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1.
Glycolipid transfer protein from bovine brain   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Glycolipid transfer protein from bovine brain has been purified partially by ammonium sulfate precipitation, CM-52 ion-exchange, and Sephadex G-75 column chromatography. Both pyrene-labeled and tritium-labeled glucocerebrosides have been used to study the kinetics of protein-mediated transfer between donor and acceptor vesicles. Protein accelerates glucocerebroside transfer but does not accelerate phospholipid transfer. In colyophilized small sonicated vesicles (10% glucocerebroside, 90% 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine) about two-thirds of the glycolipid is transferred in 2 h and the remaining one-third does not transfer (up to 5 h). For donor and acceptor vesicles made of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine or 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine, glucocerebroside (10% in donors) is transferred rapidly only when both the donor and acceptor matrix phospholipids are in the liquid-crystalline state. If either donor or acceptor vesicles are in the gel state, transfer protein mediated transfer is much reduced. The amount of transfer protein bound specifically to glucocerebroside-containing vesicles is nearly equal above and below the matrix phospholipid phase transition temperature. Bound protein transfers glucocerebroside upon addition of acceptor vesicles.  相似文献   

2.
Mammalian glycolipid transfer proteins (GLTPs) facilitate the selective transfer of glycolipids between lipid vesicles in vitro. Recent structural determinations of the apo- and glycolipid-liganded forms of human GLTP have provided the first insights into the molecular architecture of the protein and its glycolipid binding site (Malinina, L., Malakhova, M. L., Brown, R. E., and Patel, D. J. (2004) Nature 430, 1048-1053). In the present study, we have evaluated the functional consequences of point mutation of the glycolipid liganding site of human GLTP within the context of a carrier-based mechanism of glycolipid intermembrane transfer. Different approaches were developed to rapidly and efficiently assess the uptake and release of glycolipid by GLTP. They included the use of glass-immobilized, glycolipid films to load GLTP with glycolipid and separation of GLTP/glycolipid complexes from vesicles containing glycolipid (galactosylceramide or lactosylceramide) or from monosialoganglioside dispersions by employing nickel-nitrilotriacetic acid-based affinity or gel filtration strategies. Point mutants of the sugar headgroup recognition center (Trp-96, Asp-48, Asn-52) and of the ceramide-accommodating hydrophobic tunnel (Phe-148, Phe-183, Leu-136) were analyzed for their ability to acquire and release glycolipid ligand. Two manifestations of point mutation within the liganding site were apparent: (i) impaired formation of the GLTP/glycolipid complex; (ii) impaired acquisition and release of bound glycolipid by GLTP. The results are consistent with a carrier-based mode of GLTP action to accomplish the intermembrane transfer of glycolipid. Also noteworthy was the inefficient release of glycolipid by wtGLTP into phosphatidylcholine acceptor vesicles, raising the possibility of a function other than intermembrane glycolipid transfer in vivo.  相似文献   

3.
Glycolipid transfer protein (GLTP) purified from pig brain facilitates the transfer of various glycolipids between lipid bilayers. Purified GLTP migrates as two bands of different mobility in SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) under non-reducing conditions. The slower component and the faster component constituted about 80% and about 15%, respectively, of purified GLTP. Treatment of GLTP with 45 microM CuSO4 resulted in a decrease in the slower component, an increase in the faster component, and the formation of oligomeric components. The faster and oligomeric components were quantitatively converted to the slower component by reduction with 2% 2-mercaptoethanol in the presence of 1% SDS. The formation of oligomeric components was enhanced by increasing the concentration of CuSO4 to 450 microM and 4.5 mM. Oxidation of GLTP catalyzed by CuSO4 resulted in a decrease in the transfer activity and an increase in the apparent binding affinity of GLTP to 1-O-(beta-D-galactopyranosyl)-N-[10-(1-pyrenyl)decanoyl]-D-erythro- sphingosine (PyrGalCer). The oligomeric components and the monomeric components were isolated by chromatography on a Sephadex G-75 column. It was found that GLTP in fractions enriched with the monomeric components had very high transfer activity and is responsible for most of the transfer activity in the oxidized GLTP. Treatment of GLTP with 1.27 mM HgCl2 resulted in a formation of components unresolvable on SDS-PAGE and also resulted in a reduction of the transfer activity to one-third. However, no obvious change in the binding affinity of GLTP to PyrGalCer was observed by HgCl2 treatment. Treatment with 2-mercaptoethanol restored the activity of GLTP inactivated by HgCl2, whereas the activity inactivated by CuSO4 was not restored by treatment with 2-mercaptoethanol. These results suggest that the transfer activity depends on the turnover rate of the GLTP-PyrGalCer complex which is affected by modification of sulfhydryl groups of GLTP. The sulfhydryl group content of GLTP was estimated by the use of 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB). A value of 2.2 mol sulfhydryl groups per mol of GLTP was found in the presence of 0.5% SDS and one sulfhydryl group in a GLTP molecule was very rapidly oxidized in the native state, from which it is assumed that the slower component contains three sulfhydryl groups per GLTP molecule and the faster component contains one sulfhydryl group and one disulfide bond per GLTP molecule.  相似文献   

