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1.
Vitamin E acts as an antioxidant and stabilizer of membranes. Other functions of vitamin E unrelated to its effects on membranes are emerging. Vitamin E partitions into the lipid bilayer matrix of membranes. It orients perpendicularly to the plane of the membrane with the hydroxyl group pointing to the lipid-water interface. The vitamin is not randomly distributed in the plane of the membrane but tends to form clusters. These clusters appear to be composed of vitamin E and phosphatidylcholine in a stoichiometry of about one vitamin E per 10 phospholipid molecules. Vitamin E partitions into domains of phosphatidylcholine in model membranes formed from mixtures of phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine irrespective of whether the phosphatidylcholine is in the fluid or gel phase. The creation of domains enriched in vitamin E in membranes is not consistent with an antioxidant function and effects on membrane structure and stability indicate other roles of the vitamin.  相似文献   

2.
Vitamin E and its function in membranes   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Vitamin E is a fat-soluble vitamin. It is comprised of a family of hydrocarbon compounds characterised by a chromanol ring with a phytol side chain referred to as tocopherols and tocotrienols. Tocopherols possess a saturated phytol side chain whereas the side chain of tocotrienols have three unsaturated residues. Isomers of these compounds are distinguished by the number and arrangement of methyl substituents attached to the chromanol ring. The predominant isomer found in the body is alpha-tocopherol, which has three methyl groups in addition to the hydroxyl group attached to the benzene ring. The diet of animals is comprised of different proportions of tocopherol isomers and specific alpha-tocopherol-binding proteins are responsible for retention of this isomer in the cells and tissues of the body. Because of the lipophilic properties of the vitamin it partitions into lipid storage organelles and cell membranes. It is, therefore, widely distributed in throughout the body. Subcellular distribution of alpha-tocopherol is not uniform with lysosomes being particularly enriched in the vitamin compared to other subcellular membranes. Vitamin E is believed to be involved in a variety of physiological and biochemical functions. The molecular mechanism of these functions is believed to be mediated by either the antioxidant action of the vitamin or by its action as a membrane stabiliser. alpha-Tocopherol is an efficient scavenger of lipid peroxyl radicals and, hence, it is able to break peroxyl chain propagation reactions. The unpaired electron of the tocopheroxyl radical thus formed tends to be delocalised rendering the radical more stable. The radical form may be converted back to alpha-tocopherol in redox cycle reactions involving coenzyme Q. The regeneration of alpha-tocopherol from its tocopheroxyloxyl radical greatly enhances the turnover efficiency of alpha-tocopherol in its role as a lipid antioxidant. Vitamin E forms complexes with the lysophospholipids and free fatty acids liberated by the action of membrane lipid hydrolysis. Both these products form 1:1 stoichiometric complexes with vitamin E and as a consequence the overall balance of hydrophobic:hydrophillic affinity within the membrane is restored. In this way, vitamin E is thought to negate the detergent-like properties of the hydrolytic products that would otherwise disrupt membrane stability. The location and arrangement of vitamin E in biological membranes is presently unknown. There is, however, a considerable body of information available from studies of model membrane systems consisting of phospholipids dispersed in aqueous systems. From such studies using a variety of biophysical methods, it has been shown that alpha-tocopherol intercalates into phospholipid bilayers with the long axis of the molecule oriented parallel to the lipid hydrocarbon chains. The molecule is able to rotate about its long axis and diffuse laterally within fluid lipid bilayers. The vitamin does not distribute randomly throughout phospholipid bilayers but forms complexes of defined stoichiometry which coexist with bilayers of pure phospholipid. alpha-Tocopherol preferentially forms complexes with phosphatidylethanolamines rather than phosphatidylcholines, and such complexes more readily form nonlamellar structures. The fact that alpha-tocopherol does not distribute randomly throughout bilayers of phospholipid and tends to form nonbilayer complexes with phosphatidylethanolamines would be expected to reduce the efficiency of the vitamin in its action as a lipid antioxidant and to destabilise rather than stabilise membranes. The apparent disparity between putative functions of vitamin E in biological membranes and the behaviour in model membranes will need to be reconciled.  相似文献   

