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1.
This review is focused on the formation of lateral domains in model bilayer membranes, with an emphasis on sphingolipids and their interaction with cholesterol. Sphingolipids in general show a preference for partitioning into ordered domains. One of the roles of cholesterol is apparently to modulate the fluidity of the sphingolipid domains and also to help segregate the domains for functional purposes. Cholesterol shows a preference for sphingomyelin over phosphatidylcholine with corresponding acyl chains. The interaction of cholesterol with different sphingolipids is largely dependent on the molecular properties of the particular sphingolipid in question. Small head group size clearly has a destabilizing effect on sphingolipid/cholesterol interaction, as exemplified by studies with ceramide and ceramide phosphoethanolamine. Ceramides actually displace sterol from ordered domains formed with saturated phosphatidylcholine or sphingomyelin. The N-linked acyl chain is known to be an important stabilizer of the sphingolipid/cholesterol interaction. However, N-acyl phosphatidylethanolamines failed to interact favorably with cholesterol and to form cholesterol-enriched lateral domains in bilayer membranes. Glycosphingolipids also form ordered domains in membranes but do not show a strong preference for interacting with cholesterol. It is clear from the studies reviewed here that small changes in the structure of sphingolipids alter their partitioning between lateral domains substantially. 相似文献
2.
Katja Rebolj Maja Garvas Marjeta Šentjurc Manuela Coraiola Rossella Tomazzolli Mauro Dalla Serra Peter Ma?ek 《生物化学与生物物理学报:生物膜》2010,1798(5):891-2435
Ostreolysin is a cytolytic protein from the edible oyster mushroom (Pleurotus ostreatus), which recognizes specifically and binds to raft-like sterol-enriched membrane domains that exist in the liquid-ordered phase. Its binding can be abolished by micromolar concentrations of lysophospholipids and fatty acids. The membrane activity of ostreolysin, however, does not completely correlate with the ability of a certain sterol to induce the formation of a liquid-ordered phase, suggesting that the protein requires an additional structural organization of the membrane to exert its activity. The aim of this study was to further characterize the lipid membranes that facilitate ostreolysin binding by analyzing their lipid phase domain structure. Fourier-transformed infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) were used to analyze the ordering and dynamics of membrane lipids and the membrane domain structure of a series of unilamellar liposomes prepared by systematically changing the lipid components and their ratios. Our results corroborate the earlier conclusion that the average membrane fluidity of ostreolysin-susceptible liposomes alone cannot account for the membrane activity of the protein. Combined with previous data computer-aided interpretation of EPR spectra strongly suggests that chemical properties of membrane constituents, their specific distribution, and physical characteristics of membrane nanodomains, resulting from the presence of sterol and sphingomyelin (or a highly ordered phospholipid, dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine), are essential prerequisites for ostreolysin membrane binding and pore-formation. 相似文献
3.
Sphingolipid topology and the dynamic organization and function of membrane proteins 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
When acquiring internal membranes and vesicular transport, eukaryotic cells started to synthesize sphingolipids and sterols. The physical differences between these and the glycerophospholipids must have enabled the cells to segregate lipids in the membrane plane. Localizing this event to the Golgi then allowed them to create membranes of different lipid composition, notably a thin, flexible ER membrane, consisting of glycerolipids, and a sturdy plasma membrane containing at least 50% sphingolipids and sterols. Besides sorting membrane proteins, in the course of evolution the simple sphingolipids obtained key positions in cellular physiology by developing specific interactions with (membrane) proteins involved in the execution and control of signaling. The few signaling sphingolipids in mammals must provide basic transmission principles that evolution has built upon for organizing the specific regulatory pathways tuned to the needs of the different cell types in the body. 相似文献
4.
