首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
The fluorescent sterol delta 5,7,9(11),22-ergostatetraen-3 beta-ol (dehydroergosterol) was incorporated into 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine (POPC) small unilamellar vesicles (SUV) with and without cholesterol in order to monitor sterol-sterol interactions in model membranes. In the range 0-5 mol % fluorescent sterol, dehydroergosterol underwent a concentration-dependent relaxation characterized by red-shifted wavelengths of maximum absorption as well as altered ratios of absorbance maxima and fluorescence excitation maxima at 338 nm/324 nm. Fluorescence intensity per mole of dehydroergosterol increased up to 5 mol % in POPC vesicles. In contrast, quantum yield, steady-state anisotropy, limiting anisotropy, lifetime, and rotational rate remained relatively constant in this concentration range. Similarly, addition of increasing cholesterol in the range 0-5 mol % in the presence of 3 mol % dehydroergosterol also increased the fluorescence intensity per mole of dehydroergosterol, red-shifted wavelengths of maximum absorption, and altered ratios of absorbance maxima. In POPC vesicles containing between 5 and 33 mol % dehydroergosterol, the fluorescent dehydroergosterol interacted to self-quench, thereby decreasing the fluorescence intensity, quantum yield, steady-state anisotropy, and limiting anisotropy and increasing the rotational rate (decreased rotational relaxation time) of the fluorescent sterol. The fluorescence lifetime of dehydroergosterol remained unchanged. The results were in accord with the interpretation that below 5 mol% sterol, the sterols behaved as monomers exposed to some degree to the aqueous solvent in POPC bilayers.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
The behavior of dehydroergosterol in -α-dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) unsonicated multilamellar liposomes was characterized by absorption spectroscopy and fluorescence measurements. Dehydroergosterol exhibited a lowered absorption coefficient in multilamellar liposomes whiel the steady-state fluorescence anisotropy of dehydroergosterol in these membranes decreased significantly with increasing dehydroergosterol concentration, suggesting membrane sterol-sterol interactions. The comparative steady-state anisotropy of 0.9 mole percent dehydroergosterol in multilamellar liposomes was lower than in small unilamellar vesicles suggesting different sterol environments for dehydroergosterol. Dehydroergosterol fluorescence lifetime was relatively independent of membrane sterol content and yielded similar values in sonicated and unsonicated model membranes. In multilamellar liposomes containing 5 mole percent cholesterol, the gel-to-liqui crystalline phase transition of DMPC detected by 0.9 mole percent dehydroergosterol was significantly broadened when compared to the phase transition detected by dehydroergosterol in the absence of membrane cholesterol (Smutzer, G. et al. (1986) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 862, 361–371). In multilamellar liposomes containing 10 mole percent cholesterol, the major fluorescence lifetime of dehydroergosterol did not detect the gel-to-liquid crystalline phase transition of DMPC. Time-correlated fluorescence anisotropy decays of dehydroergosterol in DMPC multilamellar liposomes in the absence and presence of 5 mole percent cholesterol exhibited a single rotational correlation time near one nanosecond that was relatively independent of temperature and low concentrations of membrane cholesterol. The limiting anisotropy of 0.9 mole percent dehydroergosterol decreased above the gel-to-liquid crystalline phase transition in membranes without cholesterol and was not significantly affected by the phase transition in membranes containing 5 mole percent cholesterol. These results suggested hindered rotational diffusion of dehydroergosterol in multilamellar liposomes. Lifetime and time-correlated fluorescence measurements of 0.9 mole percent dehydroergosterol in multilamellar liposomes further suggested this fluorophore was detecting physical properties of the bulk membrane phospholipids in membranes devoid of cholesterol and was detecting sterol-rich regions in membranes of low sterol concentration.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of polyunsaturated fatty acids and lipid peroxidation on LM fibroblast plasma membrane individual leaflet sterol distribution and structural order were examined. The cytofacial (inner) leaflet was more rigid and contained more sterol than the exofacial (outer) leaflet. The static (limiting anisotropy) and dynamic (rotational relaxation time) structural components of diphenylhexatriene (DPH) motion in each leaflet were determined by phase and modulation fluorometry measurements combined with leaflet-specific quenching by trinitrophenyl groups. Polyunsaturated fatty acids, incorporated into the membrane phospholipids by culture medium supplementation, decreased the limiting anisotrophy of DPH in the cytofacial but not the exofacial leaflet thereby abolishing the transbilayer difference in fluidity. Peroxidation by Fe(II) + H2O2 resulted in a rigidification (increase in limiting anisotropy and rotational relaxation time) of the plasma membrane exofacial leaflet, regardless of whether the membranes contained saturated and monounsaturated fatty acids or were enriched in either linoleate or linolenate. The structure of the cytofacial leaflet reported by DPH was unaffected. Plasma membrane transbilayer sterol distribution, measured by leaflet-specific quenching of dehydroergosterol fluorescence, indicated that 20-28% of the sterol was localized in the exofacial leaflet. Polyunsaturated fatty acid supplementation of LM fibroblasts resulted in a complete reversal of plasma membrane transbilayer sterol distribution (72-76% exofacial leaflet). Sterol transbilayer distribution between the membrane leaflets was completely resistant to alteration by exposure to crosslinking agents and peroxidation in control plasma membranes and by peroxidation in linoleate- or linolenate-supplemented membranes.  相似文献   