4.
The transfer kinetics of the neutral glycosphingolipid gangliotetraosylceramide (asialo-GM1) were investigated by monitoring tritiated asialo-GM1 movement from donor to acceptor vesicles. Two different methods were employed to separate donor and acceptor vesicles at desired time intervals. In one method, a negative charge was imparted to dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine donor vesicles by including 10 mol% dipalmitoylphosphatidic acid. Donors were separated from neutral dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine acceptor vesicles by ion-exchange chromatography. In the other method, small, unilamellar donor vesicles (20-nm diameter) and large, unilamellar acceptor vesicles (70-nm diameter) were coincubated at 45 degrees C and then separated at desired time intervals by molecular sieve chromatography. The majority of asialo-GM1 transfer to acceptor vesicles occurred as a slow first-order process with a half-time of about 24 days assuming that the relative concentration of asialo-GM1 in the phospholipid matrix was identical in each half of the donor bilayer and that no glycolipid flip-flop occurred. Asialo-GM1 net transfer was calculated relative to that of [14C]cholesteryl oleate, which served as a nontransferable marker in the donor vesicles. A nearly identical transfer half-time was obtained when the phospholipid matrix was changed from dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine to palmitoyloleoylphosphatidylcholine. Varying the acceptor vesicle concentration did not significantly alter the asialo-GM1 transfer half-time. This result is consistent with a transfer mechanism involving diffusion of glycolipid through the aqueous phase rather than movement of glycolipid following formation of collisional complexes between donor and acceptor vesicles. When viewed within the context of other recent studies involving neutral glycosphingolipids, these findings provide additional evidence for the existence of microscopic, glycosphingolipid-enriched domains within the phospholipid bilayer.  相似文献   

5.
In this study we have addressed the ability of the glycolipid transfer protein (GLTP) to transfer anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide at different pH and sodium chloride concentrations, and the ability of three different mutants to transfer the fluorescently labeled galactosylceramide between donor and acceptor model membranes. We constructed single tryptophan mutants with site-directed mutagenesis where two of the three tryptophan (W) of wild-type human GLTP were substituted with phenylalanine (F) and named W85 GLTP (W96F and W142F), W96 GLTP (W85F and W142F) and W142 GLTP (W85F and W96F) accordingly. Wild-type GLTP and W96 GLTP were both able to transfer anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide, but the two variants W85 GLTP and W142 GLTP did not show any glycolipid transfer activity, indicating that the tryptophan in position 96 is crucial for transfer activity. Tryptophan fluorescence emission showed a blue shift of the maximal emission wavelength upon interaction of glycolipid containing vesicle with wild-type GLTP and W96 GLTP, while no blue shift was recorded for the protein variants W85 GLTP and W142 GLTP. The quantum yield of tryptophan emission was highest for the W96 GLTP protein whereas W85 GLTP, W142 GLTP and wild-type GLTP showed a lower and almost similar quantum yield. The lifetime and anisotropy decay of the different tryptophan mutants also changed upon binding to vesicles containing galactosylceramide. Again wild-type GLTP and W96 GLTP showed similar behavior in the presence of vesicles containing glycolipids. Taken together, our data show that the W96 is involved not only in the activity of the protein but also in the interaction between the protein and glycolipid containing membranes.  相似文献   

