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1.
Glycolipids are an important part of almost all biological membranes. Their effects on membrane structure and their interactions with phospholipids, however, have not been extensively studied so far. We have investigated the phase behavior and intermolecular interactions in dry and rehydrated bilayers made from the phospholipid egg phosphatidylcholine (EPC) and the plant chloroplast glycolipid digalactosyldiacylglycerol (DGDG), or from a mixture (1:1) of these lipids, using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. We show that there are extensive interactions between EPC and DGDG in mixed membranes, and also between DGDG molecules in pure DGDG membranes, involving sugar OH groups and C[double bond]O, P[double bond]O, and choline moieties in dry membranes. These interactions persist to a certain degree even after rehydration. We present evidence that these interactions influence the mixing behavior in phosphatidylcholine/DGDG membranes and also the phase behavior of both EPC/DGDG and pure DGDG membranes in the dry state.  相似文献   

2.
Adsorption of small chain alcohols into lipid membranes significantly changes the conformational states of intrinsic membrane proteins. In this study, the effects of membrane-active strong cosolvent hexafluoroisopropanol (HFIP) on the intrinsic tetrameric stability of potassium channel KcsA were investigated. Presence of acidic phosphatidylglycerol (PG) in non-bilayer phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) or bilayer phosphatidylcholine (PC) significantly increased the tetrameric stability compared to zwitterionic pure PC bilayers. The stabilizing effect of PG in both lipid bilayers was completely abolished upon deletion of the membrane-anchored N-terminus. Tryptophan fluorescence and circular dichroism experiments indicated that HFIP destabilizes the tetramer possibly via drastic changes in the lateral pressure profile close to the membrane-water interface. The data suggest that HFIP disturbs the ionic, H-bonding and hydrophobic interactions among KcsA subunits where N-terminus presumably plays a crucial role in determining the channel proper folding and tetrameric structure via ionic/H-bond interactions between the helix dipole and the membrane lipids.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Popova AV  Hincha DK 《Glycobiology》2005,15(11):1150-1155
Glycolipids are important components of almost all biological membranes. They possess unique properties that have only been incompletely characterized so far. The plant glycolipid digalactosyldiacylglycerol (DGDG) strongly influences the physical behavior of phospholipid model membranes in both the dry and hydrated state. It was, however, unclear whether the strong effect of DGDG on the gel to liquid-crystalline phase transition temperature (Tm) in dry phosphatidylcholine (PC) bilayers is mainly due to the high degree of unsaturation of the DGDG fatty acyl chains or to interactions between the DGDG and PC headgroups. Also, no information on the relative effectiveness of membrane bound and free sugars on membrane phase behavior was available. We have used Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) to investigate the phase properties and H-bonding patterns in dry membranes made from 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine (POPC) containing one saturated and one monounsaturated (16:0/18:1) fatty acid and different fractions of DGDG or 1,2-dilinolenoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine (DLPC) (18:3/18:3). This was compared to the effects of galactose (Gal) and digalactose (diGal). All additives depressed Tm of the dry membranes, but DGDG was much more effective than DLPC or Gal. diGal had a similar effect as DGDG, pointing to the sugar headgroup as the component with the strongest influence on membrane phase behavior. A combination of DLPC and diGal, which should theoretically be equivalent to DGDG, was much more effective than the galactolipid. H-bonding interactions with the P = O group of PC were also stronger for free diGal than for DGDG, indicating that the free sugar may be structurally more flexible to adopt an optimal conformation for interactions with the PC headgroup.  相似文献   

5.
The effects of sulfatide on the fluidity and surface dynamics of bilayered and micellar model membranes of egg phosphatidylcholine containing sulfatide were studied by electron spin resonance (ESR). 5-Nitroxystearic acid and 15-nitroxystearic acid were employed as spin-label probes for the region close to the surface and that close to the hydrophobic core of lipid structures. In the vesicular structures, the signals generated by 5-nitroxystearic acid showed that the presence of sulfatide reduced the mobility of the hydrocarbon chains around the probe. The effect increased with increasing glycolipid concentration. The decrease in membrane fluidity was also monitored with the 15-nitroxystearic acid probe, although to a lesser extent. We think that sulfatide causes strong side-to-side head-group interactions on the bilayer surface, causing the lipid chains to assemble in a more rigid fashion, though this effect may be balanced in part by the disordered mechanical coupling of glycolipid acyl chains in theapposite faces of the hydrophobic core of the bilayer. Reduction of this mechanical coupling between apposite lipids when there was transition from a bilayered to a micellar structure resulted in a further increase in the order of the system.  相似文献   