4.
F Schroeder  G Nemecz 《Biochemistry》1989,28(14):5992-6000
The fluorescent sterol dehydroergosterol was used as a cholesterol analogue in conjunction with multifrequency phase and modulation (1-250 MHz) fluorometry to examine whether sterols (1) interact preferentially with fluid- or solid-phase phospholipids and (2) interact preferentially with sphingomyelin in phase-separated or phase-miscible cosonicated phospholipid membranes. Cosonicated small unilamellar vesicles (SUV) were produced by mixing lipids in organic solvents, drying the mixture, adding buffer, sonicating, and separating SUV. Phospholipids of synthetic as well as biological origin were utilized. In phase-separated, cosonicated SUV of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine/distearoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC/DSPC, 1:1 molar ratio), the fluorescent sterol (0.5 mol %) interacted preferentially with the fluid-phase lipid (partition coefficient, Kf/s = 2.6-3.4) according to four criteria. First, dehydroergosterol detected only the phase transition of DMPC, the phospholipid with the lower phase transition temperature. Second, the dehydroergosterol fluorescence polarization, limiting anisotropy, order parameter, and rotational relaxation time in the cosonicated vesicle were similar to those of dehydroergosterol in SUV composed only of DMPC. Third, the number of dehydroergosterol fluorescence lifetime components as well as the distribution in the cosonicated SUV was similar to that of dehydroergosterol in SUV composed of DMPC. Fourth, dehydroergosterol concentration-dependent self-quenching was detected in DSPC SUV at much lower dehydroergosterol concentration than in DMPC SUV. Preference of dehydroergosterol for fluid-phase lipids was also observed by monitoring dehydroergosterol exchange between individually sonicated DMPC SUV and DSPC SUV after the two types of vesicles were mixed in equal proportions. In these SUV mixtures, the dehydroergosterol also partitioned into the more fluid SUV, 99:1.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
F Liu  I P Sugar    P L Chong 《Biophysical journal》1997,72(5):2243-2254
We have examined the fractional sterol concentration dependence of dehydroergosterol (DHE) fluorescence in DHE/cholesterol/dimyristoyl-L-alpha-phosphatidylcholine (DMPC), DHE/ergosterol/DMPC and DHE/cholesterol/dipalmitoyl-L-alpha-phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) liquid-crystalline bilayers. Fluorescence intensity and lifetime exhibit local minima (dips) whenever the total sterol mole fraction, irrespective of the DHE content, is near the critical mole fractions predicted for sterols being regularly distributed in hexagonal superlattices. This result provides evidence that all three of these naturally occurring sterols (e.g., cholesterol, ergosterol, and DHE) can be regularly distributed in the membrane and that the bulky tetracyclic ring of the sterols is the cause of regular distribution. Moreover, at the critical sterol mole fractions, the steady-state anisotropy of DHE fluorescence and the calculated rotational relaxation times exhibit distinct peaks, suggesting that membrane free volume reaches a local minimum at critical sterol mole fractions. This, combined with the well-known sterol condensing effect on lipid acyl chains, provides a new understanding of how variations in membrane sterol content change membrane free volume. In addition to the fluorescence dips/peaks corresponding to hexagonal superlattices, we have observed intermediate fluorescence dips/peaks at concentrations predicted by the centered rectangular superlattice model. However, the 22.2 mol% dip for centered rectangular superlattices in DHE/ergosterol/DMPC mixtures becomes diminished after long incubation (4 weeks), whereas on the same time frame the 22.2 mol% dip in DHE/cholesterol/DMPC mixtures remains discernible, suggesting that although all three of these sterols can be regularly distributed, subtle differences in sterol structure cause changes in lateral sterol organization in the membrane.  相似文献   

