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1.
Calcium-induced fusion of liposomes was studied with a view to understand the role of membrane tension in this process. Lipid mixing due to fusion was monitored by following fluorescence of rhodamine-phosphatidyl-ethanolamine incorporated into liposomal membrane at a self-quenching concentration. The extent of lipid mixing was found to depend on the rate of calcium addition: at slow rates it was significantly lower than when calcium was injected instantly. The vesicle inner volume was then made accessible to external calcium by adding calcium ionophore A23187. No effect on fusion was observed at high rates of calcium addition while at slow rates lipid mixing was eliminated. Fusion of labeled vesicles with a planar phospholipid membrane (BLM) was studied using fluorescence microscopy. Above a threshold concentration specific for each ion, Ca2+, Mg2+, Cd2+ and La3+ induce fusion of both charged and neutral membranes. The threshold calcium concentration required for fusion was found to be dependent on the vesicle charge, but not on the BLM charge. Pretreatment of vesicles with ionophore and calcium inhibited vesicle fusion with BLM. This effect was reversible: chelation of calcium prior to the application of vesicle to BLM completely restored their ability to fuse. These results support the hypothesis that tension in the outer monolayer of lipid vesicle is a primary reason for membrane destabilization promoting membrane fusion. How this may be a common mechanism for both purely lipidic and protein-mediated membrane fusion is discussed. Received: 27 September 1999/Revised: 22 March 2000  相似文献   

2.
The interaction and mixing of membrane components in sonicated unilamellar vesicles and also non-sonicated multilamellar vesicles prepared from highly purified phospholipids suspended in NaCl solutions has been examined. Electron microscopy and differential scanning calorimetry were used to characterize the extent and kinetics of mixing of membrane components between different vesicle populations. No appreciable fusion was detected between populations of non-sonicated phospholipid vesicles incubated in aqueous salt (NaCl) solutions. Mixing of vesicle membrane components via diffusion of phospholipid molecules between vesicles was observed in populations of negatively charged phosphatidylglycerol vesicles but similar exchange diffusion was not detected in populations of neutral phosphatidylcholine vesicles. Incubation of sonicated vesicle populations at temperatures close to or above the phospholipid transition temperature resulted in an increase in vesicle size and mixing of vesicle membrane components as determined by a gradual change in the thermotropic properties of the mixed vesicle population. The interaction of purified phospholipid vesicles was also examined in the presence of myristic acid and lysolecithin. Our results indicate that while these agents enhance mixing of vesicle membrane components, in most cases mixing probably proceeds via diffusion of phospholipid molecules rather than by fusion of entire vesicles. Increased mixing of vesicle membrane components was also produced when vesicles were prepared containing a purified hydrophobic protein (myelin proteolipid apoprotein) or were incubated in the presence of dimethylsulfoxide. In these two systems, however, the evidence suggests that mixing of membrane components results from the fusion of entire vesicles.  相似文献   

3.
To investigate the role of membrane proteins in the fusion process, linear hydrophobic polypeptide gramicidin was used as fusogenic agent in small unilamellar vesicles (SUV) constituted of saturated lecithins. It was found that gramicidin, externally added to a suspension of vesicles, induces a reversible vesicles aggregation. When incorporated into the bilayer, gramicidin induces increase in vesicle size. The vesicle size increase was monitored by column chromatography and transmission electron microscopy. The process of vesicle size increase occurs only when the lipid membrane is in the gel state. A maximum is observed in the kinetics at a temperature of approx. 25 degrees C lower than the phase transition temperature of lipids. Higher rates of vesicle size increase are obtained as the lipid chain length increases. The process is accompanied by a release of internal vesicle content and by membrane lipid mixing.  相似文献   