Lipid domain formation in membranes underlies the concept of rafts but their structure is controversial because the key role of cholesterol has been challenged. The configuration of glycosphingolipid receptors for agonists, bacterial toxins and enveloped viruses in plasma membrane rafts appears to be an important factor governing ligand binding and infectivity but the details are as yet unresolved. I have used X-ray diffraction methods to examine how cholesterol affects the distribution of glycosphingolipid in aqueous dispersions of an equimolar mixture of cholesterol and egg-sphingomyelin containing different proportions of glucosylceramide from human extracts. Three coexisting liquid-ordered bilayer structures are observed at 37 °C in mixtures containing up to 20 mol% glycosphingolipid. All the cholesterol was sequestered in one bilayer with the minimum amount of sphingomyelin (33 mol%) to prevent formation of cholesterol crystals. The other two bilayers consisted of sphingomyelin and glucosylceramide. Asymmetric molecular species of glucosylceramide with N-acyl chains longer than 20 carbons form an equimolar complex with sphingomyelin in which the glycosidic residues are arranged in hexagonal array. Symmetric molecular species mix with sphingomyelin in proportions less than equimolar to form quasicrystalline bilayers. When the glycosphingolipid exceeds equimolar proportions with sphingomyelin cholesterol is incorporated into the structure and formation of a gel phase of glucosylceramide is prevented. The demonstration of particular structural features of ceramide molecular species combined with the diversity of sugar residues of glycosphingolipid classes paves the way for a rational approach to understanding the functional specificity of lipid rafts and how they are coupled across cell membranes. 相似文献
5.
Ceramides are sphingolipids that greatly stabilize ordered membrane domains (lipid rafts), and displace cholesterol from them. Ceramide-rich rafts have been implicated in diverse biological processes. Because ceramide analogues have been useful for probing the biological function of ceramide, and may have biomedical applications, it is important to characterize how ceramide structure affects membrane properties, including lipid raft stability and composition. In this report, fluorescence quenching assays were used to evaluate the effect of analogues of ceramide with different N-acyl chains or different sphingoid backbones on raft stability and sterol content. The effect of replacing 18 mol% of sphingomyelin (SM) with ceramide in vesicles composed of a 1:1 (mol:mol) mixture of SM and dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC), with or without 25 mol% sterol, was examined. In the absence of sterol, the thermal stability of the SM-rich ordered domains increased with ceramide N-acyl chain length in the order C2:0 ∼ C6:0 ∼ C8:0 < no ceramide < C12:0 < C16:0. In vesicles containing 25 mol% cholesterol (1:1:0.66 sphingolipid:DOPC:cholesterol), the dependence of raft stability on ceramide N-acyl chain length increased in the order C8:0 ∼ C6:0 < C2:0 < C12:0 ∼ no ceramide < C16:0. We also studied the stability of lipid rafts in the presence of N-lauroyl- and N-palmitoylsphingosine analogues containing altered structures in or near the polar portion of the sphingoid base. In almost all cases, the analogues stabilized rafts to about the same degree as a normal ceramide containing the same acyl chain. The only exception was N-palmitoyl-4D-ribophytosphingosine, which was very strongly raft-stabilizing. We conclude that variations in sphingoid base structure induce only insignificant changes in raft properties. N-Lauroyl and N-palmitoylsphingosine and their analogues displaced sterol from rafts to a significant degree. Both C12:0 and C16:0 analogues of ceramide may be good mimics of natural ceramide, and useful for cellular studies in which maintenance of the normal physical properties of ceramide are important. 相似文献
6.
Nadezhda Stefanova Galya Staneva Diana Petkova Teodora Lupanova Roumen Pankov Albena Momchilova 《Cell biology international》2009,33(10):1079-1086
Most in vitro studies use 2-dimensional (2D) monolayer cultures, where cells are forced to adjust to unnatural substrates that differ significantly from the natural 3-dimensional (3D) extracellular matrix that surrounds cells in living organisms. Our analysis demonstrates significant differences in the cholesterol and sphingomyelin content, structural organization and cholesterol susceptibility to oxidation of plasma membranes isolated from cells cultured in 3D cultures compared with conventional 2D cultures. Differences occurred in the asymmetry of cholesterol molecules and the physico-chemical properties of the 2 separate leaflets of plasma membranes in 2D and 3D cultured fibroblasts. Transmembrane distribution of other membrane phospholipids was not different, implying that the cholesterol asymmetry could not be attributed to alterations in the scramblase transport system. Differences were also established in the chemical activity of cholesterol, assessed by its susceptibility to cholesterol oxidase in conventional and “matrix” cell cultures. The influence of plasma membrane sphingomyelin and phospholipid content on cholesterol susceptibility to oxidation in 2D and 3D cells was investigated with exogenous sphingomyelinase (SMase) and phospholipase C (PLC) treatment. Sphingomyelin was more effective than membrane phospholipids in protecting cholesterol from oxidation. We presume that the higher cholesterol/sphingomyelin molar ratio is the reason for the higher rate of cholesterol oxidation in plasma membranes of 3D cells. 相似文献
7.