3.
Tocopherols (vitamin E) located in the hydrophobic domains of biological membranes act as chain breaking antioxidants preventing the propagation of free radical reactions of lipid peroxidation. The naturally occurring form, d-alpha tocopherol is an exquisite molecule in that it is intercalated in the membrane in such a way that the hydrophobic tail anchors the molecule positioning the chromanol ring containing the hydroxyl group, which is the essence of its antioxidant function, at the polar hydrocarbon interface of phospholipid membranes. The interaction of this group with water soluble substances is not very well understood. In the present study, an investigation was made of the interaction of ascorbate and ferrous ions (Fe+2) initiators of lipid peroxidation with alpha tocopherol. The results show that tocopherol increases membrane associated iron. The formation of a tocopherol iron complex in the presence of phospholipid liposomes and ascorbate in its reduced form is indicated. These results suggest a new way in which tocopherols act to inhibit lipid peroxidation.  相似文献   

4.
The present review deals with the chemical properties of selenium in relation to its antioxidant properties and its reactivity in biological systems. The interaction of selenite with thiols and glutathione and the reactivity of selenocompounds with hydroperoxides are described. After a short survey on distribution, metabolism and organification of selenium, the role of this element as a component of the two seleno-dependent glutathione peroxidases is described. The main features of glutathione peroxidase and phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase are also reviewed. Both enzymes reduce different hydroperoxides to the corresponding alcohols and the major difference is the reduction of lipid hydroperoxides in membrane matrix catalyzed only by the phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase. However, in spite of the different specificity for the peroxidic substrates, the kinetic mechanism of both glutathione peroxidase and phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase seems identical and proceeds through a tert-uni ping pong mechanism. In the reaction cycle, indeed, as supported by the kinetic data, the oxidation of the ionized selenol by the hydroperoxide yields a selenenic acid that in turn is reduced back by two reactions with reduced glutathione. Special emphasis has been given to the role of selenium-dependent glutathione peroxidases in the prevention of membrane lipid peroxidation. While glutathione peroxidase is able to reduce hydrogen peroxide and other hydroperoxides possibly present in the soluble compartment of the cell, this enzyme fails to inhibit microsomal lipid peroxidation induced by NADPH or ascorbate and iron complexes. On the other hand, phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase, by reducing the phospholipid hydroperoxides in the membranes, actively prevents lipid peroxidation, provided a normal content of vitamin E is present in the membranes. In fact, by preventing the free radical generation from lipid hydroperoxides, phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase decreases the vitamin E requirement necessary to inhibit lipid peroxidation. Finally, the possible regulatory role of the selenoperoxidases on the arachidonic acid cascade enzymes (cyclooxygenase and lipoxygenase) is discussed.  相似文献   

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7.
Vitamin K1 is a component of the Photosystem I of plants which constitutes the major dietary form of vitamin K. The major function of this vitamin is to be cofactor of the microsomal gamma-glutamylcarboxylase. Recently, novel roles for this vitamin in the membrane have been postulated. To get insight into the influence of vitamin K1 on the phospholipid component of the membrane, we have studied the interaction between vitamin K1 and model membranes composed of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and dielaidoylphosphatidylethanolamine (DEPE). We utilized high-sensitivity differential scanning calorimetry and small-angle X-ray diffraction techniques. Vitamin K1 affected the thermotropic properties of the phospholipids, broadened and shifted the transitions to lower temperatures, and produced the appearance of several peaks in the thermograms. The presence of the vitamin gave rise to the formation of vitamin-rich domains which were immiscible with the bulk phospholipid in both the gel and the liquid-crystalline phases. Vitamin K1 was unable to alter the lamellar organization of DMPC, but we found that it produced an increase in the interlamellar repeat spacing of DMPC at 10 degrees C. Interestingly, vitamin K1 promoted the formation of inverted hexagonal HII structures in the DEPE system. We discuss the possible implications that these vitamin K1-phospholipid interactions might have with respect to the biological function of the vitamin.  相似文献   

8.
Hincha DK 《FEBS letters》2008,582(25-26):3687-3692
Tocopherol (vitamin E) is widely recognized as a cellular antioxidant. It is essential for human and animal health, but only synthesized in photosynthetic organisms, where it is localized in chloroplast membranes. While many studies have investigated non-antioxidative effects of tocopherol on phospholipid membranes, nothing is known about its effects on membranes containing chloroplast glycolipids. Here, liposomes resembling plant chloroplast membranes were used to investigate the effects of alpha-tocopherol on vesicle stability during freezing and on lipid dynamics. alpha-Tocopherol had a pronounced influence on membrane dynamics and showed strong interactions in its effects on membrane stability during freezing with the cryoprotectant sucrose. alpha-Tocopherol showed maximal effects at low concentrations (around 2mol%), close to its contents in chloroplast membranes.  相似文献   