4.
Haque ME  Lentz BR 《Biochemistry》2002,41(35):10866-10876
The fusion peptide of the HIV fusion protein gp41 is required for viral fusion and entry into a host cell, but it is unclear whether this 23-residue peptide can fuse model membranes. We address this question for model membrane vesicles in the presence and absence of aggregating concentrations of poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG). PEG had no effect on the physical properties of peptide bound to membranes or free in solution. We tested for fusion of both highly curved and uncurved PC/PE/SM/CH (35:30:15:20 mol %) vesicles and highly curved PC/PE/CH (1:1:1) vesicles treated with peptide in the presence and absence of PEG. Fusion was never observed in the absence of PEG, although high peptide concentrations led to aggregation and rupture, especially in unstable PC/PE/CH (1:1:1) vesicles. When 5 wt % PEG was present to aggregate vesicles, peptide enhanced the rate of lipid mixing between curved PC/PE/SM/CH vesicles in proportion to the peptide concentration, with this effect leveling off at peptide/lipid (P/L) ratios approximately 1:200. Peptide produced an even larger effect on the rate of contents mixing but inhibited contents mixing at P/L ratios >1:200. No fusion enhancement was seen with uncurved vesicles. The rate of fusion was also enhanced by the presence of hexadecane, and peptide-induced rate enhancement was not observed in the presence of hexadecane. We conclude that gp41 fusion peptide does not induce vesicle fusion at subrupturing concentrations but can enhance fusion between highly curved vesicles induced to fuse by PEG. The different effects of peptide on the rates of lipid mixing and fusion pore formation suggest that, while gp41 fusion peptide does affect hemifusion, it mainly affects pore formation.  相似文献   

5.
Nuclear envelope assembly was studied in vitro using extracts from Xenopus eggs. Nuclear-specific vesicles bound to demembranated sperm chromatin but did not fuse in the absence of cytosol. Addition of cytosol stimulated vesicle fusion, pore complex assembly, and eventual nuclear envelope growth. Vesicle binding and fusion were assayed by light and electron microscopy. Addition of ATP and GTP to bound vesicles caused limited vesicle fusion, but enclosure of the chromatin was not observed. This result suggested that nondialyzable soluble components were required for nuclear vesicle fusion. GTP gamma S and guanylyl imidodiphosphate significantly inhibited vesicle fusion but had no effect on vesicle binding to chromatin. Preincubation of membranes with 1 mM GTP gamma S or GTP did not impair vesicle binding or fusion when assayed with fresh cytosol. However, preincubation of membranes with GTP gamma S plus cytosol caused irreversible inhibition of fusion. The soluble factor mediating the inhibition by GTP gamma S, which we named GTP-dependent soluble factor (GSF), was titratable and was depleted from cytosol by incubation with excess membranes plus GTP gamma S, suggesting a stoichiometric interaction between GSF and a membrane component in the presence of GTP gamma S. In preliminary experiments, cytosol depleted of GSF remained active for fusion of chromatin-bound vesicles, suggesting that GSF may not be required for the fusion reaction itself. We propose that GTP hydrolysis is required at a step before the fusion of nuclear vesicles.  相似文献   

6.
Large unilamellar vesicles (REV) containing phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylethanolamine at a ratio of 1:3 were induced to fuse by adding calcium (4 mM). The kinetics of fusion was monitored by fluorometry using terbium or dipicolinic acid-containing vesicles. The morphology and the states of vesicle aggregation and fusion were examined at approx. 2, 30, 60, 150 and 900 s after calcium addition, by rapid quenching and freeze-fracture electron microscopy. The size and the state of aggregation of vesicles are quantitated from 4000 randomly selected vesicles. The aggregation and fusion kinetics as assayed by fluorescence volume mixing is very well simulated and predicted by the mass action model. The model essentially predicts the time course of the distribution of the aggregates and the increase in size of fused particles as measured by electron microscopy, although in some cases the predicted fusion rate exceeds that by morphometric measurement. No morphological features can be defined as fusion intermediates, although bead-like and rim-like materials may be attributed to the remnants of broken diaphragms between fusion partners.  相似文献   

