but not by the addition of other phospholipids or amines. The catalytic activity was also lower when the enzyme was bound to a phosphatidylcholine vesicle containing additional phosphatidic acid. Neither phosphatidylserine nor phosphatidylinositol addition altered enzyme activity. These results show that the enzyme binds to the membrane by a primary hydrophobic interaction with membrane phospholipids without requiring the polar head group and that the enzyme activity is affected via a secondary interaction with choline. We suggest that choline protects the active site of brush border alkaline phosphatase from inhibition by endogenous membrane phosphate groups.  相似文献   

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