6.
An extended Perrin equation is derived applicable to the restricted rotation of fluorophores. The equation results in a relation between time-resolved (r infinity) and steady-state fluorescence anisotropy (rs) data. This relation contains a parameter m, which expresses the difference between rotational diffusion in a lipid membrane and that in an isotropic reference oil having the same rs value. The relation is in agreement with rs, r infinity literature data for a variety of artificial and biological membranes labeled with various probes. Cholesterol and fatty acyl unsaturation affect the value of m, but temperature does not. The results indicate that, as far as fluorescence depolarization is concerned, either liposomes of saturated phospholipids without cholesterol or liposomes of unsaturated phospholipids containing cholesterol are good model systems for biological membranes. The accuracy of estimating order parameters or rotational diffusion constants from rs data is discussed. The formalism described here introduces a novel way of applying Arrhenius plots and allows for an unambiguous interpretation of rs data.  相似文献   

7.
Selective binding of cholesterol by recombinant fatty acid binding proteins   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The sterol binding specificity of rat recombinant liver fatty acid binding protein (L-FABP) and intestinal fatty acid binding protein (I-FABP) was characterized with [3H]cholesterol and a fluorescent sterol analog dehydroergosterol. Ligand binding analysis, fluorescence spectroscopy, and activation of microsomal acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase activity showed that L-FABP-bound sterols. 1) Lipidex-1000 assay showed a dissociation constant Kd = 0.78 +/- 0.18 microM and stoichiometry of 0.47 +/- 0.16 mol/mol for [3H]cholesterol binding to L-PABP. 2) With [3H]cholesterol/phosphatidylcholine liposomes, the cholesterol binding parameters for L-FABP were Kd = 1.53 +/- 0.28 microM and stoichiometry 0.83 +/- 0.07 mol/mol. 3) L-FABP interaction with dehydroergosterol altered the fluorescence intensity and polarization of dehydroergosterol. Dehydroergosterol bound to L-FABP with Kd = 0.37 microM and a stoichiometry of 0.83 mol/mol. 4) Cholesterol and dehydroergosterol decreased L-FABP tyrosine lifetime. Dehydroergosterol binding produced sensitized emission of bound dehydroergosterol with longer lifetime.5) L-FABP bound two cis-parinaric acid molecules/molecule of protein. Cholesterol displaced one of these bound cis-parinaric acids. 6) L-FABP enhanced acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase in a concentration-dependent manner. In contrast, these assays indicated that I-FABP did not bind sterols. Thus, L-FABP appears able to bind 1 mol of cholesterol/mol of L-FABP, the L-FABP sterol binding site is equivalent to one of the two fatty acid binding sites, and L-FABP stimulates acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase by transfer of cholesterol.  相似文献   

