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1.
A specific effect of cardiolipin on fluidity of mitochondrial membranes was demonstrated in Tetrahymena cells acclimated to a lower temperature in the previous report (Yamauchi, T., Ohki, K., Maruyama, H. and Nozawa, Y. (1981) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 649, 385–392). This study was further confirmed by the experiment using fluorescence polarization of 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene (DPH). Anisotropy of DPH for microsomal and pellicular total lipids from Tetrahymena cells showed that membrane fluidity of these lipids increased gradually as the cells were incubated at 15°C after the shift down of growth temperature from 39°C. However, membrane fluidity of mitochondrial total lipids was kept constant up to 10 h. This finding is compatible with the result obtained using spin probe in the previous report. Additionally, the break-point temperature of DPH anisotropy was not changed in mitochondrial lipids whereas those temperatures in pellicular and microsomal lipids lowered during the incubation at 15°C. Interaction between cardiolipins and various phospholipids, which were isolated from Tetrahymena cells grown at 39°C or 15°C and synthesized chemically, was investigated extensively using a spin labeling technique. The addition of cardiolipins from Tetrahymena cells grown at either 39°C or 15°C did not change the membrane fluidity (measured at 15°C) of phosphatidylcholine from whole cells grown at 39°C. On the other hand, both cardiolipins of 39°C-grown and 15°C-grown cells decreased the membrane fluidity of phosphatidylcholine from Tetrahymena cells grown at 15°C. The same results were obtained for phosphatidylcholines of mitochondria and microsomes. Membrane fluidity of phosphatidylethanolamine, isolated from cells grown at 15°C, was reduced to a small extent by Tetrahymena cardiolipin whereas that of 39°C-grown cells was not changed. Representative molecular species of phosphatidylcholines of cells grown at 39°C and 15°C were synthesized chemically; 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine for 39°C-grown cells and dipalmitoleoylphosphatidylcholine for 15°C-grown ones. By the addition of Tetrahymena cardiolipin, the membrane fluidity of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine was not changed but that of dipalmitoleoylphosphatidylcholine was decreased markedly. These phenomena were caused by Tetrahymena cardiolipin. However, bovine heart cardiolipin, which has a different composition of fatty acyl chains from the Tetrahymena one, exerted only a small effect.  相似文献   

2.
During temperature acclimation of Tetrahymena pyriformis, the changes in fluidity and composition of total lipids from three membrane fractions, mitochondria, pellicles and microsomes were studied by a spin-label technique using a stearate probe and thin-layer and gas-liquid chromatography. The increase of fluidity observed in microsomal and pellicular lipids following the temperature shift from 39 to 15 degrees C corresponds with the increase of the ratio of total unsaturated to saturated fatty acid content. However, despite the increase of this ratio, the fluidity of mitochondrial lipids was found to be constant up to 10 h after the temperature shift. The fluidity of total lipids of mitochondria isolated from Tetrahymena cells grown at 39 degrees C was not changed by removal of cardiolipin, whereas cardiolipin-depleted lipids of mitochondria from 15 degrees C-acclimated cells showed a decrease in fluidity. The re-addition of cardiolipin to the mitochondrial lipids depleted of cardiolipin restored the fluidity to the initial level, thereby confirming the rigidifying effect of cardiolipin in cold-acclimated cells. These results suggest that cardiolipin may be implicated in maintaining consistent fluidity of mitochondrial membranes against change in thermal environment.  相似文献   

3.
During temperature acclimation of Tetrahymena pyriformis, the changes in fluidity and composition of total lipids from three membrane fractions, mitochondria, pellicles and microsomes were studied by a spin-label technique using a stearate probe and thin-layer and gas-liquid chromatography. The increase of fluidity observed in microsomal and pellicular lipids following the temperature shift from 39 to 15°C corresponds with the increase of the ratio of total unsaturated to saturated fatty acid content. However, despite the increase of this ratio, the fluidity of mitochondrial lipids was found to be constant up to 10 h after the temperature shift. The fluidity of total lipids of mitochondria isolated from Tetrahymena cells grown at 39°C was not changed by removal of cardiolipin, whereas cardiolipin-depleted lipids of mitochondria from 15°C-acclimated cells showed a decrease in fluidity. The re-addition of cardiolipin to the mitochondrial lipids depleted of cardiolipin restored the fluidity to the initial leve, thereby confirming the rigidifying effect of cardiolipin in cold-acclimated cells. These results suggest that cardiolipin may be implicated in maintaining consistent fluidity of mitochondrial membranes against change in thermal environment.  相似文献   