6.
In this study we have addressed the ability of the glycolipid transfer protein (GLTP) to transfer anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide at different pH and sodium chloride concentrations, and the ability of three different mutants to transfer the fluorescently labeled galactosylceramide between donor and acceptor model membranes. We constructed single tryptophan mutants with site-directed mutagenesis where two of the three tryptophan (W) of wild-type human GLTP were substituted with phenylalanine (F) and named W85 GLTP (W96F and W142F), W96 GLTP (W85F and W142F) and W142 GLTP (W85F and W96F) accordingly. Wild-type GLTP and W96 GLTP were both able to transfer anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide, but the two variants W85 GLTP and W142 GLTP did not show any glycolipid transfer activity, indicating that the tryptophan in position 96 is crucial for transfer activity. Tryptophan fluorescence emission showed a blue shift of the maximal emission wavelength upon interaction of glycolipid containing vesicle with wild-type GLTP and W96 GLTP, while no blue shift was recorded for the protein variants W85 GLTP and W142 GLTP. The quantum yield of tryptophan emission was highest for the W96 GLTP protein whereas W85 GLTP, W142 GLTP and wild-type GLTP showed a lower and almost similar quantum yield. The lifetime and anisotropy decay of the different tryptophan mutants also changed upon binding to vesicles containing galactosylceramide. Again wild-type GLTP and W96 GLTP showed similar behavior in the presence of vesicles containing glycolipids. Taken together, our data show that the W96 is involved not only in the activity of the protein but also in the interaction between the protein and glycolipid containing membranes.  相似文献   

7.
We have investigated the intervesicular transfer of galactosylceramide between unilamellar bilayer vesicles composed of differing sphingomyelin and phosphatidylcholine molar ratios. To monitor glycolipid transfer from donor to acceptor vesicles, we used a fluorescence resonance energy transfer assay involving anthrylvinyl-labeled galactosylceramide (AV-GalCer) and perylenoyl-labeled triglyceride. The transfer was mediated by glycolipid transfer protein (GLTP), purified from bovine brain and specific for glycolipids. The initial transfer rate and the total accessible pool of glycolipid in the donor vesicles were both measured. An increase in the sphingomyelin content of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl phosphatidylcholine (POPC) vesicles decreased the transfer rate in a nonlinear fashion. Decreased transfer rates were clearly evident at sphingomyelin mole fractions of 0.22 or higher. The pool of AV-GalCer available for GLTP-mediated transfer also was smaller in vesicles containing high sphingomyelin content. In contrast, AV-GalCer was more readily transferred from vesicles composed of POPC and different disaturated phosphatidylcholines. Our results show that GLTP acts as a sensitive probe for detecting interactions of glycosphingolipids with neighboring lipids and that the lateral mixing of glycolipids is probably affected by the matrix lipid composition. The compositionally driven changes in lipid interactions, sensed by GLTP, occur in membranes that are either macroscopically fluid-phase or gel/fluid-phase mixtures. Gaining insights into how changes in membrane sphingolipid composition alter accessibility to soluble proteins with affinity for membrane glycolipids is likely to help increase our understanding of how sphingolipid-enriched microdomains (i.e., "rafts" and caveolae) are formed and maintained in cells.  相似文献   

8.
The steroidogenic acute regulatory protein (StAR) mediates the acute stimulation of steroid synthesis by tropic hormones in steroidogenic cells. StAR interacts with the outer mitochondrial membrane and facilitates the rate-limiting transfer of cholesterol to the inner mitochondrial membrane where cytochrome P-450scc converts this cholesterol into pregnenolone. We tested the ability of N-62 StAR to transfer cholesterol from donor vesicles containing cholesterol but no cytochrome P-450scc to acceptor vesicles containing P-450scc but no cholesterol, using P-450scc activity as a reporter of the cholesterol content of synthetic phospholipid vesicles. N-62 StAR stimulated P-450scc activity in acceptor vesicles 5-10-fold following the addition of donor vesicles. Transfer of cholesterol to acceptor vesicles was rapid and sufficient to maintain a linear rate of pregnenolone synthesis for 10 min. The effect of N-62 StAR in stimulating P-450scc activity was specific for cholesterol transfer and was not due to vesicle fusion or P-450scc exchange between vesicles. Maximum stimulation of P-450scc activity in acceptor vesicles required preincubation of N-62 StAR with phospholipid vesicles prior to adding donor vesicles. The amount of N-62 StAR causing half-maximum stimulation of P-450scc activity in acceptor vesicles was 1.9 microm. Half-maximum stimulation required more than a 10-fold higher concentration of R182L N-62 StAR, a mutant associated with congenital lipoid adrenal hyperplasia. N-62 StAR-mediated transfer of cholesterol between vesicles showed low dependence on the cholesterol concentration in the donor vesicles. Thus StAR can transfer cholesterol between synthetic membranes without other protein components found in mitochondria.  相似文献   