8.
Plasma membranes isolated from a yeast sterol auxotroph (RD5-R) grown on 1, 5, and 15 micrograms ml-1 exogenous concentrations of sterol showed no discontinuity in plots of steady-state fluorescence anisotropy. Liposomes constructed from phospholipid and sterol extracted from RD5-R grown on different sterols indicated that exogenously supplied sterol modulated cellular phospholipids such that lipid-phase transitions were avoided. Liposomes derived from sterol and phospholipid extracted from the same culture exhibited no lipid-phase transitions. However, when phospholipid extracted from a culture grown on a specific sterol was mixed with sterol extracted from a heterologous culture grown on a different sterol to form liposomes, discontinuities were detected in the anisotropy measurements of the liposomes produced. Quantitative analyses revealed that the exogenously supplied sterol coordinately regulated specific phospholipid species, fatty acid composition, and sterol to phospholipid ratios in yeast auxotrophs.  相似文献   

9.
Xu X  London E 《Biochemistry》2000,39(5):843-849
Detergent-insoluble membrane domains, enriched in saturated lipids and cholesterol, have been implicated in numerous biological functions. To understand how cholesterol promotes domain formation, the effect of various sterols and sterol derivatives on domain formation in mixtures of the saturated lipid dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and a fluorescence quenching analogue of an unsaturated lipid was compared. Quenching measurements demonstrated that several sterols (cholesterol, dihydrocholesterol, epicholesterol, and 25-hydroxycholesterol) promote formation of DPPC-enriched domains. Other sterols and sterol derivatives had little effect on domain formation (cholestane and lanosterol) or, surprisingly, strongly inhibit it (coprostanol, androstenol, cholesterol sulfate, and 4-cholestenone). The effect of sterols on domain formation was closely correlated with their effects on DPPC insolubility. Those sterols that promoted domain formation increased DPPC insolubility, whereas those sterols that inhibit domain formation decreased DPPC insolubility. The effects of sterols on the fluorescence polarization of diphenylhexatriene incorporated into DPPC-containing vesicles were also correlated with sterol structure. These experiments indicate that the effect of sterol on the ability of saturated lipids to form a tightly packed (i.e., tight in the sense that the lipids are closely packed with one another) and ordered state is the key to their effect on domain formation. Those sterols that promote tight packing of saturated lipids promote domain formation, while those sterols that inhibited tight packing of saturated lipids inhibited domain formation. The ability of some sterols to inhibit domain formation (i.e., act as "anti-cholesterols") should be a valuable tool for examining domain formation and properties in cells.  相似文献   

10.
The fluorescent sterol delta 5,7,9(11)-dehydroergostatetraen-3 beta-ol (dehydroergosterol) was used as an analogue of cholesterol to examine the molecular interaction of purified rat liver sterol carrier protein-2 (SCP-2) with sterol. The binding of dehydroergosterol to SCP-2 was evidenced by light scatter and by fluorescence polarization, lifetime, limiting anisotropy, and rotational relaxation time of dehydroergosterol. In addition, energy transfer efficiency from SCP-2 tryptophan to dehydroergosterol was 96%, indicating that the apparent distance, R, between the SCP-2 tryptophan (energy donor) and the dehydroergosterol (energy acceptor) was 13.7 A. Scatchard binding analysis of light scatter, lifetime, and energy transfer data all indicated a 1:1 molar stoichiometry with Kd = 1.2, 1.6, and 1.3 microM, respectively. SCP-2 enhanced the activity of microsomal acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase through transfer of [3H]cholesterol from donor palmitoyloleoyl phosphatidylcholine/cholesterol small unilamellar vesicles to rat liver microsomes containing the enzyme. A recently developed fluorescence assay utilizing dehydroergosterol fluorescence polarization (Nemecz, G., Fontaine, R. N., and Schroeder, F. (1988) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 948, 511-521; Nemecz, G., and Schroeder, F. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 7740-7749) was applied to examine the effect of SCP-2 on sterol exchange. In the absence of SCP-2, two spontaneously exchangeable sterol domains were observed in palmitoyloleoyl phosphatidylcholine/sterol (65:35 molar ratio) small unilamellar vesicles. SCP-2 enhanced the rate of exchange of the faster exchanging domain 2-fold. The transfer rate of the more slowly exchangeable sterol domain and the fraction of cholesterol represented by each domain were not affected. These results demonstrate the utility of dehydroergosterol to probe SCP-2 interactions with sterols and are indicative of a physiological role for SCP-2 as a soluble sterol carrier.  相似文献   