Pankov R Markovska T Antonov P Ivanova L Momchilova A 《Chemico-biological interactions》2006,164(3):167-173
Investigations were carried out on the effect of plasma membrane lipid modifications on the fusogenic capacity of control and ras-transformed fibroblasts. The plasma membrane lipid composition was modified by treatment of cells with exogenous phospholipases C and D, sphingomyelinase and cyclodextrin. The used enzymes hydrolyzed definite membrane lipids thus inducing specific modifications of the lipid composition while cyclodextrin treatment reduced significantly the level of cholesterol. The cells with modified membranes were used for assessment of their fusogenic capacity with model membranes with a constant lipid composition. Treatment with phospholipases C and D stimulated the fusogenic potential of both cell lines whereas the specific reduction of either sphingomyelin or cholesterol induced the opposite effect. The results showed that all modifications of the plasma membrane lipid composition affected the fusogenic capacity irrespective of the initial differences in the membrane lipid composition of the two cell lines. These results support the notion that the lipid composition plays a significant role in the processes of membrane-membrane fusion. This role could be either direct or through modulation of the activity of specific proteins which regulate membrane fusion. 相似文献
8.
Membranes of Mycoplasma species take up 2–4 times more exogenous cholesterol than membranes of Acholeplasma species. To test whether the lower cholesterol uptake capacity of Acholeplasma is due to the high glycolipid content of their membranes, the phospholipids of Acholeplasma laidlawii and Mycoplasma capricolum membranes were hydrolyzed by phospholipase A2. Digestion removed about 30% of the polar lipids of A. laidlawii, leaving the glycolipids and phospholglycolipids intact, and about 70% of the polar lipids of M. capricolum, the residue consisting mostly of sphingomyelin. Cholesterol uptake by the treated membranes from phosphatidylcholine/cholesterol vesicles decreased in rough proportion to the amount of polar lipid removed, indicating that the glycolipids in A. laidlawii membranes can participate in cholesterol uptake.Trypsin digestion of growing cells and isolated membranes of M. capricolum decreased cholesterol uptake by about one-half. Similar treatment of A. laidlawii cells and membranes had no effect on cholesterol uptake. These findings suggest the existence of protease-sensitive receptors on the cell surface of M. capricolum responsible for tighter contact with the cholesterol/phosphatidylcholine vesicles. It is proposed that the ability of Mycoplasma species to take up large quantities of exogenous cholesterol and phospholipids depends on the presence of protein receptors for cholesterol donors, receptors which are absent in Acholeplasma species. 相似文献
9.
B. V. Belugin I. M. Zhestkova M. S. Trofimova 《Biochemistry (Moscow) Supplemental Series A: Membrane and Cell Biology》2011,5(1):56-63
The hypothesis that sterol-enriched domains represent sites of preferred localization of PIP-aquaporins was tested in experiments
on plasma membranes isolated from cells of etiolated pea (Pisum sativum L.) seedlings. Plasma membranes were isolated from microsomes by the partition in the aqueous two-phase polymer system and
separated into vesicle fractions of different buoyant density by flotation in discontinuous OptiPrep gradient. Two types of
plasma membrane preparations were used: one was treated with cold 1% Triton X-100 and the other was not. In untreated preparations,
three populations of plasma membrane vesicles were obtained, while in the case of treated preparations, fractions of detergent-resistant
membranes (DRM) and solubilized membrane proteins were obtained. In all membrane fractions collected after OptiPrep flotation,
the amounts of proteins, sterols, and PIP-aquaporins were determined. The highest sterol content was detected in the membrane
fraction with buoyant density 1.098 g/cm3 and in the DRM fraction (1.146 g/cm3). These fractions contained much more PIP-aquaporins than the other ones. Phase state of the lipid bilayer was determined
by measuring generalized polarization excitation of fluorescence (GPEX) of laurdan incorporated into the membranes of different
fractions. It was revealed that the lipid bilayer of the membranes with density of 1.098 g/cm3 had a higher extent of ordering than that of the fractions with density of ∼1.146 g/cm3. The results indicated that uppermost local concentrations of PIP-aquaporins were associated with tightly packed sterol-enriched
domains. Moreover, upon solubilization of plasma membrane with Triton X-100, PIP-aquaporins mainly resided in DRM, thus exhibiting
a high affinity to sterols. 相似文献
10.