7.
Sendai virus fuses efficiently with small and large unilamellar vesicles of the lipid 1,2-di-n-hexadecyloxypropyl-4- (beta-nitrostyryl) phosphate (DHPBNS) at pH 7.4 and 37 degrees C, as shown by lipid mixing assays and electron microscopy. However, fusion is strongly inhibited by oligomerization of the head groups of DHPBNS in the bilayer vesicles. The enthalpy associated with fusion of Sendai virus with DHPBNS vesicles was measured by isothermal titration microcalorimetry, comparing titrations of Sendai virus into (i) solutions of DHPBNS vesicles (which fuse with the virus) and (ii) oligomerized DHPBNS vesicles (which do not fuse with the virus), respectively. The observed heat effect of fusion of Sendai virus with DHPBNS vesicles is strongly dependent on the buffer medium, reflecting a partial charge neutralization of the Sendai F and HN proteins upon insertion into the negatively-charged vesicle membrane. No buffer effect was observed for the titration of Sendai virus into oligomerized DHPBNS vesicles, indicating that inhibition of fusion is a result of inhibition of insertion of the fusion protein into the target membrane. Fusion of Sendai virus with DHPBNS vesicles is endothermic and entropy-driven. The positive enthalpy term is dominated by heat effects resulting from merging of the protein-rich viral envelope with the lipid vesicle bilayers rather than by the fusion of the viral with the vesicle bilayers per se.  相似文献   

8.
We have investigated the initial kinetics of Ca2+-induced aggregation and fusion of phosphatidylserine large unilamellar vesicles at 3, 5 and 10 mM Ca2+ and 15, 25 and 35 degrees C, utilizing the Tb/dipicolinate (Tb/DPA) assay for mixing of aqueous vesicle contents and a resonance energy transfer (RET) assay for mixing of bilayer lipids. Separate rate constants for vesicle aggregation as well as deaggregation and for the fusion reaction itself were determined by analysis of the data in terms of a mass action kinetic model. At 15 degrees C the aggregation rate constants for either assay are the same, indicating that at this temperature all vesicle aggregation events that result in lipid mixing lead to mixing of aqueous contents as well. By contrast, at 35 degrees C the RET aggregation rate constants are higher than the Tb/DPA aggregation rate constants, indicating a significant frequency of reversible vesicle aggregation events that do result in mixing of bilayer lipids, but not in mixing of aqueous vesicle contents. In any conditions, the RET fusion rate constants are considerably higher than the Tb/DPA fusion rate constants, demonstrating the higher tendency of the vesicles, once aggregated, to mix lipids than to mix aqueous contents. This possibly reflects the formation of an intermediate fusion structure. With increasing Ca2+ concentrations the RET and the Tb/DPA fusion rate constants increase in parallel with the respective aggregation rate constants. This suggests that fusion susceptibility is conferred on the vesicles during the process of vesicle aggregation and not solely as a result of the interaction of Ca2+ with isolated vesicles. Aggregation of the vesicles in the presence of Mg2+ produces neither mixing of aqueous vesicle contents nor mixing of bilayer lipids.  相似文献   