4.
The influence of the physical state of the membrane on the swimming behaviour of Tetrahymena pyriformis was studied in cells with lipid-modified membranes. When the growth temperature of Tetrahymena cells was increased from 15 degrees C to 34 degrees C or decreased from 39 degrees C to 15 degrees C, their swimming velocity changed gradually in a similar to the adaptive change in membrane lipid composition. Therefore, such adaptive changes in swimming velocity were not observed during short exposures to a different environment. Tetrahymena cells adapted to 34 degrees C swam at 570 microns/s. On incubation at 15 degrees C these cells swam at 100 microns/s. When the temperature was increased to 34 degrees C after a 90-min incubation at 15 degrees C, the initial velocity was immediately recovered. On replacement of tetrahymanol with ergosterol, the swimming velocity of 34 degrees C-grown cells decreased to 210 microns/s, and the cells ceased to move when the temperature was decreased to 15 degrees C. To investigate the influence of the physical state of the membrane on the swimming velocity, total phospholipids were prepared from Tetrahymena cells grown under these different conditions. The fluidities of liposomes of these phospholipid were measured using stearate spin probe. The membrane fluidity of the cells cooled to 15 degrees C increased gradually during incubation at 15 degrees C. On the other hand, the fluidity of the heated cell decreased during incubation at 34 degrees C. Replacement of tetrahymanol with ergosterol decreased the membrane fluidity markedly. Consequently, a good correlation was observed between swimming velocity and membrane fluidity; as the membrane fluidity increased, the swimming velocity increased linearly up to 600 microns/s. These results provide evidence for the regulation of the swimming behaviour by physical properties of the membrane.  相似文献   

5.
Thermoplasma acidophilum, a mycoplasma-like organism, grows optimally at 56 degrees C and pH2. The low temperature extreme of growth is 37 degrees C. The plasma membrane of cells grown at 37 degrees C was isolated and characterized physicobiochemically. Membrane lipids which comprise 25% of the membrane dry weight consist mainly of two repetitively methyl-branched C40 side chains that were ether-linked to two glycerol molecules. The lipid structures were elucidated by combined gas chromatography-mass spectroscopy, direct probe mass spectroscopy and 13C NMR. 37 degrees C-grown cells contained lipids with 42% more pentane cyclization than the 56 degrees C-grown cells. In 37 degrees C-grown cells, phospholipid and serine content decreased by about 10% each, carbohydrate content increased by 5%. EPR studies demonstrated an increase in membrane lipid fluidity of 37 degrees C-grown cells with an upper transition temperature at 35 degrees C which was shifted down by 10 degrees C compared with cells grown at 56 degrees C. Membrane-bound ATPase activities also indicated similar changes upon adaptation. There is a close correlation between membrane fluidity and physiological functioning of this membrane-bound enzyme.  相似文献   

6.
Mitochondrial, microsomal and pellicular membranes were isolated from Tetrahymena cells grown at 39 degrees C or 15 degrees C, and phospholipids, in turn, were separated from total lipids extracted from these membranes. The effect of growth temperature on their solid-to-fluid phase transition temperature was examined by wide-angle X-ray diffraction. The transition temperatures of phospholipids from mitochondria, microsomes and pellicles were 21, 19 and 26 degrees C for cells grown at 39 degrees C and -8, -3 and 6 degrees C for cells grown at 15 degrees C, respectively. All phospholipids were found in a completely fluid state at these growth temperatures. From a comparison between the phospholipids and total lipids from pellicles of cells grown at 39 degrees C, a triterpenoid alcohol, tetrahymanol, caused the transition temperature to increase. The alignment of tetrahymanol in membranes was examined with pellicle'a total lipid oriented in a sample holder.  相似文献   