Warren Davis Jr. 《Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA)/Molecular and Cell Biology of Lipids》2014,1841(1):168-179
The ATP-binding cassette transporters are a large family (~ 48 genes divided into seven families A–G) of proteins that utilize the energy of ATP-hydrolysis to pump substrates across lipid bilayers against a concentration gradient. The ABC “A” subfamily is comprised of 13 members and transport sterols, phospholipids and bile acids. ABCA2 is the most abundant ABC transporter in human and rodent brain with highest expression in oligodendrocytes, although it is also expressed in neurons. Several groups have studied a possible connection between ABCA2 and Alzheimer's disease as well as early atherosclerosis. ABCA2 expression levels have been associated with changes in cholesterol and sphingolipid metabolism. In this paper, we hypothesized that ABCA2 expression level may regulate esterification of plasma membrane-derived cholesterol by modulation of sphingolipid metabolism. ABCA2 overexpression in N2a neuroblastoma cells was associated with an altered bilayer distribution of the sphingolipid ceramide that inhibited acylCoA:cholesterol acyltransferase (ACAT) activity and cholesterol esterification. In contrast, depletion of endogenous ABCA2 in the rat schwannoma cell line D6P2T increased esterification of plasma membrane cholesterol following treatment with exogenous bacterial sphingomyelinase. These findings suggest that control of ABCA2 expression level may be a key locus of regulation for esterification of plasma membrane-derived cholesterol through modulation of sphingolipid metabolism. 相似文献
11.
《Journal of liposome research》2013,23(2):247-260
AbstractThe solubilisation by Triton X-100 of large unilamellar vesicles consisting of pure egg sphingomyelin (Tm 39°) or sphingomyelinxholesterol mixtures has been tested at various temperatures. For pure sphingomyelin, solubilisation occurs most readily at temperatures just below Tm. In general, egg sphingomyelin is solubilised by Triton X-100 more easily than egg phosphatidylcholine. Mixtures of sphingomyelin and cholesterol are detergent-insoluble under most conditions. Infrared spectroscopy has been applied to explore the interactions of cholesterol and sphingomyelin at the level of the lipid-water interface. Moreover, various cholesterol analogues (cholestane, cholestanone, androstenol) have been used in parallel solubilisation experiments and IR observations. The results show that cholesterol modifies the conformation (or H-bonding properties, or both) of the sphingomyelin polar head-group, both above and below Tm. Moreover, both the hydroxyl group at C3 and the hydrocarbon chain at C17 of the steroid nucleus appear to be required for insolubility to be detected. Perturbation of the polar environment of the sphingomyelin: cholesterol bilayers by 3M urea makes them soluble in Triton X-100. These results may be related to the observed insolubility of cell membrane 'rafts' in cold detergent. 相似文献
12.
We examined effects of exogenous very-long-chain fatty acids on lipids of cultured chick neurons and astrocytes. When chick neurons were incubated in chemically defined medium containing 10 microM nervonic acid (C24:1) for 7 days, it was found that a major fatty acid moiety of gangliosides and sphingomyelin was nervonic acid itself, which was not normally detected in the sphingolipid fraction. This alteration in the fatty acid composition apparently occurred in each ganglioside species. Under these experimental conditions, nervonic acid was not found in the glycerophospholipid fraction, and the amounts of triacylglycerol and free nervonic acid increased. Addition of behenic acid (C22:0) or erucic acid (C22:1) also induced changes in the fatty acid composition of gangliosides. When chick astrocytes were incubated in the presence of 10 microM nervonic acid for 7 days, no significant change was observed in the fatty acid composition of gangliosides. These studies indicate that the manipulation of the fatty acid moiety of sphingolipids in cultured neurons is possible. 相似文献
13.
Erythrocyte ghosts were incubated with sonicated vesicles and the uptake of cholesterol by vesicles allowed to proceed to equilibrium. The experiments were carried out for a series of phospholipids at different temperatures. The equilibrium partition of cholesterol between ghosts and single shelled vesicles provided a measure of the relative affinities of cholesterol for the different phospholipids studied. It was found that the affinity of cholesterol for dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine was the same as that for sphingomyelin both at temperatures above and below the gel to liquid crystalline transition temperature of these phospholipids. 相似文献
14.
《Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA)/General Subjects》2019,1863(9):1381-1389
BackgroundBecause ordered membrane domains, called lipid rafts, regulate activation of ion channels related to the nerve pulse, lipids rafts are thought to be a possible target for anesthetic molecules. To understand the mechanism of anesthetic action, we examined influence of representative local anesthetics (LAs); dibucaine, tetracaine, and lidocaine, on raft-like liquid-ordered (Lo)/non-raft-like liquid-disordered (Ld) phase separation.MethodsImpact of LAs on the phase separation was observed by fluorescent microscopy. LA-induced perturbation of the Lo and Ld membranes was examined by DPH anisotropy measurements. Incorporation of LAs to the membranes was examined by fluorescent anisotropy of LAs. The biding location of the LAs was indicated by small angle x-ray diffraction (SAXD).ResultsFluorescent experiments showed that dibucaine eliminated the phase separation the most effectively, followed by tetracaine and lidocaine. The disruption of the phase separation can be explained by their disordering effects on the Lo membrane. SAXD and other experiments further suggested that dibucaine's most potent perturbation of the Lo membrane is attributable to its deeper immersion and bulky molecular structure. Tetracaine, albeit immersed in the Lo membrane as deeply as dibucaine, less perturbs the Lo membrane probably because of its smaller bulkiness. Lidocaine hardly reaches the hydrophobic region, resulting in the weakest Lo membrane perturbation.ConclusionDibcaine perturbs the Lo membrane the most effectively, followed by tetracaine and lidocaine. This ranking correlates with their anesthetic potency.General significanceThis study suggests a possible mechanistic link between anesthetic action and perturbation of lipid rafts. 相似文献
15.
A delipidized proteolipid protein fraction was purified from organic solvent extracts of bovine cerebral cortex and studied by means of diffraction, electron microscopic, and ir techniques. Special use was made of an electron diffraction procedure which minimized the electron damage to the biological specimens. The ir spectroscopy of the apoprotein fraction indicated the presence of polypeptides in extended β-conformation, possibly in the antiparallel mode of packing. Electron microscopy of the fraction, negatively stained in organic media, made apparent the presence of both ordered and amorphous material. Only the former, characterized by repeating units of about 40–45 Å in diameter and varying length, produced diffraction patterns in the selected area mode exhibiting a highly undistorted lattice. The two-dimensional cell parameters of the protein fraction were a = 4.79 Å, b = 7.20 Å, and γ = 90°. The plane group symmetry, corresponding to the systematic absences, was p 2gg, consistent with the β-pleated sheet structure of simple polypeptides. 相似文献
16.
Sandro Sonnino 《FEBS letters》2009,583(4):597-40910
Caveolin-1, and probably also -2 and -3, can organize multimolecular membrane complexes involved in transmembrane traffic, cell adhesion and signal transduction. In this review, we discuss on the importance of caveolin membrane environment in regulating the architecture and function of such complexes, with a special emphasis on the role of sphingolipids. 相似文献
17.
Spectral parameters of spin-labelled phosphatidylcholine, ceramide and cerebroside in the plasma membranes of human blood lymphocytes were measured before and after treatment with various ligands, which included concanavalin-A and phytohaemagglutinin. It was found that ligand treatment led to a significant decrease in order of the hydrocarbon chains of the phospholipids. This was accompanied by a clustering of the labelled sphingolipids, as estimated by spin-spin interaction, and an increase in the order of their hydrocarbon chains. In the untreated cells the cerebroside fatty acid chain was more ordered than that of the phosphatidylcholine.It was considered that the decrease in phospholipid order was brought about by the sequestration of the more rigid sphingolipids into the patches and caps formed by receptor-ligand complexes. The significance of these changes in lipid distribution and ordering is discussed in relation to the activation of membrane enzyme systems by mitogenic ligands. 相似文献
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20.
Andreas Max Ernst Britta Brügger 《Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA)/Molecular and Cell Biology of Lipids》2014,1841(5):665-670
The diversity of the transmembranome of higher eukaryotes is matched by an enormous diversity of sphingolipid classes and molecular species. The intrinsic properties of sphingolipids are not only suited for orchestrating lateral architectures of biological membranes, but their molecular distinctions also allow for the evolution of protein motifs specifically recognising and interacting with individual lipids. Although various reports suggest a role of sphingolipids in membrane protein function, only a few cases have determined the specificity of these interactions. In this review we discuss examples of specific protein–sphingolipid interactions for which a modulator-like dependency on sphingolipids was assigned to specific proteins. These novel functions of sphingolipids in specific protein–lipid assemblies contribute to the complexity of the sphingolipid classes and other molecular species observed in animal cells. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled New Frontiers in Sphingolipid Biology. 相似文献