6.
A phospholipid spin label, 16-doxylphosphatidylcholine, is employed in a study of lipid--protein interactions in cytochrome oxidase containing membranes. Two methods are used to label the membranous cytochrome oxidase: dispersion in cholate with subsequent detergent removal, and fusion with vesicles of the pure phospholipid label in the absence of detergent. A fraction of the label is immobilized, which is calculated to fall in the range of 0.17--0.21 mg of phospholipid/mg of protein (0.15--0.19 after correction for lipids not extracted by chloroform--methanol). This narrow range of values is independent of methods of labeling, protein isolation, and lipid depletion within experimental error. When labeling by fusion is utilized, the patches of pure phosphatidylcholine spin label diffuse in the plane of the bilayer, become diluted, and demonstrate exchange with bound phospholipid. These observations are evidence that boundary lipid, as reflected by the partitioning of the phosphatidylcholine label, is in equilibrium with adjacent bilayer regions and that it consists of a relatively constant amount of phospholipid associated with the hydrophobic portion of the protein.  相似文献   

7.
Lipid composition of the isolated rat intestinal microvillus membrane   总被引:13,自引:4,他引:9  
1. Rat intestinal microvillus plasma membranes were prepared from previously isolated brush borders and the lipid composition was analysed. 2. The molar ratio of cholesterol to phospholipid was greatest in the membranes and closely resembled that reported for myelin. 3. Unesterified cholesterol was the major neutral lipid. However, 30% of the neutral lipid fraction was accounted for by glycerides and fatty acid. 4. Five phospholipid components were identified and measured, including phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylserine, sphingomyelin and lysophosphatidylcholine. Though phosphatidylethanolamine was the chief phospholipid, no plasmalogen was detected. 5. In contrast with other plasma membranes in the rat, the polar lipids of the microvillus membrane were rich in glycolipid. The cholesterol:polar lipid (phospholipid+glycolipid) ratio was about 1:3 for the microvillus membrane. Published data suggest that this ratio resembles that of the liver plasma membrane more closely than myelin or the erythrocyte membrane. 6. The fatty acid composition of membrane lipids was altered markedly by a single feeding of safflower oil. Membrane polar lipids did not contain significantly more saturated fatty acids than cellular polar lipids. Differences in the proportion of some fatty acids in membrane and cellular glycerides were noted. These differences may reflect the presence of specific membrane glycerides.  相似文献   

8.
Ramakrishnan M  Jensen PH  Marsh D 《Biochemistry》2003,42(44):12919-12926
Alpha-synuclein is a small presynaptic protein, which is linked to the development of Parkinson's disease. Alpha-synuclein partitions between cytosolic and vesicle-bound states, where membrane binding is accompanied by the formation of an amphipathic helix in the N-terminal section of the otherwise unstructured protein. The impact on alpha-synuclein of binding to vesicle-like liposomes has been studied extensively, but far less is known about the impact of alpha-synuclein on the membrane. The interactions of alpha-synuclein with phosphatidylglycerol membranes are studied here by using spin-labeled lipid species and electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy to allow a detailed analysis of the effect on the membrane lipids. Membrane association of alpha-synuclein perturbs the ESR spectra of spin-labeled lipids in bilayers of phosphatidylglycerol but not of phosphatidylcholine. The interaction is inhibited at high ionic strength. The segmental motion is hindered at all positions of spin labeling in the phosphatidylglycerol sn-2 chain, while still preserving the chain flexibility gradient characteristic of fluid phospholipid membranes. Direct motional restriction of the lipid chains, resulting from penetration of the protein into the hydrophobic interior of the membrane, is not observed. Saturation occurs at a protein/lipid ratio corresponding to approximately 36 lipids/protein added. Alpha-synuclein exhibits a selectivity of interaction with different phospholipid spin labels when bound to phosphatidylglycerol membranes in the following order: stearic acid > cardiolipin > phosphatidylcholine > phosphatidylglycerol approximately phosphatidylethanolamine > phosphatidic acid approximately phosphatidylserine > N-acyl phosphatidylethanolamine > diglyceride. Accordingly, membrane-bound alpha-synuclein associates at the interfacial region of the bilayer where it may favor a local concentration of certain phospholipids.  相似文献   