7.
Changes in the thermal phase transition temperature of membrane lipids were studied by X-ray wide-angle diffraction during adaptation of Tetrahymena pyriformis to a lower growth temperature. After a shift in growth temperature from 39 to 15 degrees C, the phase transition temperature was lowered gradually in microsomal and pellicular phospholipids, whereas that in mitochondrial phospholipids was unchanged for 10 h after the temperature shift. Only a small decrease in the transition temperature of mitochondrial phospholipids was observed, even after 24 h following the shift. Transition temperatures of microsomal, pellicular and mitochondrial phospholipids reached the growth temperature (15 degrees C) about 6, 10 and 24 h after the temperature shift. The temperature dependence of the solid phase in membrane phospholipids was estimated from the 4.2 A peak of the X-ray diffraction pattern. In the case of the phospholipids extracted from cells grown at 39 degrees C, the solid phase was increased upon lowering temperature in a similar manner in all three membrane fractions: mitochondria, pellicles and microsomes. However, in the case of the phospholipids from cells exposed to a lower growth temperature (15 degrees C) for 10 h, the increase in the solid phase was significantly smaller in mitochondrial phospholipids than in two other membrane fractions. The difference in the thermal behaviour of mitochondrial lipid from pellicular and microsomal lipids is discussed in terms of phase transition and phase separation.  相似文献   

8.
Sphingolipids make up 30 to 40 mole % of the phospholipids found in the surface membrane of Tetrahymena pyriformis NT-1. We have identified the two major classes as non-hydroxy fatty acid-containing ceramide-2-aminoethylphosphonate (NCAEP) and alpha-hydroxy fatty acid-containing ceramide-2-aminoethylphosphonate (HCAEP). Both classes were well represented in cells grown at 39 degrees C. At this temperature their principal long chain bases were n-hexadeca-4-sphingenine and n-nonadeca-4-sphingenine. The major fatty acid of NCAEP from 39 degrees C-grown cells was palmitic acid and that of HCAEP was alpha-hydroxypalmitic acid. Cells grown at 15 degrees C contained NCAEP, but only traces of HCAEP. By analyzing the incorporation of [1-14C]palmitic acid into cells growing isothermally or shifted from 15 degrees C to 39 degrees C, we obtained evidence favoring a direct conversion of NCAEP to HCAEP. This conversion was blocked in cells grown at 15 degrees C, causing an accumulation of NCAEP. Tetrahymena is a useful model system for studying the poorly understood alpha-hydroxylation process that is of critical importance in myelination of animal nervous tissues.  相似文献   

9.
C E Martin  D C Foyt 《Biochemistry》1978,17(17):3587-3591
Measurement of the time-resolved fluorescence depolarization of 1,6-diphenylhexatriene (DPH) in artificial bilayers of microsomal membrane lipids from Tetrahymena gives detailed information concerning the molecular motion of this probe and fluid properties of the membrane lipids which are obscured with steady-state methods. The rotational motion of DPH in these lipids from cells acclimated to 15 and 39.5 degrees C growth temperatures was anisotropic, which agrees with recent time-resolved studies of this probe in synthetic phospholipid systems. Evaluation of DPH polarization data obtained from these lipid fractions at their respective growth temperatures showed differences in physical properties which suggest that "viscosity", per se, of the microsomal lipids is not a strictly regulated as it is in prokaryotic systems. Rotational relaxation of DPH in 39.5 degrees C microsomal lipids measured at 15 degrees C is more complex than that of either lipid fraction measured at its actual growth temperature, suggesting that the probe has partitioned into two dissimilar environments within the bilayer. Similar effects are observed in the microsomes of 39.5 degrees C cells by freeze-fracture electron microscopy following rapid cooling to 15 degrees C. Under these conditions, two distinct regions are observed on the fracture faces, suggesting a correlation between lipid phase changes and alterations in membrane structure.  相似文献   

10.
The fatty acid distribution pattern of lipids extracted from different subcellular components of Tetrahymena pyriformis was found to be significantly different from one type of membrane to another.The growth-temperature shift caused alterations in fatty acid composition. The ratio of palmitoleic to palmitic acid, especially, showed a sharp linear decline with increase of temperature in all of the membrane fractions.The spin labels were rapidly incorporated into Tetrahymena membranes. The order parameter of 5-nitroxide stearate spin label incorporated into various membrane fractions was found to be different for the different membrane fractions, suggesting the following order of the fluidity; microsomes > pellicles > cilia.The fluidity of the surface membranes, cilia and pellicles isolated from Tetrahymena cells grown at 15°C was noticeably higher than that of the membranes from cells grown at 34°C but was not so different with microsomal fractions.The motion of the spin label in the pellicular membrane was more restricted than in its extracted lipids, thus indicating the assumption that in Tetrahymena membranes the proteins influence the fluidity.It was also suggested that a sterol-like triterpenoid compound, tetrahymanol, which is principally localized in the surface membranes, would be involved in the membrane fluidity.  相似文献   

