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1.
Dynamic light scattering has been used to study the temperature dependence of Ca2+-induced fusion of phosphatidylserine vesicles and mixed vesicles containing phosphatidylserine and different phosphatidylcholines. The final vesicle size after Ca2+ and EDTA incubation serves as a measure of the extent of fusion. With phosphatidylserine vesicles, the extent of fusion shows a sharp maximum at an incubation temperature which depends on the Ca2+ concentration between 0.8 and 2 mM. The shift in the fusion peak temperature with Ca2+ concentration is similar to the typical shift in the phase transition temperature with divalent cation concentration in acidic phospholipids. The results suggest a direct correlation between the fusion peak temperature and the phase transition temperature in the presence of Ca2+ prior to fusion. With mixed vesicles containing up to 33% of a phosphatidylcholine in at least 2 mM Ca2+, the extent of fusion as a function of incubation temperature also shows a maximum. The fusion peak temperature is essentially independent of the quantity and type of phosphatidylcholine and the Ca2+ concentration, and identical to that with pure phosphatidylserine in excess Ca2+. The results imply that Ca2+- induced molecular segregation occurs first, and fusion subsequently takes place between pure phosphatidylserine domains.  相似文献   

2.
We have investigated the contribution of various phospholipids to membrane fusion induced by divalent cations. Fusion was followed by means of a new fluorescence assay monitoring the mixing of internal aqueous contents of large (0.1 μm diameter) unilamellar liposomes. The rate and extent of fusion induced by Ca2+ in mixed phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine vesicles were lower compared to those in pure phosphatidylserine vesicles. The presence of 50% phosphatidylcholine completely inhibited fusion, although the vesicles aggregated upon Ca2+ addition. When phosphatidylserine was mixed with phosphatidylethanolamine, however, rapid fusion could be induced by Ca2+ even in mixtures that contained only 25% phosphatidylserine. Phosphatidylethanolamine also facilitated fusion by Mg2+ which could not fuse pure phosphatidylserine vesicles. In phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylethanolamine/phosphatidylcholine mixtures, in which the phosphatidylcholine content was kept at 25%, phosphatidylethanolamine could not substitute for phosphatidylserine, and the fusogenic capacity of Mg2+ was abolished by the presence of merely 10% phosphatidylcholine. The initial rate of release of vesicle contents was slower than the rate of fusion in all the mixtures used. The presence of phosphate effected a considerable decrease in the threshold concentration of Ca2+ and also enhanced  相似文献   

3.
Small unilamellar phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine liposomes incubated on one side of planar phosphatidylserine bilayer membranes induced fluctuations and a sharp increase in the membrane conductance when the Ca2+ concentration was increased to a threshold of 3–5 mM in 100 mM NaCl, pH 7.4. Under the same ionic conditions, these liposomes fused with large (0.2 μm diameter) single-bilayer phosphatidylserine vesicles, as shown by a fluorescence assay for the mixing of internal aqueous contents of the two vesicle populations. The conductance behavior of the planar membranes was interpreted to be a consequence of the structural rearrangement of phospholipids during individual fusion events and the incorporation of domains of phosphatidylcholine into the Ca2+-complexed phosphatidylserine membrane. The small vesicles did not aggregate or fuse with one another at these Ca2+ concentrations, but fused preferentially with the phosphatidylserine membrane, analogous to simple exocytosis in biological membranes. Phosphatidylserine vesicles containing gramicidin A as a probe interacted with the planar membranes upon raising the Ca2+ concentration from 0.9 to 1.2 mM, as detected by an abrupt increase in the membrane conductance. In parallel experiments, these vesicles were shown to fuse with the large phosphatidylserine liposomes at the same Ca2+ concentration.  相似文献   

