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1.
Lactosylceramide (LacCer) is a pivotal intermediate in the metabolism of higher gangliosides, localizes to sphingolipid-sterol "rafts," and has been implicated in cellular signaling. To provide a fundamental characterization of LacCer phase behavior and intermolecular packing, LacCer containing different saturated (16:0, 18:0, 24:0) or monounsaturated (18:1(Delta9), 24:1(Delta15)) acyl chains were synthesized and studied by differential scanning calorimetry and Langmuir film balance approaches. Compared to related sphingoid- and glycerol-based lipids, LacCers containing saturated acyl chains display relatively high thermotropic and pressure-induced transitions. LacCer monolayer films are less elastic in an in-plane sense than sphingomyelin films, but are somewhat more elastic than galactosylceramide films. Together, these findings indicate that the disaccharide headgroup only marginally disrupts gel phase packing and orients more perpendicular than parallel to the interface. This contrasts the reported behavior of digalactosyldiglycerides with saturated acyl chains. Introducing single cis double bonds into the LacCer acyl chains dramatically lowers the high thermotropic and pressure-induced transitions. Greater reductions occur when cis double bonds are located near the middle of the acyl chains. The results are discussed in terms of how an extended disaccharide headgroup can enhance interactions among naturally abundant LacCers with saturated acyl chains.  相似文献   

2.
Membrane microdomains, such as caveolae and rafts, are enriched in cholesterol and sphingomyelin, display liquid-ordered phase properties, and putatively function as protein organizing platforms. The goal of this investigation was to identify sterol and sphingomyelin structural features that modulate surface compression and solubilization by detergent because liquid-ordered phase displays low lateral elasticity and resists solubilization by Triton X-100. Compared to cholesterol, sterol structural changes involved either altering the polar headgroup (e.g., 6-ketocholestanol) or eliminating the isooctyl hydrocarbon tail (e.g., 5-androsten-3beta-ol). Synthetic changes to sphingomyelin resulted in homogeneous acyl chains of differing length but of biological relevance. Using a Langmuir surface balance, surface compressional moduli were assessed at various surface pressures including those (pi > or =30 mN/m) that mimic biomembrane conditions. Sphingomyelin-sterol mixtures generally were less elastic in a lateral sense than chain-matched phosphatidylcholine-sterol mixtures at equivalent high sterol mole fractions. Increasing content of 6-ketocholestanol or 5-androsten-3beta-ol in sphingomyelin decreased lateral elasticity but much less effectively than cholesterol. Our results indicate that cholesterol is ideally structured for maximally reducing the lateral elasticity of membrane sphingolipids, for enabling resistance to Triton X-100 solubilization, and for interacting with sphingomyelins that contain saturated acyl chains similar in length to their sphingoid bases.  相似文献   

3.
Li XM  Momsen MM  Smaby JM  Brockman HL  Brown RE 《Biochemistry》2001,40(20):5954-5963
The interfacial interactions of cholesterol with sphingomyelins (SMs) containing various homogeneous acyl chains have been investigated by Langmuir film balance approaches. Low in-plane elasticity among the packed lipids was identified as an important physical feature of the cholesterol-sphingomyelin liquid-ordered phase that correlates with detergent resistance, a characteristic property of sphingolipid-sterol rafts. Changes in the in-plane elastic packing, produced by cholesterol, were quantitatively assessed by the surface compressional moduli (C(s)(-1)) of the monolayer isotherms. Of special interest were C(s)(-1) values determined at high surface pressures (>30 mN/m) that mimic the biomembrane situation. To identify structural features that uniquely affect the in-plane elasticity of the sphingomyelin-cholesterol lateral interaction, comparisons were made with phosphatidylcholine (PC)-cholesterol mixtures. Cholesterol markedly decreased the in-plane elasticity of either SM or PC regardless of whether they were fluid or gel phase without cholesterol. The magnitude of the reduction in in-plane elasticity induced by cholesterol was strongly influenced by acyl chain structure and by interfacial functional groups. Liquid-ordered phase formed at