9.
A glycolipid-specific lipid transfer protein has been purified to apparent homogeneity from pig brain post-mitochondrial supernatant. The purified protein was obtained after about 6,000-fold purification at a yield of 19%. Evidence for the homogeneity of the purified protein includes the following: (i) a single band in acidic gel electrophoresis, in sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis, (ii) a single band in analytical gel isoelectric focusing, (iii) exact correspondence between the glycolipid transfer activity and stained protein absorbance in the acidic gel electrophoresis, and (iv) coincidence between the transfer activity and protein absorption at 280 nm in gel filtration through Ultrogel AcA 54. The protein has an isoelectric point of about 8.3 and a molecular weight of 22,000, as measured by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. A molecular weight of 15,000 was calculated from AcA 54 gel filtration. The amino acid composition has been determined. The protein binds [3H]galactosylceramide but not [3H]phosphatidylcholine. Under the conditions used, 1 mol of the transfer protein bound about 0.13 mol of [3H]galactosylceramide. The glycolipid transfer protein-[3H]galactosylceramide complex was isolated by a Sephadex G-75 chromatography. An incubation of the complex with liposomes resulted in the transfer of [3H]galactosylceramide from the complex to the acceptor liposomes. The result indicates that the complex functions as an intermediate in the glycolipid transfer reaction. The protein facilitates the transfer of [3H]galactosylceramide from donor liposomes to acceptor liposomes lacking in glycolipid as well as to acceptor liposomes containing galactosylceramide.  相似文献   

10.
K W Wirtz  P F Devaux  A Bienvenue 《Biochemistry》1980,19(14):3395-3399
2-Stearoyl spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine (PC*) has been introduced into the phosphatidylcholine exchange protein from bovine liver and its electron spin resonance (ESR) spectrum determined. The spin-labeled group in the PC*- exchange protein complex was strongly immobilized. Addition of sodium deoxycholate micelles released PC* from its binding site, producing a mobile signal. This was also observed when micelles of lysophosphatidylcholine and vesicles of phosphatidic acid were added, indicating that the exchange protein can insert its endogenous PC* into interfaces devoid of phosphatidylcholine. ESR spectroscopy was used to measure transfer of PC* from spin-labeled "donor" vesicles to unlabeled "acceptor" vesicles as described by Machida & Ohnishi [Machida, K., & Ohnishi, S. (1978) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 507, 156-164]. The donor vesicles consisted of PC* and phosphatidic acid (75:25 mol%) and the acceptor vesicles of phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidic acid (81:19 mol%). Addition of exchange protein catalyzed a net transfer of PC* from donor to acceptor vesicles. This transfer proceeded until the acceptor vesicles contained approximately 2 mol% of PC*. A spontaneous transfer of PC* was not observed. As for the mode of action, it appears that the exchange protein, after insertion of its endogenous PC* into the acceptor, leaves the interface without a bound phospholipid molecule yet continues to shuttle PC* from donor to acceptor.  相似文献   

11.
Microsomal triglyceride transfer protein (MTP) activity is classically measured using radioactive lipids. We described a simple fluorescence assay to measure its triacylglycerol (TAG) transfer activity. Here, we describe fluorescence-based methods to measure the transfer of phospholipids (PLs) and cholesteryl esters (CEs) by MTP. Both transfer activities increased with time and MTP amounts and were inhibited to different extents by an MTP antagonist, BMS197636. We also describe a method to measure the net deposition of fluorescent lipids in acceptor vesicles. In this procedure, negatively charged donor vesicles are incubated with MTP and acceptor vesicles, and lipids transferred to acceptors are quantified after the removal of donor vesicles and MTP by the addition of DE52. Lipid deposition in acceptor vesicles was dependent on time and MTP. Using these methods, TAG transfer activity was the most robust activity present in purified MTP; CE and PL transfer activities were 60-71% and 5-13% of the TAG transfer activity, respectively. The method to determine lipid transfer is recommended for routine MTP activity measurements for its simplicity. These methods may help identify specific inhibitors for individual lipid transfer activities, in characterizing different domains involved in transfer, and in the isolation of mutants that bind but cannot transfer lipids.  相似文献   