9.
The brief review presents evidence that, in addition to the well-known functions of ubiquinone (coenzyme Q) as a component of the mitochondrial respiratory chain, this compound in the reduced form (ubiquinol) functions as an antioxidant. Ubiquinone in a partially reduced form is found in all cell membranes. It protects efficiently not only membrane phospholipids from peroxidation but also mitochondrial DNA and membrane proteins from free-radical-induced oxidative damage. This protective role of ubiquinol is independent of the effect of exogenous antioxidants, such as vitamin E, and it can both prevent the formation of free lipid radicals and eliminate them either directly or by regenerating vitamin E.  相似文献   

10.
Sec14, a yeast phosphatidylinositol/phosphatidylcholine transfer protein, functions at the trans-Golgi membranes. It lacks domains involved in protein-protein or protein-lipid interactions and consists solely of the Sec14 domain; hence, the mechanism underlying Sec14 function at proper sites remains unclear. In this study, we focused on the lipid packing of membranes and evaluated its association with in vitro Sec14 lipid transfer activity. Phospholipid transfer assays using pyrene-labelled phosphatidylcholine suggested that increased membrane curvature as well as the incorporation of phosphatidylethanolamine accelerated the lipid transfer. The quantity of membrane-bound Sec14 significantly increased in these membranes, indicating that “packing defects” of the membranes promote the membrane binding and phospholipid transfer of Sec14. Increased levels of phospholipid unsaturation promoted Sec14-mediated PC transfer, but had little effect on the membrane binding of the protein. Our results demonstrate the possibility that the location and function of Sec14 are regulated by the lipid packing states produced by a translocase activity at the trans-Golgi network.  相似文献   

11.
Cells under aerobic condition are always threatened with the insult of reactive oxygen species, which are efficiently taken care of by the highly powerful antioxidant systems of the cell. The erythrocytes (RBCs) are constantly exposed to oxygen and oxidative stress but their metabolic activity is capable of reversing the injury under normal conditions. In vitro hemolysis of RBCs induced by 5, 10 and 20 mM glucose was used as a model to study the free radical induced damage of biological membranes in hyperglycemic conditions and the protection rendered by vitamin E on the same. RBCs are susceptible to oxidative damage, peroxidation of the membrane lipids, release of hemoglobin (hemolysis) and alteration in activity of antioxidant enzymes catalase and superoxide dismutase. The glucose induced oxidative stress and the protective effect of vitamin E on cellular membrane of human RBCs manifested as inhibition of membrane peroxidation and protein oxidation and restoration of activities of superoxide dismutase and catalase, was investigated.Thiobarbituric acid reactive substances are generated from decomposition of lipid peroxides and their determination gives a reliable estimate of the amount of lipid peroxides present in the membrane. Vitamin E at 18 μg/ml (normal serum level) strongly enhanced the RBC resistance to oxidative lysis leading to only 50–55% hemolysis in 24 h, whereas RBCs treated with 10 and 20 mM glucose without vitamin E leads to 70–80% hemolysis in 24 h. Levels of enzymic antioxidants catalase, superoxide dismutase and nonenzymic antioxidants glutathione showed restoration to normal levels in presence of vitamin E. The study shows that vitamin E can protect the erythrocyte membrane exposed to hyperglycemic conditions and so a superior antioxidant status of a diabetic patient may be helpful in retarding the progressive tissue damage seen in chronic diabetic patients.  相似文献   