lower cholesterol mole fractions when SM's acyl chain was saturated rather than monounsaturated. At similar high cholesterol mole fractions, the in-plane elasticity within SM-cholesterol liquid-ordered phase was significantly lower than that of PC-cholesterol liquid-ordered phase, even when PCs were chain-matched to the SMs. Sphingoid-base functional groups (e.g., amide linkages), which facilitate or strengthen intermolecular hydrogen bonds, appear to be important for forming sphingomyelin-cholesterol, liquid-ordered phases with especially low in-plane elasticity. The combination of structural features that predominates in naturally occurring SMs permits very effective resistance to solubilization by Triton X-100.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of cholesterol on the interfacial elastic packing interactions of various molecular species of phosphatidylcholines (PCs) has been investigated by using a Langmuir-type film balance and analyzing the elastic area compressibility moduli (Cs(-1)) as a function of average cross-sectional molecular area. Emphasis was on the high surface pressure regions (pi > or = 30 mN/m) which are thought to mimic biomembrane conditions. Increasing levels of cholesterol generally caused the in-plane elasticity of the mixed monolayers to decrease. Yet, the magnitude of the cholesterol-induced changes was markedly dependent upon PC hydrocarbon structure. Among PC species with a saturated sn-1 chain but different sn-2 chain cis unsaturation levels [e.g., myristate (14:0), oleate (18:1delta9(c), linoleate (18:2delta9,12(c), arachidonate (20:4delta5,8,11,14(c), or docosahexenoate (22:6delta4,7,10,13,16,19(c)], the in-plane elasticity moduli of PC species with higher sn-2 unsaturation levels were less affected by high cholesterol mol fractions (e.g., >30 mol %) than were the more saturated PC species. The largest cholesterol-induced decreases in the in-plane elasticity were observed when both chains of PC were saturated (e.g., di-14:0 PC). When both acyl chains were identically unsaturated, the resulting PCs were 20-25% more elastic in the presence of cholesterol than when their sn-1 chains were long and saturated (e.g., palmitate). The mixing of cholesterol with PC was found to diminish the in-plane elasticity of the films beyond what was predicted from the additive behavior of the individual lipid components apportioned by mole and area fraction. Deviations from additivity were greatest for di-14:0 PC and were least for diarachidonoyl PC and didocosahexenoyl PC. In contrast to Cs(-1) analyses, sterol-induced area condensations were relatively unresponsive to subtle structural differences in the PCs at high surface pressures. Cs(-1) versus average area plots also indicated the presence of cholesterol concentration-dependent, low-pressure (<14 mN/m) phase boundaries that became more prominent as PC acyl chain unsaturation increased. Hence, area condensations measured at low surface pressures often do not accurately portray which lipid structural features are important in the lipid-sterol interactions that occur at high membrane-like surface pressures.  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.
This article reviews the use of fluorescent lipids and free probes in the studies of lipid regular distribution in model membranes. The first part of this article summarizes the evidence and physical properties for lipid regular distribution in pyrene-labeled phosphatidylcholine (PC)/unlabeled PC binary mixtures as revealed by the fluorescence of pyrene-labeled PC. The original and the extended hexagonal superlattice model are discussed. The second part focuses on the fluorescence studies of sterol regular distributions in membranes. The experimental evidence for sterol superlattice formation obtained from the fluorescent sterol (i.e. dehydroergosterol) and non-sterol fluorescent probes (e.g. DPH and Laurdan) are evaluated. Prospects and concerns are given with regard to the sterol regular distribution. The third part deals briefly with the evidence for polar headgroup superlattices. The emphasis of this article is placed on the new concept that membrane properties and activities, including the activities of surface acting enzymes, drug partitioning, and membrane free volume, are fine-tuned by minute changes in the concentration of bulky lipids (e.g. sterols and pyrene-containing acyl chains) in the vicinities of the critical mole fractions for superlattice formation.  相似文献   

7.