9.
alpha-Sarcin is a fungal cytotoxic protein that inactivates the eukaryotic ribosomes. A kinetic study of the aggregation and lipid mixing promoted by this protein on phosphatidylglycerol (PG) and phosphatidylserine (PS) vesicles has been performed. Egg yolk PG, bovine brain PS, dimyristoyl-PG (DMPG) and dimyristoyl-PS (DMPS) vesicles have been considered. The initial rates of the vesicle aggregation induced by the protein have been measured by stopped-flow 90 degrees light scattering. The formation of a vesicle dimer as the initial step of this process was deduced from the second-order dependence of the initial rates on phospholipid concentration. The highest alpha-sarcin concentration studied did not inhibit the vesicle aggregation, indicating that many protein molecules are involved in the vesicle cross-linking. These are common characteristics of the initial steps of the aggregation produced by alpha-sarcin in the four types of phospholipid vesicles considered. However, the kinetics of the scattering values revealed that more complex changes occurred in the later steps of the aggregation process of egg PG and brain PS vesicles than in those of their synthetic counterparts. alpha-Sarcin produced lipid mixing in vesicles composed of DMPG or DMPS, which was measured by fluorescence resonance energy transfer assays. A delay in the onset of the process, dependent on the protein concentration, was observed. Measurement of the rates of lipid mixing revealed that the process is first order on phospholipid concentration. Egg PG and brain PS vesicles did not show lipid mixing, although they avidly aggregated. However, alpha-sarcin was able to promote lipid mixing in heterogeneous systems composed of egg PG+DMPG or brain PS+DMPS vesicles.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
The fusogenic properties of gramicidin were investigated by using large unilamellar dioleoylphosphatidylcholine vesicles. It is shown that gramicidin induces aggregation and fusion of these vesicles at peptide to lipid molar ratios exceeding 1/100. Both intervesicle lipid mixing and mixing of aqueous contents were demonstrated. Furthermore, increased static and dynamic light scattering and a broadening of 31P NMR signals occurred concomitant with lipid mixing. Freeze-fracture electron microscopy revealed a moderate vesicle size increase. Lipid mixing is paralleled by changes in membrane permeability: small solutes like carboxyfluorescein and smaller dextrans, FD-4(Mr approximately 4000), rapidly (1-2 min) leak out of the vesicles. However, larger molecules like FD-10 and FD-17 (Mr approximately 9400 and 17,200) are retained in the vesicles for greater than 10 min after addition of gramicidin, thereby making detection of contents mixing during lipid mixing possible. At low lipid concentrations (5 microM), lipid mixing and leakage are time resolved: leakage of CF shows a lag phase of 1-3 min, whereas lipid mixing is immediate and almost reaches completion during this lag phase. It is therefore concluded that leakage, just as contents mixing, occurs subsequent to aggregation and lipid mixing. Although addition of gramicidin at a peptide/lipid molar ratio exceeding 1/50 eventually leads to hexagonal HII phase formation and a loss of vesicle contents, it is concluded that leakage during fusion (1-2 min) is not the result of HII phase formation but is due to local changes in lipid structure caused by precursors of this phase. By making use of gramicidin derivatives and different solvent conformations, it is shown that there is a close parallel between the ability of the peptide to induce the HII phase and its ability to induce intervesicle lipid mixing and leakage. It is suggested that gramicidin-induced fusion and HII phase formation share common intermediates.  相似文献   

11.
The interactions of unilamellar vesicles containing phosphatidylcholine (PC) and phosphatidic acid (PA) in the presence of calcium and magnesium were examined by fluorometric assays of vesicle lipid mixing, contents mixing, and contents leakage and by spray-freezing freeze-fracture electron microscopy. These results were correlated with calorimetric and fluorometric measurements of divalent cation induced lateral segregation of lipids in these vesicles under comparable conditions. PA-PC vesicles in the presence of calcium show a rapid but limited intermixing of vesicle lipids and contents, the extent of which increases as the vesicle size decreases or the PA content increases. Calcium produces massive aggregation and efficient mixing of the contents of vesicles containing high proportions of dioleoyl-PA or egg PA, but vesicle coalescence in the latter case is followed rapidly by vesicle collapse and massive leakage of contents. The effects of magnesium are similar for vesicles of very high PA content. However, in the presence of magnesium, vesicles containing lower amounts of PA exhibit "hemifusion", a mode of interaction in which vesicles aggregate and mix approximately 50% of their lipids, apparently representing the lipids of the outer monolayer of each vesicle, without significant mixing of vesicle contents or collapse of the vesicles. Fluorometric measurements of lipid lateral segregation demonstrate that lateral redistribution of lipids in PA-PC vesicles begins at submillimolar concentrations of divalent cations and shows no abrupt change at the "threshold" divalent cation concentration, above which coalescence of vesicles is observed. By correlating calorimetric and fluorometric measurements of lipid lateral segregation and mixing of vesicle components, we can demonstrate that lipid segregation is at least strongly correlated with calcium-promoted coalescence of PA-PC vesicles and is essential to the magnesium-promoted interactions of vesicles of low PA contents.  相似文献   