9.
A molecular dynamics simulation study of four lipid bilayers with inserted trans-membrane helical fragment of epithelial growth factor (EGF) receptor (EGF peptide) was performed. The lipid bilayers differ in their lipid composition and consist of (i) unsaturated phosphatidylcholine (palmitoyloleoylphosphatidylcholine, POPC), (ii) POPC and 20 mol% of cholesterol (Chol), (iii) sphingomyelin (SM) and 20 mol% of Chol, and (iv) SM and 50 mol% of Chol. Only 1 out of 26 residues in the EGF-peptide sequence is polar (Thr). The hydrophobic thickness of each bilayer is different but shorter than the length of the peptide and so, due to hydrophobic mismatch, the inserted peptide is tilted in each bilayer. Additionally, in the POPC bilayer, which is the thinnest, the peptide loses its helical structure in a short three-amino acid fragment. This facilitates bending of the peptide and burying all hydrophobic amino acids inside the membrane core (Figure 1(b)). Bilayer lipid composition affects interactions between the peptide and lipids in the membrane core. Chol increases packing of atoms relative to the peptide side chains, and thus increases van der Waals interactions. On average, the packing around the peptide is higher in SM-based bilayers than POPC-based bilayers but for certain amino acids, packing depends on their position relative to the bilayer center. In the bilayer center, packing is higher in POPC-based bilayers, while in regions closer to the interface packing is higher in SM-based bilayers. In general, amino acids with larger side chains interact strongly with lipids, and thus the peptide sequence is important for the pattern of interactions at different membrane depths. This pattern closely resembles the shape of recently published lateral pressure profiles [Ollila et alJ. Struct. Biol. DOI:10.1016/j.jsb.2007.01.012].  相似文献   

10.
This paper reviews model membrane studies on the modulation of the macroscopic structure of lipids by lipid-protein interactions, with particular emphasis on the gramicidin molecule. This hydrophobic peptide has three main effects on lipid polymorphism: (1) in lysophosphatidylcholine it triggers a micellar to bilayer transition, (2) in phosphatidylethanolamine it lowers the bilayer to hexagonal HII phase transition temperature and (3) in phosphatidylcholine and other bilayer preferring lipids it is able to induce the formation of an HII phase. From experiments in which the gramicidin molecule was chemically modified it can be concluded that the tryptophan residues play a determining role in the peptide-induced changes in polymorphism. The experimental data lead to the proposal that gramicidin molecules have a tendency to self-associate, possibly mediated by tryptophan-tryptophan interactions and organize into tubular structures such as found in the HII phase.  相似文献   

11.
There is mounting evidence that the lipid matrix of neuronal cell membranes plays an important role in the accumulation of beta-amyloid peptides into senile plaques, one of the hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease (AD). With the aim to clarify the molecular basis of the interaction between amyloid peptides and cellular membranes, we investigated the interaction between a cytotoxic fragment of Abeta(1-42), i.e., Abeta(25-35), and phospholipid bilayer membranes. These systems were studied by Electron Paramagnetic Resonance (EPR) spectroscopy, using phospholipids spin-labeled on the acyl chain. The effect of inclusion of charged phospholipids or/and cholesterol in the bilayer composition was considered in relation to the peptide/membrane interaction. The results show that Abeta(25-35) inserts in bilayers formed by the zwitterionic phospholipid dilauroyl phosphatidylcholine (DLPC), positioning between the outer part of the hydrophobic core and the external hydrophilic layer. This process is not significantly influenced by the inclusion of the anionic phospholipid phosphatidylglycerol (DLPG) in the bilayer, indicating the peptide insertion to be driven by hydrophobic rather than electrostatic interactions. Cholesterol plays a fundamental role in regulating the peptide/membrane association, inducing a membrane transition from a fluid-disordered to a fluid-ordered phase. At low cholesterol content, in the fluid-disordered phase, the insertion of the peptide in the membrane causes a displacement of cholesterol towards the more external part of the membrane. The crowding of cholesterol enhances its rigidifying effect on this region of the bilayer. Finally, the cholesterol-rich fluid-ordered membrane looses the ability to include Abeta(25-35).  相似文献   

12.
The large number of different membrane lipids with various structural modifications and properties and the characteristic lipid composition of different types of membranes suggest that different lipids have specific functions in the membrane. Many of the varying properties of lipids with different polar head groups and in different ionization states can be attributed to the presence of interactive or repulsive forces between the head groups in the bilayer. The interactive forces are hydrogen bonds between hydrogen bond donating groups such as --P--OH,--OH, and--NH3+ and hydrogen bond accepting groups such as --P--O- and --COO-. These interactions increase the lipid phase transition temperature and can account for the tendency of certain lipids to go into the hexagonal phase and the dependence of this tendency on the pH and ionization state of the lipid. The presence or absence of these interactions can also affect the penetration of hydrophobic substances into the bilayer, including hydrophobic residues of membrane proteins. Evidence for this suggestion has been gathered from studies of the myelin basic protein, a water-soluble protein with a number of hydrophobic residues. In this way the lipid composition can affect the conformation and activity of membrane proteins. Since hydrogen-bonding interactions depend on the ionization state of the lipid, they can be altered by changes in the environment which affect the pK of the ionizable groups. The formation of the hexagonal phase or inverted micelles, the conformation and activity of membrane proteins, and other functions mediated by lipids could thus be regulated in this way.  相似文献   