We determined the distribution of lecithin molecular species between vesicles and mixed micelles in cholesterol super-saturated model biles (molar taurocholate-lecithin-cholesterol ratio 67:23:10, 3 g/dl, 0.15 M NaCl, pH approximately 6-7) that contained equimolar synthetic lecithin mixtures or egg yolk or soybean lecithins. After apparent equilibration (48 h), biles were fractionated by Superose 6 gel filtration chromatography at 20 degrees C, and lecithin molecular species in the vesicle and mixed micellar fractions were quantified as benzoyl diacylglycerides by high performance liquid chromatography. With binary lecithin mixtures, vesicles were enriched with lecithins containing the most saturated sn-1 or sn-2 chains by as much as 2.4-fold whereas mixed micelles were enriched in the more unsaturated lecithins. Vesicles isolated from model biles composed of egg yolk (primarily sn-1 16:0 and 18:0 acyl chains) or soy bean (mixed saturated and unsaturated sn-1 acyl chains) lecithins were selectively enriched (6.5-76%) in lecithins with saturated sn-1 acyl chains whereas mixed micelles were enriched with lecithins composed of either sn-1 18:1, 18:2, and 18:3 unsaturated or sn-2 20:4, 22:4, and 22:6 polyunsaturated chains. Gel filtration, lipid analysis, and quasielastic light scattering revealed that apparent micellar cholesterol solubilities and metastable vesicle cholesterol/lecithin molar ratios were as much as 60% and 100% higher, respectively, in biles composed of unsaturated lecithins. Acyl chain packing constraints imposed by distinctly different particle geometries most likely explain the asymmetric distribution of lecithin molecular species between vesicles and mixed micelles in model bile as well as the variations in apparent micellar cholesterol solubilities and vesicle cholesterol/lecithin molar ratios.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Sphingomyelins (SMs) containing homogeneous acyl chains with 12, 14, 16, 18, 24, or 26 carbons were synthesized and characterized using an automated Langmuir-type film balance. Surface pressure was monitored as a function of lipid molecular area at constant temperatures between 10 degrees C and 30 degrees C. SM containing lauroyl (12:0) acyl chains displayed only liquid-expanded behavior. Increasing the length of the saturated acyl chain (e.g., 14:0, 16:0, or 18:0) resulted in liquid-expanded to condensed two-dimensional phase transitions at many temperatures in the 10-30 degrees C range. Similar behavior was observed for SMs with lignoceroyl (24:0) or (cerotoyl) 26:0 acyl chains, but isotherms showed only condensed behavior at 10 and 15 degrees C. Insights into the physico-mechanical in-plane interactions occurring within the different SM phases and accompanying changes in SM phase state were provided by analyzing the interfacial area compressibility moduli. At similar surface pressures, SM fluid phases were less compressible than those of phosphatidylcholines with similar chain structures. The area per molecule and compressibility of SM condensed phases depended upon the length of the saturated acyl chain and upon spreading temperature. Spreading of SMs with very long saturated acyl chains at temperatures 30-35 degrees below T(m) resulted in condensed films with lower in-plane compressibilities, but consistently larger cross-sectional molecular areas than the condensed phases achieved by spreading at temperatures only 10-20 degrees below T(m). This behavior is discussed in terms of the enhancement of SM lateral aggregation by temperature reduction, a common approach used during domain isolation from biomembranes.  相似文献   

9.
Acholeplasma laidlawii was grown with different fatty acids for membrane lipid synthesis (saturated straight- and branched-chain acids and mono- and di-unsaturated acids). The ability of 12 different sterols to affect cell growth, lipid head group composition, the order parameter of the acyl chains, and the phase equilibria of in vivo lipid mixtures was studied. The following two effects were observed with respect to cell growth: with a given acyl chain composition of the membrane lipids, growth was stimulated, unaffected, reduced, or completely inhibited (lysis), depending on the sterol structure; and the effect of a certain sterol depended on the acyl chain composition (most striking for epicoprostanol, cholest-4-en-3-one, and cholest-5-en-3-one, which stimulated growth with saturated acyl chains but caused lysis with unsaturated chains). The three lytic sterols were the only sterols that caused a marked decrease in the ratio between the major lipids monoglucosyldiglyceride and diglucosyldiglyceride and hence a decrease in bilayer stability when the membranes were enriched in saturated (palmitoyl) chains. With these chains correlations were found for several sterols between the glucolipid ratio and the order parameter of the acyl chains, as well as the lamellar-reversed hexagonal phase transition, in model systems. A shaft experiment revealed a marked decrease in the ratio of monoglucosyldiglyceride to diglucosyldiglyceride with the lytic sterols in unsaturated (oleoyl) membranes. The two cholestenes induced nonlamellar phases in in vivo mixtures of oleoyl A. laidlawii lipids. The order parameters of the oleoyl chains were almost unaffected by the sterols. Generally, the observed effects cannot be explained by an influence of the sterols on the gel-to-liquid crystalline phase transition.  相似文献   

10.