11.
The swimming velocity and the amplitude of the helical swimming path of T. pyriformis-NT1 cells grown at 20 degrees C (Tg 20 degrees C) and 38 degrees C (Tg 38 degrees C) were monitored between 0 and 40 degrees C in the presence and absence of electric fields. Within physiological limits the swimming velocity increased and the amplitude decreased as temperature was raised. The temperature profiles of these properties were not linear, and showed discontinuities at different temperatures for the different cultures. The break points in Arrhenius plots of the resting potential, regenerative spike magnitude, repolarization time, swimming velocity and swimming amplitude are tabulated and compared. The initial breakpoints upon cooling were clustered about the breakpoints in fluorescence polarization of D.P.H. in extracted phospholipids, and around the transition temperatures estimated from the literature for the pellicular membrane of these cells. The average of the initial breakpoints on cooling was 22.9 degrees C for Tg 38 degrees C cells and 13.7 degrees C for Tg 20 degrees C cells, a shift of 9.2 degrees C. Unlike Paramecium there is no depolarizing receptor potential in Tetrahymena upon warming. It is suggested that this may be the basis of a behavioural difference between Tetrahymena and Paramecium--namely that in Tetrahymena maximum swimming velocity occurs above growth temperature whereas in Paramecium the two points coincide. Swimming velocity and resting potential were correlated with membrane fluidity within physiological limits, but for other parameters the relationship with fluidity was more complex.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Steady-state fluorescence polarization measurements of 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene in microsomal lipids from Tetrahymena pyriformis cells grown at 39 or 15°C revealed discrete slope discontinuities in plots of polarization vs. temperature. Two well-defined ‘break points’ were present in the 0–40°C temperature range examined and their precise location was dependent upon the growth temperature of the cells. By mixing phospholipids from cells grown at different temperatures, the break points at 17.5 and 32°C in 39°C-lipid multilayer preparations were shown to correlate with the breaks at 12 and 27°C, respectively, in similar preparations from 15°C-grown cells. The discrete break points were also present, but at slightly different characteristic temperatures, in a phosphatidylcholine fraction and a phosphatidylethanolamine plus 2-aminoethylphosphonolipid fraction purified from the phospholipids and in total microsomal lipids (phospholipids plus the sterol-like triterpenoid, tetrahymanol). However, catalytic hydrogenation of the phospholipid fatty acids or mixing the non-hydrogenated phospholipids with increasing proportions of synthetic dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine eliminated the break points. We interpret this discontinuous thermotropic response in microsomal lipids as signalling a lipid phase separation of importance in regulating physiological events.  相似文献   

13.
The ciliary membrane of Tetrahymena pyriformis is physically and metabolically remote from the main centers of lipid metabolism. Nevertheless, it possesses an independent capacity to modify its phospholipid molecular species composition rapidly under stress. The role of ciliary phospholipid deacylating and reacylating enzymes in this phenomenon has been evaluated. Isolated cilia showed substantial phospholipase A (combined A1 and A2), acyl-CoA synthetase and acyltransferase activities. Activities of all the three enzymes of cilia from 39 degrees C-grown cells were greatly reduced when the cilia were incubated at 15 degrees C. In contrast, the phospholipase A and acyltransferase activities in cilia from 15 degrees C-grown cells were surprisingly high at 15 degrees C and twice as high at 37 degrees C as were the equivalent activities in preparations from 39 degrees C-grown cells. While the in vivo substrate specificity of phospholipase A could not be meaningfully assessed, the acyltransferases exhibited a temperature-dependent substrate specificity in vivo. Growth temperature also affected the positional distribution of fatty acids incorporated into ciliary phospholipids in vivo. The ability of acyltransferases to utilize added [14C] acyl-CoA could be markedly stimulated, and their lipid class specificity could be significantly altered in vitro by supplementing the incubation mixture with exogenous lysophospholipid acceptors. These findings suggest that the rate-limiting factor in acyl chain turnover is not the activity of acyltransferases per se but rather the availability of suitable substrates and acceptors. Therefore, we postulate that temperature alters the rate and specificity of ciliary membrane phospholipid retailoring primarily by controlling the in situ phospholipase A activity.  相似文献   