11.
The in vitro effects of plant sterols were investigated with regard to their uptake and membrane lipid fluidity in human keratinocytes. Among the different media tested to transport sterols (liposomes, micelles and organic solvents), the best results in terms of incorporation and viability were obtained by the use of the organic solvents dimethylsulfoxide and ethanol. After 48 h incubation exogenous sterol can account for about 30% of the total cell sterol content. The total sterol amount in plasma membranes increased 2-fold after incubation with cholesterol, whereas it was not altered when phytosterols were incorporated. The incorporation of cholesterol, sitosterol and stigmasterol led to an increase in the percent of unsaturated fatty acid C18:1 in the plasma membrane. The effect of this uptake on membrane fluidity was studied by means of fluorescence polarisation using DPH and TMA-DPH as fluorescent probes. Whereas cholesterol and sitosterol had no significant effect on the DPH fluorescence anisotropy (rs), the presence of stigmasterol induced a 12% decrease of rs reflecting an increase in membrane fluidity. We can conclude from this study that in the presence of sitosterol, the mean fluidity of the membrane is regulated whereas stigmasterol triggers a looseness of molecular packing of phospholipids acyl chains, in accordance with previous results obtained on purely lipid model membranes.  相似文献   

12.
A fluorescent sterol probe study of human serum low-density lipoproteins   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The fluorescent sterol probe, ergosta-5,7,9,(11),22-tetraen-3 beta-ol (dehydroergosterol), was utilized as a cholesterol analog to label human serum low-density lipoproteins (LDL). Quenching of dehydroergosterol fluorescence by KI indicated that most of the fluorophore was either buried within the outer phospholipid monolayer of LDL or within the neutral lipid core of LDL. The steady-state anisotropy of dehydroergosterol in LDL detected the cholesteric core phase transition near 30 degrees C. Fluorescence lifetime decays for dehydroergosterol contained two components, both below and above the cholesteric phase transition, with the major lifetime component near 1 ns. Neither lifetime component underwent a detectable change in duration at the core phase transition temperature. Time-correlated fluorescence anisotropy decays of dehydroergosterol indicated a single rotational correlation time near 1.7 ns, which was unaffected by the core phase transition. Time-correlated anisotropy decays also suggested hindered rotation of dehydroergosterol in LDL. These results indicate that unesterified cholesterol is primarily located in the outer phospholipid monolayer of LDL, with the majority of cholesterol not in direct contact with the aqueous phase.  相似文献   

13.
Sterols are one of the major components of cellular membranes. Although in mammalian membranes cholesterol is a predominant sterol, in the human organism plant sterols (phytosterols) can also be found. Phytosterols, especially if present in concentrations higher than normal (phytosterolemia), may strongly affect membrane properties. In this work, we studied phytosterol-phospholipid interactions in mixed Langmuir monolayers serving as model membranes. Investigated were two phytosterols, beta-sitosterol and stigmasterol and a variety of phospholipids, both phosphatidylethanolamines and phosphatidylcholines. The phospholipids had different polar heads, different length and saturation of their hydrocarbon chains. The interactions between molecules in mixed sterol/phospholipid films were characterized with the mean area per molecule (A(12)) and the excess free energy of mixing (DeltaG(Exc)). The effect of the sterols on the molecular organization of the phospholipid monolayers was analyzed based on the compression modulus values. It was found that the incorporation of the phytosterols into the phospholipid monolayers increased their condensation. The plant sterols revealed higher affinity towards phosphatidylcholines as compared to phosphatidylethanolamines. The phytosterols interacted more strongly with phospholipids possessing longer and saturated chains. Moreover, both the length and the saturation of the phosphatidylcholines influenced the stoichiometry of the most stable complexes. Our results, compared with those presented previously for cholesterol/phospholipid monolayers, allowed us to draw a conclusion that the structure of sterol (cholesterol, beta-sitosterol, stigmasterol) does not affect the stoichiometry of the most stable complexes formed with particular phospholipids, but influences their stability. Namely, the strongest interactions were found for cholesterol/phospholipids mixtures, while the weakest for mixed systems containing stigmasterol.  相似文献   