13.
Membranes of thermophilic Archaea are composed of unique tetraether lipids in which C40, saturated, methyl-branched biphytanyl chains are linked at both ends to polar groups. In this paper, membranes composed of bipolar lipids P2 extracted from the acidothermophile archaeon Sulfolobus solfataricus are studied. The biophysical basis for the membrane formation and thermal stability is investigated by using electron spin resonance (ESR) of spin-labeled lipids. Spectral anisotropy and isotropic hyperfine couplings are used to determine the chain flexibility and polarity gradients, respectively. For comparison, similar measurements have been carried out on aqueous dispersions of diacyl reference lipid dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine and also of diphytanoyl phosphatidylcholine, which has methyl-branched chains. At a given temperature, the bolaform lipid chains are more ordered and less flexible than in normal bilayer membranes. Only at elevated temperatures (80 degrees C) does the flexibility of the chain environment in tetraether lipid assemblies approach that of fluid bilayer membranes. The height of the hydrophobic barrier formed by a monolayer of archaebacterial lipids is similar to that in conventional fluid bilayer membranes, and the permeability barrier width is comparable to that formed by a bilayer of C16 lipid chains. At a mole ratio of 1:2, the tetraether P2 lipids mix well with dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine lipids and stabilize conventional bilayer membranes. The biological as well as the biotechnological relevance of the results is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
We have employed four lipids in the present study, of which two are cationic and two bear phosphatidylcholine (PC) headgroups. Unlike dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine, the other lipids employed herein do not have any ester linkage between the hydrocarbon chains and the respective lipid backbones. Small unilamellar vesicles formed from each of the PC and cationic lipids with or without varying amounts of cholesterol have been examined using the steady-state fluorescence anisotropy method as a function of temperature. The anisotropy data clearly indicate that the order in the lipid bilayer packing is strongly affected upon inclusion of cholesterol. This effect is similar irrespective of the electrostatic character of the lipid employed. The influence of cholesterol inclusion on multi-lamellar lipid dispersions has also been examined by 1H-nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy above the phase transition temperatures. With all the lipids, the line widths of (CH2)n protons of hydrocarbon chains in the NMR spectra respond to the addition of cholesterol to membranes. The influence on the bilayer widths of various lipids upon inclusion of cholesterol was determined from X-ray diffraction studies of the cast films of the lipid-cholesterol coaggregates in water. The effect of cholesterol on the efflux rates of entrapped carboxyfluorescein (CF) from the phospholipid vesicles was determined. Upon incremental incorporation of cholesterol into the phospholipid vesicles, the CF leakage rates were progressively reduced. Independent experiments measuring transmembrane OH- ion permeation rates from cholesterol-doped cationic lipid vesicles using entrapped dye riboflavin also demonstrated that the addition of cholesterol into the cationic lipid vesicles reduced the leakage rates irrespective of lipid molecular structure. It was found that the cholesterol induced changes on the membrane properties such as lipid order, linewidth broadening, efflux rates, bilayer widths, etc., did not depend on the ability of the lipids to participate in the hydrogen bonding interactions with the 3beta-OH of cholesterol. These findings emphasize the importance of hydrophobic interaction between lipid and cholesterol and demonstrate that it is not necessary to explain the observed cholesterol induced effects on the basis of the presence of hydrogen bonding between the 3beta-OH of cholesterol and the lipid chain-backbone linkage region or headgroup region.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Lipid-protein interactions in membranes are dynamic, and consequently are well studied by magnetic resonance spectroscopy. More recently, lipids associated with integral membrane proteins have been resolved in crystals by X-ray diffraction, mostly at cryogenic temperatures. The conformation and chain ordering of lipids in crystals of integral proteins are reviewed here and are compared and contrasted with results from magnetic resonance and with the crystal structures of phospholipid bilayers. Various aspects of spin-label magnetic resonance studies on lipid interactions with single integral proteins are also reviewed: specificity for phosphatidylcholine, competition with local anaesthetics, oligomer formation of single transmembrane helices, and protein-linked lipid chains. Finally, the interactions between integral proteins and peripheral or lipid-linked proteins, as reflected by the lipid-protein interactions in double reconstitutions, are considered.  相似文献   