12.
Cells acquire cholesterol either by de novo synthesis in the endoplasmic reticulum or by internalization of cholesterol-containing lipoproteins, particularly low density lipoprotein (LDL), via receptor-mediated endocytosis. The inherited disorder Niemann-Pick type C (NPC), in which abnormal LDL-cholesterol trafficking from the endo/lysosomal compartment leads to substantial cholesterol and glycolipid accumulation in lysosomes, is caused by defects in either of two genes that encode for proteins designated as NPC1 and NPC2. NPC2 is a small intralysosomal protein that has been characterized biochemically as a cholesterol binding protein. We determined the rate and mechanism by which NPC2 delivers cholesterol to model phospholipid membranes. A fluorescence dequenching assay was used to monitor the kinetics of cholesterol transfer from the protein to membranes. The endogenous tryptophan fluorescence of the NPC2 was quenched upon binding of cholesterol, and the subsequent addition of acceptor vesicles resulted in dequenching of the tryptophan signal, enabling the monitoring of cholesterol transfer to membranes. The rates of cholesterol transfer were evaluated as a function of acceptor vesicle concentration, acceptor vesicle phospholipid headgroup composition, and aqueous phase properties. The results suggest that NPC2 rapidly transports cholesterol to phospholipid vesicles via a collisional mechanism which involves a direct interaction with the acceptor membrane. Transfer of cholesterol to membranes is faster in an acidic environment and is greatly enhanced by the presence of the unique lysosomal/late endosomal phospholipid lyso-bisphosphatidic acid (LBPA) (also known as bismonoacylglycerol phosphate). Finally, we found that the rate of transfer of cholesterol from vesicles to NPC2 was dramatically increased by the presence of lyso-bisphosphatidic acid in the donor vesicles. These results support a role for the NPC2 protein in the egress of LDL derived cholesterol out of the endosomal/lysosomal compartment.  相似文献   

13.
A lipid transfer protein, purified from bovine brain (23.7 kDa, 208 amino acids) and specific for glycolipids, has been used to develop a fluorescence resonance energy transfer assay (anthrylvinyl-labeled lipids; energy donors and perylenoyl-labeled lipids; energy acceptors) for monitoring the transfer of lipids between membranes. Small unilamellar vesicles composed of 1 mol% anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide, 1.5 mol% perylenoyl-triglyceride, and 97.5% 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl phosphatidylcholine (POPC) served as donor membranes. Acceptor membranes were 100% POPC vesicles. Addition of glycolipid transfer protein to mixtures of donor and acceptor vesicles resulted in increasing emission intensity of anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide and decreasing emission intensity of the nontransferable perylenoyl-triglyceride as a function of time. The behavior was consistent with anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide being transferred from donor to acceptor vesicles. The anthrylvinyl and perylenoyl energy transfer pair offers advantages over frequently used energy transfer pairs such as NBD and rhodamine. The anthrylvinyl emission overlaps effectively the perylenoyl excitation spectrum and the fluorescence parameters of the anthrylvinyl fluorophore are nearly independent of the medium polarity. The nonpolar fluorophores are localized in the hydrophobic region of the bilayer thus producing minimal disturbance of the bilayer polar region. Our results indicate that this method is suitable for assay of lipid transfer proteins including mechanistic studies of transfer protein function.  相似文献   

14.
Bovine liver phospholipid exchange protein catalyzes the transfer of phosphatidylcholine between donor and acceptor populations of single bilayer phospholipid vesicles. In comparing egg and dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine vesicles, larger transfer rates are found for the unsaturated phospholipid. The bidirectional transfer rates measured from donor to acceptor and from acceptor to donor, are equivalent, suggesting that the protein facilitates an exchange rather than a net transfer of phosphatidylcholine.  相似文献   