12.
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Vitamin E benefits in human health and chronic disease prevention are evaluated with respect to established alpha-tocopherol functions during vitamin E deficiency, adequacy, and excess. RECENT FINDINGS: Baseline vitamin E status of the 29 092 Finnish men participating in the Alpha-Tocopherol, Beta-Carotene Cancer Prevention study showed that the men in the highest compared with the lowest quintile of serum alpha-tocopherol had significantly lower incidences of total and cause-specific mortality. New findings from the Women's Health Study support a role for vitamin E supplements in decreasing the risk for sudden death from cardiovascular disease and from thromboembolism. We speculate that a potential mechanism may involve vitamin E interference in vitamin K activation. SUMMARY: alpha-Tocopherol acts as a peroxyl and alkoxyl radical scavenger in lipid environments, and thus it prevents lipid peroxidation in lipoproteins and membranes, especially nervous tissues. Decreased chronic disease incidence is associated with lifelong generous dietary vitamin E intakes, but more than 90% of Americans do not consume the recommended dietary amounts (15 mg/day). Vitamin E supplements can have beneficial effects on health beyond those from dietary amounts, perhaps because pharmacologic levels also upregulate hepatic xenobiotic pathways.  相似文献   

13.
In this review article, we summarize the current state of biophysical knowledge concerning the phase behavior and organization of cardiolipin (CL) and CL-containing phospholipid bilayer model membranes. We first briefly consider the occurrence and distribution of CL in biological membranes and its probable biological functions therein. We next consider the unique chemical structure of the CL molecule and how this structure may determine its distinctive physical properties. We then consider in some detail the thermotropic phase behavior and organization of CL and CL-containing lipid model membranes as revealed by a variety of biophysical techniques. We also attempt to relate the chemical properties of CL to its function in the biological membranes in which it occurs. Finally, we point out the requirement for additional biophysical studies of both lipid model and biological membranes in order to increase our currently limited understanding of the relationship between CL structure and physical properties and CL function in biological membranes.  相似文献   

14.
Numerous reports have established that lipid peroxidation contributes to cell injury by altering the basic physical properties and structural organization of membrane components. Oxidative modification of polyunsaturated phospholipids has been shown, in particular, to alter the intermolecular packing, thermodynamic, and phase parameters of the membrane bilayer. In this study, the effects of oxidative stress on membrane phospholipid and sterol organization were measured using small angle x-ray diffraction approaches. Model membranes enriched in dilinoleoylphosphatidylcholine were prepared at various concentrations of cholesterol and subjected to lipid peroxidation at physiologic conditions. At cholesterol-to-phospholipid mole ratios (C/P) as low as 0.4, lipid peroxidation induced the formation of discrete, membrane-restricted cholesterol domains having a unit cell periodicity or d-space value of 34 A. The formation of cholesterol domains correlated directly with lipid hydroperoxide levels and was inhibited by treatment with vitamin E. In the absence of oxidative stress, similar cholesterol domains were observed only at C/P ratios of 1.0 or higher. In addition to changes in sterol organization, lipid peroxidation also caused reproducible changes in overall membrane structure, including a 10 A reduction in the width of the surrounding, sterol-poor membrane bilayer. These data provided direct evidence that lipid peroxidation alters the essential organization and structure of membrane lipids in a manner that may contribute to changes in membrane function during aging and oxidative stress-related disorders.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Hydrogen peroxide generated from dissolved oxygen through the alloxandialuric acid cycle affected both the permeability and the stability of lipid bilayer membranes. The permeability of the artificial membranes varied directly with the hydrogen peroxide concentration. Membrane stability varied inversely with the hydrogen peroxide concentration. Bilayers formed from solutions containing both phospholipid and the antioxidant vitamin E were less permeable and more stable in the presence of hydrogen peroxide than bilayers generated from solutions containing phospholipid alone. Peroxidation of phospholipid monolayers caused first an expansion of the films presumably through the introduction of peroxide groups. Further oxidation of phospholipid monolayers led to contraction of the films presumably through the formation of water-soluble products. The results of the monolayer studies and a consideration of the possible kinetics for the peroxidation reaction sequence have been used to explain the changes in the permeability and the stability of lipid bilayer membranes. Our data suggest that oxidation of lipid in biological membranes may first increase membrane permeability and then decrease membrane stability.  相似文献   