4.
The effects of phospholipid vesicles and divalent cations in the subphase solution on the surface tension of phospholipid monolayer membranes were studied in order to elucidate the nature of the divalent cation-induced vesicle-membrane interaction. The monolayers were formed at the air/water interface. Various concentrations of unilamellar phospholipid (phosphatidylserine, phosphatidylcholine and their mixtures) vesicles and divalent cations (Mg2+, Ca2+, Mn2+, etc.) were introduced into the subphase solution of the monolayers. The changes of surface tension of monolayers were measured by the Wilhelmy plate (Teflon) method with respect to divalent ion concentrations and time.When a monolayer of phosphatidylserine and vesicles of phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine (1 : 1) were used, there were critical concentrations of divalent cations to produce a large reduction in surface tension of the monolayer. These concentrations were 16 mM for Mg2+, 7 mM for Sr2+, 6 mM for Ca2+, 3.5 mM for Ba2+ and 1.8 mM for Mn2+. On the other hand, for a phosphatidylcholine monolayer and phosphatidylcholine vesicles, there was no change in surface tension of the monolayer up to 25 mM of any divalent ion used. When a phosphatidylserine monolayer and phosphatidylcholine vesicles were used, the order of divalent ions to effect the large reduction of surface tension was Mn2+ > Ca2+ > Mg2+ and their critical concentrations were in between the former two cases. The threshold concentrations also depended upon vesicle concentrations as well as the area/molecule of monolayers. For phosphatidylserine monolayers and phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine (1 : 1) vesicles, above the critical concentrations of Mn2+ and Ca2+, the surface tension decreased to a value close to the equilibrium pressure of the monolayers within 0.5 h.This decrease in surface tension of the monolayers is interpreted partly as the consequence of fusion of the vesicles with the monolayer membranes. The  相似文献   

5.
Ca2+-induced fusion of glycolipid-phospholipid vesicles containing several different anionic phospholipids was investigated, with and without lectin-mediated intervesicle contact. In vesicles containing phosphatidylserine, phosphatidylinositol or its mono- or diphosphate as the anionic phospholipid fusion was induced only at 1–10 mM Ca2+ both in the absence and presence of lectin. In contrast, the Ca2+-threshold for fusion of phosphatidate-containing vesicles was reduced to ?0.1 mM Ca2+ by lectin-mediated intermembrane contact.  相似文献   

6.
Ca2+-induced fusion of glycolipid-phospholipid vesicles containing several different anionic phospholipids was investigated, with and without lectin-mediated intervesicle contact. In vesicles containing phosphatidylserine, phosphatidylinositol or its mono- or diphosphate as the anionic phospholipid fusion was induced only at 1–10 mM Ca2+ both in the absence and presence of lectin. In contrast, the Ca2+-threshold for fusion of phosphatidate-containing vesicles was reduced to 0.1 mM Ca2+ by lectin-mediated intermembrane contact.  相似文献   

7.
The kinetics of Ca2+-induced fusion of large (0.1 μm) unilamellar cardiolipin/phosphatidylcholine (1:1) vesicles have been investigated by continuous monitoring of the mixing of the aqueous vesicle contents. In parallel, release of vesicle contents to the external medium has been followed. Initial fusion of the vesicles is non-leaky, release of vesicle contents being largely a secondary phenomenon. The minimal Ca2+ concentration required for fusion in this system is approx. 9 mM. At higher Ca2+ concentrations fusion is extremely fast, occurring on the time scale of seconds.  相似文献   

8.
We have examined the early events in Ca2+-induced fusion of large (0.2 μm diameter) unilamellar cardiolipin/phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylethanolamine vesicles by quick-freezing freeze-fracture electron microscopy, eliminating the necessity of using glycerol as a cryoprotectant. Freeze-fracture replicas of vesicle suspensions frozen after 1–2 s of stimulation revealed that the majority of vesicles had already undergone membrane fusion, as evidenced by dumbbell-shaped structures and large vesicles. In the absence of glycerol, lipidic particles or the hexagonal HII phase, which have been proposed to be intermediate structures in membrane fusion, were not observed at the sites of fusion. Lipidic particles were evident in less than 5% of the cardiolipin/phosphatidylcholine vesicles after long-term incubation with Ca2+, and the addition of glycerol produced more vesicles displaying the particles. We have also shown that rapid fusion occurred within seconds of Ca2+ addition by the time-course of fluorescence emission produced by the intermixing of aqueous contents of two separate vesicle populations. These studies therefore have produced no evidence that lipidic particles are necessary intermediates for membrane fusion. On the contrary, they indicate that lipidic particles are structures obtained at equilibrium long after fusion has occurred and they become particularly prevalent in the presence of glycerol.  相似文献   