14.
The fluorescent sterol delta 5,7,9,(11)-cholestatrien-3 beta-ol (cholestatrienol) was incoporated into 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine (POPC) small unilamellar vesicles (SUV) with and without cholesterol in order to monitor sterol-sterol interactions in model membranes. Previously another fluorescent sterol, dehydroergosterol (F. Schroeder, Y. Barenholz, E. Gratton and T.E. Thompson. Biochemistry 26 (1987) 2441), was used for this purpose. However, there is some concern that dehydroergosterol may not be the best analogue for cholesterol. Fluorescence properties of cholestatrienol in POPC SUV were highly sensitive to cholestatrienol purity. The fluorescence decay of cholestatrienol in the POPC SUV was analyzed by assuming either that the decay is comprised of a discrete sum of exponential components or that the decay is made up of one or more component's distribution of lifetimes. The decay for cholestatrienol in POPC SUV analyzed using distributions had a lower chi 2 value and was described by a two-component Lorentzian function with centers near 0.86 and 3.24 ns, and fractional intensities of 0.96 and 0.04, respectively. Both distributions were quite narrow, i.e., 0.05 ns full-width at half-maximum peak height. It is proposed that the two lifetime distributions are generated by separate continua of environments for the cholestatrienol molecule described by different dielectric constants. In the range 0-6 mol% cholestatrienol, the cholestatrienol underwent a concentration-dependent relaxation. This process was characterized by red-shifted absorption and maxima and altered ratios of absorption and fluorescence excitation maxima. Fluorescence quantum yield, lifetime, steady-state anisotropy, limiting anisotropy and rotational rate remained constant. In contrast, in POPC vesicles containing between 6 and 33 mol% cholestatrienol, the fluorescent cholestatrienol partially segregated, resulting in quenching. Thus, below 6 mol% cholestatrienol, the cholestatrienol appeared to behave in part as monomers exposed to some degree to the aqueous solvent in a sterol-poor domain within POPC bilayers. Since the lifetime did not decrease above 6 mol% cholestatrienol, the fluorescence at high mol% values of cholestatrienol was due to cholestatrienol in the sterol-poor domain. The fluorescence intensity, quantum yield, steady-state anisotropy, and limiting anisotropy of cholestatrienol in the sterol-poor domain decreased to limiting, nonzero values while the rotational rate increased to a limiting value. Thus, the sterol-poor domain became more disordered when it coexisted with the sterol-rich domain.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
The time-resolved fluorescence emission anisotropy of 12-(9-anthroyloxy)stearic acid (12-AS) and 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene (DPH) have been measured in dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine liposomes in the presence and absence of 40 mol% cholesterol at temperatures above and below the phase transition temperature (41°C). By using a synchronously-pumped mode-locked frequency-doubled dye laser and single photon counting detection with an excitation response function of 300 picosecond, rotational correlation times down to less than 1 nanosecond could be resolved. Whereas DPH showed only small changes in the limiting anisotropy on the addition of cholesterol, 12-AS showed significant increases in this parameter with the effect being potentiated at higher temperatures. This difference in behaviour has been attributed to a fluorophore-cholesterol interaction that resulted in a change in the fluorophore geometry. Not only do DPH and 12-AS sense different depolarizing rotations due to the different directions of their emission dipoles but also differ in their lipid interactions which alter their limiting anisotropies. The implication is that the comparison of steady-state anisotropy measurements between chemically identical fluorophores in different lipid environments may be complicated by molecular distortions that change the motions to which the steady-state fluorescence parameters will be sensitive.  相似文献   