15.
Trafficking and sorting of lipids during transport from the endoplasmic reticulum to the Golgi apparatus was studied using a cell-free system from rat liver. Transitional elements of the endoplasmic reticulum were prepared from liver slices prelabeled with [14C]- or [3H]acetate as the donor fraction. Non-radioactive Golgi apparatus were immobilized on nitrocellulose as the acceptor. When reconstituted, the radiolabeled donor retained a capacity to transfer labeled lipids to the non-radioactive Golgi apparatus acceptor. Transfer exhibited two kinetically different components. One was stimulated by ATP, facilitated by cytosol and inhibited by guanosine 5'-O-(thiotriphosphate) and N-ethylmaleimide. In parallel with protein transport, the ATP-dependent lipid transfer occurred with a temperature transition at about 20 degrees C. The other was not stimulated by ATP, did not require cytosol, was acceptor unspecific, was unaffected by inhibitors and, while temperature dependent, did not exhibit a sharp temperature transition. The ATP-independent transfer was non-vesicular. In contrast, the ATP-dependent transfer was vesicular. Transition vesicles isolated by preparative free-flow electrophoresis, when used as the donor fraction, transferred lipids to Golgi apparatus acceptor with a 5-6-fold greater efficiency than that exhibited by the unfractionated transitional endoplasmic reticulum. Formation of transition vesicles was ATP-dependent. Transferred lipids were chiefly phosphatidylcholine and cholesterol. Membrane triglycerides, major constituents of the transitional endoplasmic reticulum membranes, were both depleted in the transition vesicle-enriched fractions and not transferred to Golgi apparatus suggestive of lipid sorting prior to or during transition vesicle formation. The characteristics of the ATP plus cytosol-dependent transfer were similar to those for protein transfer mediated by transition vesicles. Thus, the 50-70-nm vesicles derived from transitional endoplasmic reticulum appear to function in the trafficking of both newly synthesized proteins and lipids from the endoplasmic reticulum to the Golgi apparatus.  相似文献   

16.
The mammalian glycolipid transfer protein, GLTP, catalyzes the transfer in vitro of glycolipids between membranes. In this study we have examined on one hand the effect of the variations in the donor vesicle composition and on the other hand the effects of variations in the acceptor vesicle composition on the GLTP-catalyzed transfer kinetics of galactosylceramide between bilayer vesicles. For this purpose a resonance energy transfer assay was used, the energy donor being anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide and the energy acceptor DiO-C16. First, we show that the transfer of anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide from palmitoyl-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine donor vesicles was faster than from dipalmitoyl-phosphatidylcholine vesicles, and that there is no transfer from palmitoyl-sphingomyelin vesicles regardless of the cholesterol amount. In this setup the acceptor vesicles were always 100% palmitoyl-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine. We also showed that the transfer in general is faster from small highly curved vesicles compared to that from larger vesicles. Secondly, by varying the acceptor vesicle composition we showed that the transfer is faster to mixtures of sphingomyelin and cholesterol compared to mixtures of phosphatidylcholines and cholesterol. Based on these experiments we conclude that the GLTP mediated transfer of anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide is sensitive to the matrix lipid composition and membrane bending. We postulate that a tightly packed membrane environment is most effective in preventing GLTP from accessing its substrates, and cholesterol is not required to protect the glycosphingolipid in the membrane from being transferred by GLTP. On the other hand GLTP can more easily transfer glycolipids to 'lipid raft' like membranes, suggesting that the protein could be involved in raft assembly.  相似文献   