16.
Vitamin E is an essential factor to maintain biological membranes stability and its lack may affect membranes structures and reduce erythrocyte life-span. Vitamin E also play a role in the maintenance of a normal platelet aggregation. A.A. studied the effects of a ten days supply of d-1-alpha tocopherol acetate (50 mg/Kg/die) on blood viscosity in 8 rabbits. Results obtained show a significant reduction of blood viscosity on 6th day of treatment in the male rabbits and a progressive reduction of values from the 6th till the 10th day in female rabbits. The most significant decrease of blood viscosity were obtained at the lowest shear-rates, due to an increased red cells deformability to the antioxidative action of vitamin E on the erythrocytes membrane and to a reduced red cells aggregation. Such modifications on the red blood cells caratheristics can be determined by vitamin E through different mechanism: a) inhibiting red cell membrane's polyunsaturable fatty acids oxidation; b) by removal of abnormal lipids from erythrocyte membrane; c) physical and chemical stabilization of membrane's surface.  相似文献   

17.
The mechanism of lipid peroxidation and the ways in which the rate of this reaction can be reduced by small quantities of certain specific chemicals, called antioxidants, are described. The types and roles of the different antioxidants found in living systems are considered. Vitamin E (alpha-tocopherol) has long been recognized as an important lipid-soluble, chain-breaking antioxidant. It has an unexpectedly high reactivity towards peroxyl radicals, which can be understood only after detailed consideration of its structure. It is the major antioxidant of its class in human blood and its effectiveness in plasma is greatly improved by a synergistic interaction with water-soluble reducing agents such as ascorbic acid. Experiments designed to locate vitamin E within phospholipid bilayers and to discover the origin of the different biopotencies of stereoisomers of alpha-tocopherol are also described.  相似文献   

18.
Mitochondria are exposed to large fluxes of iron, and reactive oxygen and nitrogen species. Hence they are susceptible to oxidative stress, a process inhibited by vitamin E. Our investigations show that iron uncouples oxidative phosphorylation whereas peroxynitrite and nitrite are inhibitors of oxidative phosphorylation. Oxidation of mitochondrial vitamin E is accompanied by generation of lipid peroxidation products, altered enzyme activity and electrical conductance etc., and result in inefficient oxidative phosphorylation. Vitamin E is important for mitochondrial function because: (1) Prior investigations have shown that vitamin E is essential for maintaining mitochondrial respiration. (2) Vitamin E is the most potent, lipid-soluble antioxidant localized ideally in mitochondrial membranes. (3) The decline in respiratory control ratios (RCR) of rat brain mitochondria exposed to peroxynitrite closely paralleled the oxidative elimination of vitamin E. (4) Finally, iron is a strong uncoupler of oxidative phosphorylation in brain mitochondria from vitamin E deficient animals and not from controls.Special issue dedicated to Lawrence F. Eng.  相似文献   

19.
Oxidations of soybean phosphatidylcholine liposomes in an aqueous dispersion initiated by free radicals generated initially either in the aqueous phase or in the lipid phase were efficiently suppressed by vitamin E in the membranes. Vitamin E was consumed linearly with time and, when the inhibition period was over the oxidation proceeded rapidly at a rate similar to that in the absence of vitamin E. L-Cysteine was also effective by itself in scavenging radicals in the aqueous region, but it was consumed more rapidly than vitamin E. On the other hand, cysteine could not scavenge the radicals efficiently in a lipid region. Nevertheless, when vitamin E was incorporated into liposomes, the addition of cysteine in the aqueous phase prolonged the inhibition period and it reduced the rate of decay of vitamin E markedly even when the radicals were generated initially in the lipid bilayer. Furthermore, it was found by an electron spin resonance study that chromanoxyl radical disappeared quite rapidly when it was mixed with cysteine and that the spin adduct of cysteine radical was observed in the presence of alpha-(4-pyridyl-N-oxide)-N-tert-butyl nitrone. It was concluded that L-cysteine located in an aqueous region could regenerate vitamin E by reacting with vitamin E radical formed in a lipid region and show a synergistic antioxidant effect, although its efficiency of vitamin E regeneration was lower than that by vitamin C.  相似文献   

20.
The conductance induced by the channel-forming peptide gramicidin A in lipid membranes is reduced by many orders of magnitude on exposure of the membrane and its aqueous environment to ionizing radiation. This results from an interaction of free radicals of water radiolysis with the tryptophan residues of gramicidin A. The sensitivity of the ion channels towards irradiation is strongly reduced in the presence of either vitamin E or of highly unsaturated lipids. An increase of the D37 dose up to a factor of 50 was found. The phenomena are interpreted via a reduction of the effective concentration of free radicals (such as OH.) in the membrane by reaction with unsaturated fatty acid residues or with vitamin E.  相似文献   

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