12.
Tear proteins are supplied by the regulated fusion of secretory vesicles at the apical surface of lacrimal gland acinar cells, utilizing trafficking mechanisms largely yet uncharacterized. We investigated the role of Rab27b in the terminal release of these secretory vesicles. Confocal fluorescence microscopy analysis of primary cultured rabbit lacrimal gland acinar cells revealed that Rab27b was enriched on the membrane of large subapical vesicles that were significantly colocalized with Rab3D and Myosin 5C. Stimulation of cultured acinar cells with the secretagogue carbachol resulted in apical fusion of these secretory vesicles with the plasma membrane. Evaluation of morphological changes by transmission electron microscopy of lacrimal glands from Rab27b(-/-) and Rab27(ash/ash)/Rab27b(-/-) mice, but not ashen mice deficient in Rab27a, showed changes in abundance and organization of secretory vesicles, further confirming a role for this protein in secretory vesicle exocytosis. Glands lacking Rab27b also showed increased lysosomes, damaged mitochondria, and autophagosome-like organelles. In vitro, expression of constitutively active Rab27b increased the average size but retained the subapical distribution of Rab27b-enriched secretory vesicles, whereas dominant-negative Rab27b redistributed this protein from membrane to the cytoplasm. Functional studies measuring release of a cotransduced secretory protein, syncollin-GFP, showed that constitutively active Rab27b enhanced, whereas dominant-negative Rab27b suppressed, stimulated release. Disruption of actin filaments inhibited vesicle fusion to the apical membrane but did not disrupt homotypic fusion. These data show that Rab27b participates in aspects of lacrimal gland acinar cell secretory vesicle formation and release.  相似文献   

13.
A synthetic, amphipathic 30-amino acid peptide with the major repeat unit Glu-Ala-Leu-Ala (GALA) was designed to mimic the behavior of the fusogenic sequences of viral fusion proteins. GALA is a water-soluble peptide with an aperiodic conformation at neutral pH and becomes an amphipathic alpha-helix as the pH is lowered to 5.0 where it interacts with bilayers. Fluorescence energy transfer measurements indicated that GALA induced lipid mixing between phosphatidylcholine small unilamellar vesicles but not large unilamellar vesicles. This lipid mixing occurred only at pH 5.0 and not at neutral pH. Concomitant with lipid mixing, the vesicles increased in diameter from 500 to 750 to 1000 A as measured by dynamic light scattering and internal volume determination. GALA induced leakage of small molecules (Mr 450) at pH 5.0 was too rapid to permit detection of contents mixing. However, retention of larger molecules (Mr 4100) under the same conditions suggests that vesicle fusion is occurring. For a 100/1 lipid/peptide ratio all vesicles fused just once, whereas for a 50/1 ratio higher order fusion products formed. A mass action model gives good simulation of the kinetics of increase in fluorescence intensity and yields rate constants of aggregation and fusion. As the lipid to peptide ratio decreases from 100/1 to 50/1 both rate constants of aggregation and fusion increase, indicating that GALA is a genuine inducer of vesicle fusion. The presence of divalent cations which can alter GALAs conformation at pH 7.5 had little effect on its lipid mixing activity. GALA was modified by altering the sequence while keeping the amino acid composition constant or by shortening the sequence. These peptides did not have any lipid mixing activity nor did they induce an increase in vesicle size. Together, these results indicate that fusion of phosphatidylcholine small unilamellar vesicles induced by GALA requires both a peptide length greater than 16 amino acids as well as a defined topology of the hydrophobic residues.  相似文献   