16.
Murine fibroblasts, LM cells, were cultured in suspension with laurate (12:0), myristate (14:0), palmitate (16:0), palmitoleate (16:1), or palmitate + palmitoleate (16:0 + 16:1) bound to fatty acid-free bovine serum albumin. Supplementation with saturated fatty acids decreased the ratio of unsaturated/saturated fatty acids in membrane phospholipids as much as 3.4-fold (palmitate-enriched cells). Concomitantly fluorescence polarization, absorption-corrected fluorescence, and relative fluorescence efficiency of the fluorescence probe molecule, β-parinaric acid, increased 1.5-, 2.9-, and 1.8-fold, respectively, in the membrane phospholipids. Unsaturated fatty acid (palmitoleate) increased the unsaturated/saturated fatty acid ratio by 20% but did not significantly alter the fluorescence parameters. When the cells were fed mixtures of palmitate and palmitoleate, the unsaturated/saturated fatty acid ratio of the membrane phospholipids and the above fluorescence parameters had values intermediate between those if each fatty acid had been fed separately. All fatty acid supplements caused a loss of two characteristic temperatures in Arrhenius plots of relative fluorescence efficiency. However, no shifts or appearance of new characteristic temperatures occurred. The break points at approximately 42, 37, and 22 °C were essentially un-altered. The data were consistent with the possibility that LM cells were unable to maintain constant fluidity, as indicated by fluorescence polarization, when supplemented with different fatty acids. A good correlation could be made between the phospholipid unsaturated/ saturated fatty ratio, the fluorescence polarization, and the toxicity elicited by different fatty acid supplements.  相似文献   

17.
Differential polarized phase fluorometry has been used to investigate the depolarizing rotations of 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene (DPH) in isotropic solvents and in lipid bilayers. For DPH dissolved in isotropic solvents, there is a precise agreement between the observed and predicted values for maximum differential tangents, indicating that in these media DPH is a free isotropic rotator. In lipid bilayers the tangent defects (i.e., the differences between the calculated and the observed maximum differential tangents) are too large to be explained by anisotropy in the depolarizing rotations but are accounted for by hindered isotropic torsional motions for the fluorophore [Weber, G (1978) Acta Phys. Pol A 54, 173]. This theory describes the depolarizing rotations of the fluorophore by its rotational rate R (in radians/second) and the limiting fluorescence anisotropy (r) at times long compared with the fluorescence lifetime. Through the combined use of both steady-state anisotropy measurements and differential phase measurements, we have demonstrated that one may obtain unique solutions for both R and r. For DPH embedded in vesicles prepared from dimyristoyl-, dipalmitoyl-, and distearoylphosphatidylcholines, the depolarizing motions are highly hindered at temperatures below the transition temperature (Tc) but are unhindered above Tc. The apparent rotational rates of the probe do not change significantly at Tc. These data suggest that the changes observed in the steady-state anisotropy near Tc derive primarily from changes in the degree to which the probe's rotations are hindered, and only to a small extent from changes in rotational rate. For DPH embedded in bilayers that contained 25 mol % cholesterol, no clear transition occurred and the rotations appeared to be hindered at all temperatures. The rotational motions of DPH embedded in dioleolyphosphatidylcholine were found to be far less hindered, but the rotational rates were similar to those obtained in the saturated phosphatidylcholines. Finally, the data show that in an anisotropic environment, such as that of a lipid bilayer, steady-state fluorescence anisotropy measurements alone cannot yield quantitatively meaningful rotational rates. Extrapolation of steady-state aniosotropy data to the quantitation of membrane viscosity is therefore difficult, if not invalid; however, qualitative comparisons can be useful.  相似文献   