9.
Membrane fusion induced by Ca2+ and Mg2+ in large unilamellar vesicles composed of mixtures of phosphatidylethanolamine with phosphatidate and phosphatidylinositol was studied by means of a fluorescence assay for the intermixing of internal aqueous contents of the vesicles. The threshold concentrations of Ca2+ or Mg2+ required for fusion increased only moderately when up to 80 mol% phosphatidylethanolamine was included with phosphatidate at pH 7.4, but no fusion could be detected in vesicles containing 70 mol% phosphatidylcholine even at high concentrations of Ca2+ or Mg2+. Phosphatidate-phosphatidylethanolamine (1 : 4) vesicles could be induced to fuse by 0.1 mM Ca2+ in the presence of a Mg2+ concentration which alone was insufficient for fusion. When equimolar amounts of phosphatidylethanolamine was included with phosphatidylinositol, the vesicles were susceptible to fusion by Ca2+, although pure phosphatidylinositol vesicles themselves merely aggregate and do not fuse (Sundler, R. and Papahadjopoulos, D. (1981) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 649, 743–750, accompanying paper). The role of phosphatidylethanolamine acyl chains, and hence the possible involvement of the bilayer-hexagonal (HII) transition in membrane fusion, was examined by the temperature dependence of Ca2+-induced fusion in phosphatidylinositol-dimyristoylphosphatidylethanolamine (1 : 1) vesicles. Fusion was strictly dependent on the gel-liquid crystalline transition of the mixture and not on the phase behavior of the phosphatidylethanolamines. Comparable fusion rates were obtained for both egg yolk phosphatidylethanolamine and dimyristoylphosphatidylethanolamine at 50°C. As the dimyristoylphosphatidylethanolamine does not convert to a non-bilayer phase in this temperature range, we conclude that the bilayer-hexagonal transition is not necessary for membrane fusion. We propose that the dehydration characteristics of the phospholipids and their metal ion complexes are the critical factors determining fusion suceptibility of phospholipid membranes.  相似文献   

10.
The effects of proteins on divalent cation-induced phospholipid vesicle aggregation and phospholipid vesicle-monolayer membrane interactions (fusion) were examined. Glycophorin (from human erythrocytes) suppressed the membrane interactions more than N-2 protein (from human brain myelin) when these proteins were incorporated into acidic phospholipid vesicle membranes. The threshold concentrations of divalent cations which induced vesicle aggregation were increased by protein incorporation, and the rate of vesicle aggregation was reduced. A similar inhibitory effect by the proteins, incorporated into lipid vesicle membranes, was observed for Ca2+-induced lipid vesicle-monolayer interactions. However, when these proteins were incorporated only in the acidic phospholipid monolayers, the interaction (fusion) of the lipid vesicle-monolayer membranes, induced by divalent cations, was not appreciably altered by the presence of the proteins.In contrast to these two proteins, the presence of synexin in the solution did enhance the Ca2+-induced aggregation of phosphatidylserine vesicles, but did not seem to affect the degree of Ca2+-induced fusion between phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine (1:1) and phosphatidylserine vesicles and monolayer membranes.  相似文献   

11.
The kinetics of Ca2+-induced fusion of large (0.1 μm) unilamellar cardiolipin/phosphatidylcholine (1:1) vesicles have been investigated by continuous monitoring of the mixing of the aqueous vesicle contents. In parallel, release of vesicle contents to the external medium has been followed. Initial fusion of the vesicles is non-leaky, release of vesicle contents being largely a secondary phenomenon. The minimal Ca2+ concentration required for fusion in this system is approx. 9 mM. At higher Ca2+ concentrations fusion is extremely fast, occurring on the time scale of seconds.  相似文献   

12.
The interaction of phosphatidylserine vesicles with Ca2+ and Mg2+ has been examined by several techniques to study the mechanism of membrane fusion. Data are presented on the effects of Ca2+ and Mg2+ on vesicle permeability, thermotropic phase transitions and morphology determined by differential scanning calorimetry, X-ray diffraction, and freeze-fracture electron microscopy. These data are discussed in relation to information concerning Ca2+ binding, charge neutralization, molecular packing, vesicle aggregation, phase transitions, phase separations and vesicle fusion.The results indicate that at Ca2+ concentrations of 1.0–2.0 mM, a highly cooperative phenomenon occurs which results in increased vesicle permeability, aggregation and fusion of the vesicles. Under these conditions the hydrocarbon chains of the lipid bilayers undergo a phase change from a fluid to a crystalline state. The aggregation of vesicles that is observed during fusion is not sufficient in itself to induce fusion without a concomitant phase change. Mg2+ in the range of 2.0–5.0 mM induces aggregation of phosphatidylserine vesicles but no significant fusion nor a phase change.From the effect of variations in pH, temperature, Ca2+ and Mg2+ concentration on the fusion of vesicles, it is concluded that the key event leading to vesicle membrane fusion is the isothermic phase change induced by the bivalent metals. It is proposed that this phase change induces a transient destabilization of the bilayer membranes that become susceptible to fusion at domain boundaries.  相似文献   