14.
The influence of the physical state of the membrane on the swimming behaviour of Tetrahymena pyriformis was studied in cells with lipid-modified membranes. When the growth temperature of Tetrahymena cells was increased from 15°C to 34°C or decreased from 39°C to 15°C, their swimming velocity changed gradually in a similar to the adaptive change in membrane lipid composition. Therefore, such adaptive changes in swimming velocity were not observed during short exposures to a different environment. Tetrahymena cells adapted to 34°C swam at 570 μm/s. On incubation at 15°C these cells swam at 100 μm/s. When the temperature was increased to 34°C after a 90-min incubation at 15°C, the initial velocity was immediately recovered. On replacement of tetrahymanol with ergosterol, the swimming velocity of 34°C-grown cells decreased to 210 μm/s, and the cells ceased to move when the temperature was decreased to 15°C. To investigate the influence of the physical state of the membrane on the swimming velocity, total phospholipids were prepared from Tetrahymena cells grown under these different conditions. The fluidities of liposomes of these phospholipid were measured using stearate spin probe. The membrane fluidity of the cells cooled to 15°C increased gradually during incubation at 15°C. On the other hand, the fluidity of the heated cell decreased during incubation at 34°C. Replacement of tetrahymanol with ergosterol decreased the membrane fluidity markedly. Consequently, a good correlation was observed between swimming velocity and membrane fluidity; as the membrane fluidity increased, the swimming velocity increased linearly up to 600 μm/s. These results provide evidence for the regulation of the swimming behaviour by physical properties of the membrane.  相似文献   

15.
C E Martin  G A Thompson 《Biochemistry》1978,17(17):3581-3586
Fluorescence polarization of 1,6-diphenylhexatriene (DPH) was used to study the effects of temperature acclimation on Tetrahymena membranes. The physical properties of membrane lipids were found to be highly dependent on cellular growth temperature. DPH polarization in lipids from three different membrane fractions correlated well with earlier freeze-fracture and electron spin resonance observations showing that membrane fluidity progressively decreases in the order microsomes greater than pellicles greater than cilia throughout a wide range of growth temperatures. Changes in membrane lipid fluidity following a shift from high to low growth temperatures proceed rapidly in the microsomes, whereas there is a pronounced lag in the changes of peripheral cell membrane lipids. These data support previous observations that adaptive changes in membrane fluidity proceed via lipid modifications in the endoplasmic reticulum, followed by dissemination of lipid components to other cell membranes. The rapid changes in polarization observed in the microsomal lipids following a temperature shift correspond closely with the time-dependent alterations in both lipid fatty acid composition and freeze-fracture patterns of membrane particle distribution, suggesting that, in the endoplasmic reticulum, lipid phase separation is the primary cause of membrane particle rearrangements.  相似文献   

16.
Mammalian cell metabolism is responding to changes in temperature. Body temperature is regulated around 37 degrees C, but temperatures of exposed skin areas may vary between 20 degrees C and 40 degrees C for extended periods of time without apparent disturbance of adequate cellular functions. Cellular membrane functions are depending from temperatures but also from their lipid environment, which is a major component of membrane fluidity. Temperature-induced changes of membrane fluidity may be counterbalanced by adaptive modification of membrane lipids. Temperature-dependent changes of whole cell- and of purified membrane lipids and possible homeoviscous adaptation of membrane fluidity have been studied in human skin fibroblasts cultured at 30 degrees C, 37 degrees C, and 40 degrees C for ten days. Membrane anisotropy was measured by polarized fluorescence spectroscopy using TMA-DPH for superficial and DPH for deeper membrane layers. Human fibroblasts were able to adapt themselves to hypothermic temperatures (30 degrees C) by modifying the fluidity of the deeper apolar regions of the plasma membranes as reported by changes of fluorescence anisotropy due to appropriate changes of their plasma membrane lipid composition. This could not be shown for the whole cells. At 40 degrees C growth temperature, adaptive changes of the membrane lipid composition, except for some changes in fatty acid compositions, were not seen. Independent from the changes of the membrane lipid composition, the fluorescence anisotropy of the more superficial membrane layers (TMA-DPH) increased in cells growing at 30 degrees C and decreased in cells growing at 40 degrees C.  相似文献   