17.
Proteins in the postmicrosomal supernatant fraction of rat brain catalyzed the transfer of bovine brain galactocerebroside, sulfatide, and ganglioside GM1 from unilamellar liposomes to the rat erythrocytes or ghosts. The vesicles were made with egg yolk lecithin, cholesterol, 3H-labelled glycolipid, and a trace of [14C]triolein as a nonexchangeable marker. The routine assay of the glycosphingolipid transfer consisted of incubation of the donor liposomes with erythrocytes in the presence or absence of supernatant protein in physiological buffer at 37 degrees C for various time intervals. After the incubation, the erythrocytes were separated from the vesicles by centrifugation and the extent of protein-catalyzed transfer of labelled glycolipid in the membrane-bound total lipid fraction was determined by scintillation spectrometry. The fraction of [3H]glycosphingolipid transferred is represented by a change in the 3H/14C ratios at initial and subsequent time intervals. The glycosphingolipid transfer catalyzed by the supernatant protein was found to be logarithmic, whereas the protein-independent transfer was linear over a period of 3-4 h. The rate constant (K) and half time (t1/2) of the protein-catalyzed transfer reaction of cerebrosides and sulfatides were almost the same, while the transfer of ganglioside GM1 occurred at a slightly faster rate, probably owing to the greater aqueous solubility of this lipid. The transfer activity was also increased in a manner dependent on the amount of supernatant protein added up to 10 mg. The catalytic activity of the protein was lost when heated at 70 degrees C for 5 min. The pH optimum of the activity was around 7.4.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Microsomal triglyceride transfer protein (MTP) is critical for the assembly and secretion of apolipoprotein B (apoB) lipoproteins. Its activity is classically measured by incubating purified MTP or cellular homogenates with donor vesicles containing radiolabeled lipids, precipitating the donor vesicles, and measuring the radioactivity transferred to acceptor vesicles. Here, we describe a simple, rapid, and sensitive fluorescence assay for MTP. In this assay, purified MTP or cellular homogenates are incubated with small unilamellar donor vesicles containing quenched fluorescent lipids (triacylglycerols, cholesteryl esters, and phospholipids) and different types of acceptor vesicles made up of phosphatidylcholine or phosphatidylcholine and triacylglycerols. Increases in fluorescence attributable to MTP-mediated lipid transfer are measured after 30 min. MTP's lipid transfer activity could be assayed using apoB lipoproteins but not with high density lipoproteins as acceptors. The assay was used to measure MTP activity in cell and tissue homogenates. Furthermore, the assay was useful in studying the inhibition of the cellular as well as purified MTP by its antagonists. This new method is amenable to automation and can be easily adopted for large-scale, high-throughput screening.  相似文献   

19.
A lipid transfer protein that facilitates the transfer of glycolipids between donor and acceptor membranes has been investigated using a fluorescence resonance energy transfer assay. The glycolipid transfer protein (23-24 kDa, pI 9.0) catalyzes the high specificity transfer of lipids that have sugars beta-linked to either a ceramide or a diacylglycerol backbone, such as simple glycolipids and gangliosides, but not the transfer of phospholipids, cholesterol, or cholesterol esters. In this study, we examined the effect of different charged lipids on the rate of transfer of anthrylvinyl-labeled galactosylceramide (1 mol %) from a donor to acceptor vesicle population at neutral pH. Compared to neutral donor vesicle membranes, introduction of negatively charged lipid at 5 or 10 mol % into the donor vesicles significantly decreased the transfer rate. Introduction of the same amount of negative charge into the acceptor vesicle membrane did not impede the transfer rate as effectively. Also, positive charge in the donor vesicle membrane was not as effective at slowing the transfer rate as was negative charge in the donor vesicle. Increasing the ionic strength of the buffer with NaCl significantly reversed the charge effects. At neutral pH, the transfer protein (pI congruent with 9.0) is expected to be positively charged, which may promote association with the negatively charged donor membrane. Based on these and other experiments, we conclude that the transfer process follows first-order kinetics and that the off-rate of the transfer protein from the donor vesicle surface is the rate-limiting step in the transfer process.  相似文献   

20.
The mammalian glycolipid transfer protein, GLTP, catalyzes the transfer in vitro of glycolipids between membranes. In this study we have examined on one hand the effect of the variations in the donor vesicle composition and on the other hand the effects of variations in the acceptor vesicle composition on the GLTP-catalyzed transfer kinetics of galactosylceramide between bilayer vesicles. For this purpose a resonance energy transfer assay was used, the energy donor being anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide and the energy acceptor DiO-C16. First, we show that the transfer of anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide from palmitoyl-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine donor vesicles was faster than from dipalmitoyl-phosphatidylcholine vesicles, and that there is no transfer from palmitoyl-sphingomyelin vesicles regardless of the cholesterol amount. In this setup the acceptor vesicles were always 100% palmitoyl-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine. We also showed that the transfer in general is faster from small highly curved vesicles compared to that from larger vesicles. Secondly, by varying the acceptor vesicle composition we showed that the transfer is faster to mixtures of sphingomyelin and cholesterol compared to mixtures of phosphatidylcholines and cholesterol. Based on these experiments we conclude that the GLTP mediated transfer of anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide is sensitive to the matrix lipid composition and membrane bending. We postulate that a tightly packed membrane environment is most effective in preventing GLTP from accessing its substrates, and cholesterol is not required to protect the glycosphingolipid in the membrane from being transferred by GLTP. On the other hand GLTP can more easily transfer glycolipids to ‘lipid raft’ like membranes, suggesting that the protein could be involved in raft assembly.  相似文献   

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