13.
We have studied the characteristics of fusion of large unilamellar vesicles composed of phosphatidate and phosphatidylinositol alone and in mixtures with other naturally occurring phospholipids. Fusion was induced by the addition of Ca2+ or Mg2+ and was monitored by detecting the mixing of aqueous vesicle contents. Release of vesicle contents was measured by dequenching of carboxyfluorescein fluorescence. Aggregation was monitored by 90° light scattering. The results indicated striking differences with respect to the fusion capacity of the different vesicles. Phosphatidate vesicles fuse in the presence of both Ca2+ and Mg2+ at threshold concentration ranges of 0.03–0.1 mM (Ca2+) and 0.07–0.15 mM (Mg2+) depending on the pH of the medium, 8.5-6.0, respectively. In contrast, phosphatidylinositol vesicles do not fuse with either Ca2+ or Mg2+ even at 50 mM concentrations, in spite of aggregation induced by both cations in the range of 5–10 mM. A large difference in terms of fusion capacity is retained even when these two phospholipids are mixed with phosphatidylserine, phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylcholine in 2 : 2 : 4 : 2 molar ratios. The results are discussed in terms of the molecular mechanism of membrane fusion and the possible role of the metabolic interconversion of phosphatidylinositol to phosphatidate as an on-off control system for membrane fusion phenomena involved in secretion.  相似文献   

14.
Summary The aggregation, leakage, and fusion of pure PS (phosphatidylserine) and mixed PS/PC (phosphatidylcholine) sonicated vesicles were studied by light scattering, the release of encapsulated carboxyfluorescein, and a new fusion assay which monitors the mixing of the internal compartments of fusing vesicles. On a time scale of 1 min the extent of fusion was considerably greater than leakage. The Ca2+ and Mg2+ concentrations required to induce fusion increased when the PS content of the vesicles was decreased, and/or when the NaCl concentration was increased.Calculations employing a modified Gouy-Chapman equation and experimentally determined intrinsic binding constants of Na+ and Ca2+ to PS were shown to predict correctly the amount of Ca2+ bound in mixed PS/PC vesicles. For vesicles composed of either pure PS or of mixtures with PC in 100mM NaCl (41 and 21 PS/PC); the induction of fusion (on a time scale of minutes) occurred when the amount of Ca or Mg bound/PS molecule exceeded 0.35–0.39. The induction of fusion for both pure PS and PS/PC mixed vesicles (with PS exceeding 50%) can be explained by assuming that destabilization of these vesicles requires a critical binding ratio of divalent cations to PS.  相似文献   

15.
The interaction of La3+ with phosphatidylserine vesicles is elucidated by binding studies, differential scanning calorimetry, X-ray diffraction, freeze fracture electron microscopy, and release of vesicle contents. La3+ effectively competes with Ca2+ for phosphatidylserine binding sites. The saturation level is close to a La/lipid ratio of 1:3. A concentration of 0.1 mM of La3+ is sufficient to induce fusion between sonicated vesicles.  相似文献   

16.
The interaction of La3+ with phosphatidylserine vesicles is elucidated by binding studies, differential scanning calorimetry, X-ray diffraction, freeze fracture electron microscopy, and release of vesicle contents. La3+ effectively competes with Ca2+ for phosphatidylserine binding sites. The saturation level is close to a La/lipid ratio of 1:3. A concentration of 0.1 mM of La3+ is sufficient to induce fusion between sonicated vesicles.  相似文献   

17.
The interaction of La3+ with phosphatidylserine vesicles is studied by differential scanning calorimetry, 140La binding, 31P-NMR chemical shifts and relaxation rates, carboxyfluorescein and [14C]sucrose release, X-ray diffraction and freeze-fracture electron microscopy. In the presence of La3+ concentrations above 1 mM and an incubation temperature of 38°C, i.e., at the phase transition temperature of the complex La/phosphatidylserine, the binding ratio of La/lipid exceeds a 13 ratio, reaching saturation at a 12 ratio. Analysis, employing a modified Gouy-Chapman equation, indicates a significant increase in the intrinsic binding constant of La/phosphatidylserine when the La3+ concentration exceeds the threshold concentration for leakage. The analysis illustrates that at the molecular level the binding of La3+ can be comparable to or even weaker than that of Ca2+, but that even when present at smaller concentrations La3+ competes with and partially displaces Ca2+ from membranes or other negatively charged surfaces. The results suggest that the sequence La3+>Ca2+>Mg2+ reflects both the binding strength of these cations to phosphatidylserine as well as their ability to induce leakage, enhancement of 31P spin-lattice relaxation rates, fusion and other structural changes. The leakage, fusion, and other structural changes are more pronounced at the phase transition temperature of the La/lipid complex.  相似文献   