17.
The protein composition of the outer membrane of Yersinia pestis grown at 26 and at 37 degrees C was examined. The outer membrane was isolated by isopycnic sucrose density centrifugation, and its degree of purity was determined with known inner and outer membrane components. Using two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, we identified a large number of heat-modifiable proteins in the outer membrane of cells grown at either incubation temperature. One-dimensional sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of heated preparations indicated five proteins in the outer membrane of 37 degrees C-grown cells not evident in 26 degrees C-grown cells. Differences in the protein composition of the outer membrane due to the stage of growth were evident at both 26 degrees C and 37 degrees C, although different changes were found at each temperature. When cell envelopes were examined for the presence of peptidoglycan-associated proteins, no differences were seen as a result of stage of growth. Envelopes from 26 degrees C-grown cells yielded two peptidoglycan-associated proteins, E and J. Cells grown at 37 degrees C, however, also contained an additional protein (F) which was not found in either the bound or free form 26 degrees C. The changes in outer membrane protein composition in response to incubation temperature may relate to known nutritional and antigenic changes which occur under the same conditions.  相似文献   

18.
It has been recently shown that mitochondrial creatine kinase (mtCK) organizes mitochondrial model membrane by modulating the state and fluidity of lipids and by promoting the formation of protein-cardiolipin clusters. This report shows, using Brewster angle microscopy, that such clustering is largely dependent on the acyl chain composition of phospholipids. Indeed, mtCK-cardiolipin domains were observed not only with unsaturated cardiolipins, but also with the cardiolipin precursor phosphatidylglycerol. On the other hand, in the case of saturated dimyristoylphosphatidylglycerol and tetramyristoylcardiolipin, mtCK was homogeneously distributed underneath the monolayer. However, an overall decrease in membrane fluidity was indicated by infrared spectroscopy as well as by extrinsic fluorescence spectroscopy using Laurdan as a fluorescent probe, both for tetramyristoylcardiolipin and bovine heart cardiolipin containing liposomes. The binding mechanism implicated the insertion of protein segments into monolayers, as evidenced from alternative current polarography, regardless of the chain unsaturation for the phosphatidylglycerols and cardiolipins tested.  相似文献   

19.
Radiation damage to K+ permeability of an unsaturated fatty acid auxotroph of E. coli grown with oleate or linolenate was investigated at different temperatures. A remarkable effect of radiation was observed at 0 degrees C with cells that had been grown with linolenate at 42 degrees C. This indicates that, besides protein, membrane lipids at least are involved in the radiation damage. The damage also seems to be affected by the fluidity of membrane lipids.  相似文献   

20.
B F Dickens  G A Thompson 《Biochemistry》1980,19(22):5029-5037
Fluorescence measurements of the probe 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene in native Tetrahymena pyriformis microsomal membranes revealed characteristic "break points" in curves of polarization vs. temperature. In the 5--35 degree C range, membranes from cells grown at 39 degrees C exhibited two break points, one at 11.6 +/- 0.6 degrees C and another at 23.1 +/- 1.6 degrees C. Membranes from 15 degrees C grown cells also showed two break points, one at 8.0 +/- 1.7 degrees C and another at 17.7 +/- 1.7 degrees C. Complementary measurements of turbidity (absorbance at 360 nm) vs. temperature revealed break points at approximately the same temperatures as observed with the fluorescent probe, thus strengthening the likelihood that the break points signify the onset or termination of lipid phase separations or some other significant structural alteration of lipids. In general, break points measured in the native membrane samples occurred at slightly lower temperatures than did break points in lipids extracted from comparable membranes. This suggests two possible types of protein--lipid interaction. First, there may be a selective withdrawal of relatively highly saturated phospholipid molecular species from the bulk lipid phase and into protein annulus regions. Alternatively, the configuration of the hydrophobic core of certain key membrane proteins may be such that nonspecific interactions with the lipids stabilize the liquid-crystalline phase.  相似文献   

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