18.
Charged anesthetics selectively alter plasma membrane order   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
W D Sweet  W G Wood  F Schroeder 《Biochemistry》1987,26(10):2828-2835
Although indirect evidence supporting differential lipid fluidity in the two monolayers of plasma membranes has accumulated, unambiguous demonstration of this difference has been difficult to obtain. In the present study, the fluorescent probe 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene (DPH), selective quenching of fluorescence by trinitrophenyl groups, and differential polarized phase fluorescence techniques were used to directly examine the static (order) and dynamic (rotational rate) components of lipid motion in the exofacial and cytofacial leaflets of LM fibroblast plasma membranes. The limiting anisotropy (0.137), the order parameter (0.590), and the rotational relaxation time (1.20 ns) of DPH in the plasma membranes (inner plus outer leaflet) indicated rapid but restricted probe motion in the lipid environment. However, the statics and dynamics of DPH motion in the individual monolayers were significantly (p less than 0.025) different. The limiting anisotropy, order parameter, and rotational relaxation time of DPH in the cytofacial monolayer were 0.036, 0.08, and 0.16 ns, respectively, greater than calculated for the exofacial monolayer of the LM plasma membrane. At appropriate concentrations, phenobarbital and, to a lesser degree, pentobarbital preferentially reduced the limiting anisotropy of DPH calculated for the exofacial leaflet while prilocaine reduced the limiting anisotropy of DPH in the cytofacial leaflet of LM fibroblast plasma membranes. In contrast, the putative cytofacial anesthetic procaine failed to show any preference for either leaflet. Arrhenius plots of DPH fluorescence in LM plasma membranes showed a prominent characteristic break point near 30-32 degrees C. Phenobarbital, pentobarbital, and procaine did not affect this break point while prilocaine selectively abolished it. The break point was therefore assigned to the inner monolayer of the LM plasma membrane.  相似文献   

19.
Saccharomyces cerevisiae GL7 cells require exogenous sterol and unsaturated fatty acid for growth. When grown in the presence of cholesterol or 7-dehydrocholesterol, the cells incorporated less saturated fatty acid into phospholipids than cells grown with ergosterol, stigmasterol, or beta-sitosterol as the sterol source. This lower saturated fatty acid content was most pronounced in phosphatidylethanolamine, slightly less so in phosphatidylcholine, and least evident in phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylinositol. Growing the cells with the various sterols did not affect the ratios of individual phospholipids. The ability of strain GL7 to use 7-dehydrocholesterol as the only sterol supplement for growth was dependent upon the nature of the unsaturated fatty acids added to the growth medium. In the presence of linoleic, linolenic, or a mixture of palmitoleic and oleic acids, excellent growth was observed with either ergosterol, cholesterol, or 7-dehydrocholesterol. However, when the medium was supplemented with either oleic or petroselenic acid, the cells grew more slowly (oleic) or much more poorly (petroselenic) with 7-dehydrocholesterol than with ergosterol. A specific relationship between sterol structure and membrane fatty acid composition in yeast cells is implied.  相似文献   

20.
Physical properties of the fluorescent sterol probe dehydroergosterol   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Spectroscopic studies were performed on the fluorescent sterol probes ergosta-5,7,9(11),22-tetraen-3 beta-ol (dehydroergosterol) and cholesta-5,7,9(11)-trien-3 beta-ol (cholestatrienol). In most isotropic solvents, these molecules exhibited a single lifetime near 300 ps. Fluorescence lifetimes in 2-propanol were independent of emission wavelength and independent of excitation wavelength. Excited state behavior of these probes appears relatively simple. In isotropic solvents, dehydroergosterol fluorescence emission underwent at most a small Stokes shift as solvent polarity was modified. Time-resolved anisotropy decays indicated that dehydroergosterol decay was monoexponential, with rotational correlation times dependent on solvent viscosity. When incorporated into L-alpha-dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine liposomes at a concentration of 0.9 mol%, dehydroergosterol fluorescence lifetime decreased at the phase transition of this phospholipid indicating that the sterol probe was detecting physical changes of the bulk phospholipids. Furthermore, total fluorescence decays and anisotropy decays were sensitive to the environment of the sterol. Dehydroergosterol and cholestatrienol are thus useful probes for monitoring sterol behavior in biological systems.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号