18.
A sensitive method which utilizes fluorescence energy transfer to assay Ca2+ -or Mg2+ -mediated fusion of phospholipid vesicles is reported. More than 85% quenching results when phosphatidylserine vesicles labelled with dansyl phosphatidylethanolamine (donor) are fused with vesicles labelled with rhodamine phosphatidylethanolamine (acceptor) in the presence of 5 mM CaCl2 or 10 mM MgCl2. Higher concentrations of divalent cations are required to obtain maximal quenching when phosphatidylserine is partially replaced with phosphatidylethanolamine or phosphatidylcholine. The rate of vesicle fusion is dependent upon the concentrations of both cation and vesicles. Maximum quenching occurs within 5 min using phosphatidylserine vesicles and 5 mM Ca2+, but quenching is incomplete even after 20 h with 0.8--2 mM Ca2+. This probably reflects the heterogeneous size distribution of these vesicles, since the extent of fusion was found to correlated with vesicle size. Binding of antibody to membrane-localized phenobarbital hapten effectively blocks Ca2+ -mediated vesicle fusion. This effect can be inhibited by preincubation of the antibody with phenobarbital. Leakage of tempocholine from intact vesicles induced by 5 mM Ca2+ occurs even when fusion is prevented by bound antibody. This demonstrates that fusion is not a necessary requirement for Ca2+ -induced leakage.  相似文献   

19.
Ca2+-induced phase separation in phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylethanolamine/phosphatidylcholine model membranes was studied using spin-labeled phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylcholine and compared with that in phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine model membranes studied previously. The phosphatidyl-ethanolamine-containing membranes behaved in qualitatively the same way as did phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine model membranes. There were some quantitative differences between them. The degree of phase separation was higher in the phosphatidylethanolamine-containing membranes. For example, the degree of phase separation in phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylethanolamine membranes containing various mole fractions of phosphatidylserine was 94–100% at 23°C and 84–88% at 40°C, while the corresponding value for phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine membranes was 74–85% at 23°C and 61–79% at 40°C. Ca2+ concentration required for the phase separation was lower for phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylethanolamine than that for phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine membranes; concentration to cause a half-maximal phase separation was 1.4 · 10?7 M for phosphatidylserine-phosphatidylethanolamine and 1.2 · 10?6 M for phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine membranes. The phase diagram of phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylethanolamine membranes in the presence of Ca2+ was also qualitatively the same as that of phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine except for the different phase transition temperatures of phosphatidylethanolamine (17°C) and phosphatidylcholine (?15°C). These differences were explained in terms of a greater tendency for phosphatidylethanolamine, compared to phosphatidylcholine, to form its own fluid phase separated from the Ca2+-chelated solid-phase phosphatidylserine domain.  相似文献   

20.
The relative kinetics of intermixing and release of liposome aqueous contents during Ca2+-induced membrane fusion has been investigated. Fusion was monitored by the Tb-dipicolinic acid (DPA) fluorescence assay. Release was followed by the relief of self-quenching of carboxyfluorescein or by Tb fluorescence, with essentially identical results. Fusion of large unilamellar vesicles (LUV) made of phosphatidylserine (PS) in 100 mM NaCl (pH 7.4) at 25°C was initially non-leaky, whereas the fusion of small unilamellar vesicles (SUV) was accompanied by partial release of contents. After several rounds of fusion, the internal aqueous space of the vesicles collapsed. The rate of intermixing of lipids, measured by a resonance energy transfer assay, and the rate of coalescence of aqueous contents during fusion were similar over a range of Ca2+ concentrations. Most of the aqueous contents were retained after the fusion of SUV (PS) in 5 mM NaCl and 1 mM Ca2+. LUV made of a 1:1 mixture of Bacillus subtilis cardiolipin and dioleoylphosphatidylcholine went through about two rounds of fusion in the presence of Ca2+ at 10°C, with complete retention of contents. Similar results were obtained with vesicles composed of phosphatidate/PS/phosphatidylethanolamine/cholesterol (1:2:3:2) in the presence of Ca2+ and synexin at 25°C. These results emphasize the diversity of the relative kinetics of fusion and release in different phospholipid vesicle systems under various ionic conditions, and indicate that the initial events in the fusion of LUV are in general, non-leaky.  相似文献   

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