14.
Unilamellar vesicles of varying and reasonably uniform size were prepared from 1,2-dipalmitoyl-3-sn-phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) by the extrusion procedure and sonication. Quasi-elastic light scattering was used to show that different vesicle preparations had mean (Z-averaged) diameters of 1340, 900, 770, 630, and 358 A (sonicated). Bilayer-phase behavior as detected by differential scanning calorimetry was consistent with the existence of essentially uniform vesicle populations of different sizes. The response of these different vesicles to treatment with poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) was monitored using fluorescence assays for lipid transfer, contents leakage, and contents mixing, as well as quasi-elastic light scattering. No fusion, as judged by vesicle contents mixing and change in vesicle size, was detected for vesicles of diameter greater than 770 A. The diameters of smaller vesicles increased dramatically when treated with high concentrations of PEG, although mixing of their contents could not be detected both because of their small trapped volumes and because of the extensive leakage induced in small vesicles by high concentrations of PEG. Lipid transfer was detected between vesicles of all sizes. We conclude the high bilayer curvature does encourage fusion of closely juxtaposed membrane bilayers but that highly curved vesicles appear also to rupture and form larger structures when diluted from high PEG concentration, a process that can be confused with fusion. Despite the failure of PEG to induce fusion of large, uncurved vesicles composed of a single phosphatidylcholine, these vesicles can be induced to fuse when they contain small amounts of certain amphiphathic compounds thought to play a role in cellular fusion processes. Thus, vesicles which contained 0.5 mol % L-alpha-lysopalmitoylphosphatidylcholine, 5 mol % platelet activating factor, or 0.5 mol % palmitic acid fused in the presence of 30%, 25%, and 20% (w/w) PEG, respectively. However, vesicles containing 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycerol, 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycerol, 1-oleoyl-2-acetyl-sn-glycerol, or monooleoyl-rac-glycerol at surface concentrations up to 5 mol % did not fuse in the presence or absence of PEG. There was no correlation between the abilities of these amphipaths to induce phase separation or nonlamellar phases and their abilities to support fusion of pure DPPC unilamellar vesicles in the presence of high concentrations of PEG. The results are discussed in terms of the type of disrupted lipid packing that could be expected to favor PEG-mediated fusion.  相似文献   

15.
Giardia is an intestinal parasite that undergoes adaptation for survival outside the host. It secretes an extracellular cyst wall using a poorly understood process. An encystation-specific secretory vesicle (ESV) was previously described containing cyst wall proteins. The process of release of these vesicles has been suggested to occur after fragmentation of large ESV in small secretory vesicles, followed by exocytosis, but it was not demonstrated. The release of the ESV was studied by transmission electron microscopy. It was observed: (1) the moment of vesicle release; (2) that a large vesicle is exocytosed and does not fragment into small vesicles; (3) membrane fusion is distinct from traditional exocytosis since it is incomplete; (4) the occurrence of membrane fragmentation and that those membranes reseal to form ghosts; (5) these membrane ghosts may be endocytosed, adhered to flagellar surface or/and form empty vesicles in the extracellular medium.  相似文献   

16.
The influence of a transmembrane pH gradient on the Ca(2+)-induced fusion of phospholipid vesicles, containing free fatty acids, has been investigated. Large unilamellar vesicles composed of an equimolar mixture of cardiolipin, dioleoylphosphatidylcholine, and cholesterol, containing 20 mol % oleic acid, were employed. Fusion was measured using a kinetic assay for lipid mixing, based on fluorescence resonance energy transfer. At pH 7.5, but not at pH 6.0, in the absence of a pH gradient, oleic acid stimulates the fusion of the vesicles by shifting the Ca2+ threshold concentration required for aggregation and fusion of the vesicles from about 13 mM to 10 mM. In the presence of a pH gradient (at an external pH of 7.5 and a vesicle interior pH of 10.5), the vesicles exhibit fusion characteristics similar to vesicles that do not contain oleic acid at all, consistent with an effective sequestration of the fatty acid to the inner monolayer of the vesicle bilayer induced by the imposed pH gradient. The kinetics of the fusion process upon simultaneous generation of the pH gradient across the vesicle bilayer and initiation of the fusion reaction show that the inward movement of oleic acid in response to the pH gradient is extremely fast, occurring well within 1 s. Conversely, dissipation of an imposed pH gradient, by addition of a proton ionophore during the course of the fusion process, results in a rapid enhancement of the rate of fusion due to reequilibration of the oleic acid between the two bilayers leaflets.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Fusion of phosphatidylserine vesicles induced by divalent cations, temperature and osmotic pressure gradients across the membrane was studied with respect to variations in vesicle size. Vesicle fusion was followed by two different methods: 1) the Tb/DPA fusion assay, whereby the fluorescent intensity upon mixing of the internal aqueous contents of fused lipid vesicles was monitored, and 2) measurement of the changes in turbidity of the vesicle suspension due to vesicle fusion. It was found that the threshold concentration of divalent cations necessary to induce vesicle fusion depended on the size of vesicles; as the diameter of the vesicle increased, the threshold value increased and the extent of fusion became less. For the osmotic pressure-induced vesicle fusion, the larger the diameter of vesicles, the smaller was the osmotic pressure gradient required to induce membrane fusion. Divalent cations, temperature increase and vesicle membrane expansion by osmotic pressure gradient all resulted in increase in surface energy (tension) of the membrane. The degree of membrane fusion correlated with the corresponding surface energy changes of vesicle membranes due to the above fusion-inducing agents. The increase in surface energy of 9.5 dyn/cm from the reference state corresponded to the threshold point of phosphatidylserine membrane fusion. An attempt was made to explain the factors influencing fusion phenomena on the basis of a single unifying theory.  相似文献   