17.
The membrane lipids of six higher plants that differ in salt tolerance were analyzed and compared. The root lipids increased in a ratio of glycolipid/phospholipid with increasing salt- tolerance. A similar increase in the ratio was observed with increasing external salinity when halophytic orach and salt-sensitive cucumber were exposed to varying salinity, although the latter plant was limited to only a little increase. Measurements of ion-transport rates with artificial lipid membranes revealed that the root lipids from a salt-resistant plant formed a more permeable membrane than those from a salt-sensitive species. It was found that the membrane permeability was related to the glycolipid/phospholipid ratio in the membrane lipids, where the glycolipids were stimulative and the phospholipids were repressive for ion-flow. These different effects of the two lipid classes may be attributed to their molecular species and head groups.  相似文献   

18.
Bonev BB  Chan WC  Bycroft BW  Roberts GC  Watts A 《Biochemistry》2000,39(37):11425-11433
Nisin is a positively charged antibacterial peptide which binds to the negatively charged membranes of Gram-positive bacteria. The initial interaction of the peptide with model membranes of neutral (phosphatidylcholine) and negatively charged (phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylglycerol) model lipid membranes was studied using nonperturbing solid state magic angle spinning (MAS) (31)P NMR and (2)H wide-line NMR. In the presence of nisin, the coexistence of two bilayer lipid environments was observed both in charged and in neutral membranes. One lipid environment was found to be associated with lipid directly interacting with nisin and one with noninteracting lipid. Solid state (31)P MAS NMR results show that the acidic membrane lipid component partitions preferentially into the nisin-associated environment. Deuterium NMR ((2)H NMR) of the selectively headgroup-labeled acidic lipid provides further evidence of a strong interaction between the charged lipid component and the peptide. The segregation of acidic lipid into the nisin-bound environment was quantified from (2)H NMR measurements of selectively headgroup-deuterated neutral lipid. It is suggested that the observed lipid partitioning in the presence of nisin is driven, at least initially, by electrostatic interactions. (2)H NMR measurements from chain-perdeuterated neutral lipids indicate that nisin perturbs the hydrophobic region of both charged and neutral bilayers.  相似文献   

19.
Several studies have shown that the physical state of the phospholipid membrane has an important role in protein-membrane interactions, involving both electrostatic and hydrophobic forces. We have investigated the influence of the interaction of the calcium-depleted, (apo)-conformation of bovine alpha-lactalbumin (BLA) on the integrity of anionic glycerophospholipid vesicles by leakage experiments using fluorescence spectroscopy. The stability of the membranes was also studied by measuring surface tension/molecular area relationships with phospholipid monolayers. We show that the degree of unsaturation of the acyl chains and the proportion of charged phospholipid species in the membranes made of neutral and acidic glycerophospholipids are determinants for the association of BLA with liposomes and for the impermeability of the bilayer. Particularly, tighter packing counteracted interaction with BLA, while unsaturation-leading to looser packing-promoted interaction and leakage of contents. Equimolar mixtures of neutral and acidic glycerophospholipids were more permeable upon protein binding than pure acidic lipids. The effect of lipid structure on BLA-membrane interaction and bilayer integrity may throw new light on the membrane disrupting mechanism of a conformer of human alpha-lactalbumin (HAMLET) that induces death of tumour cells but not of normal cells.  相似文献   

20.
The binding of the Syrian hamster prion protein, SHaPrP(90-231), to model lipid membranes was investigated by tryptophan fluorescence. Membranes composed of negatively charged or zwitterionic lipids, and raft-like membranes containing dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine(1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC), cholesterol and sphingomyelin, were investigated. It was found that SHaPrP(90-231) binds to negatively charged lipid membranes and raft-like membranes. Binding of PrP to negatively charged lipid membranes involves both electrostatic and hydrophobic lipid-protein interactions and results in partial insertion of PrP into the lipid bilayer. This membrane-inserted conformation of PrP is richer in beta-sheet structure and has a disruptive effect on the integrity of the lipid bilayer, leading to total release of vesicle contents. In contrast, the binding of PrP to raft-like membranes is driven by hydrophobic lipid-protein interactions and induces the formation of alpha-helical structure. This conformation of PrP with a high content of alpha-helix is formed only at pH 7 and does not destabilize the lipid bilayer. Our findings support the view that an interaction of PrP with lipid membranes could play a role in PrP conversion.  相似文献   

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