18.
Myelin basic protein (MBP) is considered to have a primary role in the formation and maintenance of the myelin sheath. Many studies using artificial vesicle systems of simple lipid composition, and generally small size, have shown that MBP can elicit vesicle fusion, aggregation, or even fragmentation under different conditions. Here, we have studied the effects of increasing concentrations of bovine MBP charge isomer C1 (MBP/C1) on large unilamellar vesicles (LUVs) composed of phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylserine (92:8 molar ratio), or with a lipid composition similar to that of the myelin membrane in vivo (Cyt-LUVs). Using absorbance spectrophotometry, fluorescence resonance energy transfer, dynamic light scattering and transmission electron microscopy, we have shown that vesicle aggregation and some vesicle fusion occurred upon addition of MBP/C1, and as the molar protein-lipid ratio increased. Fragmentation of Cyt-LUVs was observed at very high protein concentrations. These results showed that the phenomena of vesicle fusion, aggregation, and fragmentation can all be observed in one in vitro system, but were dependent on lipid composition and on the relative proportions of protein and lipid.  相似文献   

19.
Lipid mixing between vesicles functionalized with SNAREs and the cytosolic C2AB domain of synaptotagmin-1 recapitulates the basic Ca2+ dependence of neuronal exocytosis. However, in the conventional ensemble lipid mixing assays it is not possible to discriminate whether Ca2+ accelerates the docking or the fusion of vesicles. Here we report a fluorescence microscopy-based assay to monitor SNARE-mediated docking and fusion of individual vesicle pairs. In situ measurement of the concentration of diffusing particles allowed us to quantify docking rates by a maximum-likelihood approach. This analysis showed that C2AB and Ca2+ accelerate vesicle-vesicle docking with more than two orders of magnitude. Comparison of the measured docking rates with ensemble lipid mixing kinetics, however, suggests that in most cases bilayer fusion remains the rate-limiting step. Our single vesicle results show that only ∼60% of the vesicles dock and only ∼6% of docked vesicles fuse. Lipid mixing on single vesicles was fast (tmix < 1 s) while an ensemble assay revealed two slow mixing processes with tmix ∼ 1 min and tmix ∼ 20 min. The presence of several distinct docking and fusion pathways cannot be rationalized at this stage but may be related to intrasample heterogeneities, presumably in the form of lipid and/or protein composition.  相似文献   

20.
Melittin, the soluble lipophilic peptide of bee venom, causes fusion of phospholipid vesicles when vesicle suspensions are heated or cooled through their thermal phase transition. Fusion was detected using a new photochemical method (Morgan, C.G., Hudson, B. and Wolber, P. (1980) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 77, 26–30) which monitors lipid mixing. Electron microscopy and gel filtration confirmed that most of the lipid formed large vesicular structures. Fluorescence experiments with a water-soluble, membrane-impermeable complex of terbium (Wilschut, J. and Papahadjopoulos, D. (1979) Nature 281, 690–692) demonstrate that these ionic contents are released during fusion. The large structures formed by melittin-induced fusion are impermeable to these ions and are resistant to further fusion. This is in contrast to the behavior observed for the cationic detergent cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CETAB). The large size of the vesicles formed, the extreme speed of the fusion event and the appearance of electron microscope images of the vesicles prior to fusion suggest that the mechanism of the fusion process includes a preaggregation step.  相似文献   

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