In a previous study, we observed a series of dips in the plot of E/M (the ratio of excimer to monomer fluorescence intensity) versus the mole fraction of 1-palmitoyl-2-(10-pyrenyl)decanoyl-sn-glycerol-3-phosphatidylcholine (Pyr-PC) in Pyr-PC/DMPC binary mixtures at 30 degrees C. In the present study, we have characterized the physical nature of E/M dips in Pyr-PC/DMPC binary mixtures by varying pressure, temperature, and vesicle diameter. The E/M dips at 66.7 and at 71.4 mol% PyrPC in DMPC multilamellar vesicles remain discernible at 30-43 degrees C. At higher temperatures (e.g., 53 degrees C), the depth of the dip abruptly becomes smaller. This result agrees with the idea that E/M dips appear as a result of regular distribution of pyrene-labeled acyl chains into hexagonal super-lattices at critical mole fractions. Regular distribution is a self-ordering phenomenon. Usually, in self-ordered systems, the number of structural defects increases with increasing temperature, and thermal fluctuations eventually result in an order-to-disorder transition. The effect of vesicle diameter on the E/M dip at 66.7 mol% Pyr-PC in DMPC has been studied at 37.5 degrees C by using unilamellar vesicles of varying sizes. The E/M dip is observable in large unilamellar vesicles; however, the depth of the E/M dip decreases when the vesicle diameter is reduced. When the vesicle diameter is reduced to about 64 nm, the dip becomes shallow and split. This result suggests that the curvature-induced increase in the separation of lipids in the outer monolayer decreases the tendency of regular distribution for pyrene-labeled acyl chains. Regular distribution is believed to arise from the long-range repulsive interaction between Pyr-PC molecules due to the elastic deformation of the lipid matrix around the bulky pyrene moiety. When the radius of curvature becomes small, outer monolayer lipids are more separated. Therefore, pyrene-containing acyl chains fit better into the membrane matrix, which alleviates the deformation of the lattice and diminishes the long-range repulsive interactions between pyrene-containing acyl chains. Furthermore, we have shown a striking difference in the pressure dependence of E/M at critical Pyr-PC mole fractions and at noncritical mole fractions. In the pressure range between 0.001 and 0.7 kbar at 30 degrees C, E/M decreases steadily with increasing pressure at noncritical mole fractions; in contrast, E/M changes little with pressure at critical mole fractions (e.g., 33.3 and 50.0 mol% Pyr-PC).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Recently, evidence for cholesterol and phosphatidylcholine (PC) molecules to adapt superlattice arrangements in fluid lipid bilayers has been presented. Whether superlattice arrangements exist in other biologically relevant lipid membranes, such as phosphatidylethanolamine (PE)/PC, is still speculative. In this study, we have examined the physical properties of fluid 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-PC (POPC) and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-PE (POPE) binary mixtures as a function of the POPE mole fraction (X(PE)) using fluorescence and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. At 30 degrees C, i.e., above the Tm of POPE and POPC, deviations, or dips, as well as local data scattering in the excimer-to-monomer fluorescence intensity ratio of intramolecular excimer forming dipyrenylphosphatidylcholine probe in POPE/POPC mixtures were detected at X(PE) approximately 0.04, 0.11, 0.16, 0.26, 0.33, 0.51, 0.66, 0.75, 0.82, 0.91, and 0.94. The above critical values of X(PE) coincide (within +/-0.03) with the critical mole fractions X(HX,PE) or X(R,PE) predicted by a headgroup superlattice model, which assumes that the lipid headgroups form hexagonal or rectangular superlattice, respectively, in the bilayer. Other spectroscopic data, generalized polarization of Laurdan and infrared carbonyl and phosphate stretching frequency, were also collected. Similar agreements between some of the observed critical values of X(PE) from these data and the X(HX,PE) or X(R,PE) values were also found. However, all techniques yielded critical values of X(PE) (e.g., 0.42 and 0.58) that cannot be explained by the present headgroup superlattice model. The effective cross-sectional area of the PE headgroup is smaller than that of the acyl chains. Hence, the relief of "packing frustration" of PE in the presence of PC (larger headgroup than PE) may be one of the major mechanisms in driving the PE and PC components to superlattice-like lateral distributions in the bilayer. We propose that headgroup superlattices may play a significant role in the regulation of membrane lipid compositions in cells.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
A long-standing question about membrane structure and function is the degree to which the physical properties of the inner and outer leaflets of a bilayer are coupled to one another. Using our recently developed methods to prepare asymmetric vesicles, coupling was investigated for vesicles containing phosphatidylcholine (PC) in the inner leaflet and sphingomyelin (SM) in the outer leaflet. The coupling of both lateral diffusion and membrane order was monitored as a function of PC and SM acyl chain structure. The presence in the outer leaflet of brain SM, which decreased outer-leaflet lateral diffusion, had little effect upon lateral diffusion in inner leaflets composed of dioleoyl PC (i.e., diffusion was only weakly coupled in the two leaflets) but did greatly reduce lateral diffusion in inner leaflets composed of PC with one saturated and one oleoyl acyl chain (i.e., diffusion was strongly coupled in these cases). In addition, reduced outer-leaflet diffusion upon introduction of outer-leaflet milk SM or a synthetic C24:0 SM, both of which have long interdigitating acyl chains, also greatly reduce diffusion of inner leaflets composed of dioleoyl PC, indicative of strong coupling. Strikingly, several assays showed that the ordering of the outer leaflet induced by the presence of SM was not reflected in increased lipid order in the inner leaflet, i.e., there was no detectable coupling between inner and outer leaflet membrane order. We propose a model for how lateral diffusion can be coupled in opposite leaflets and discuss how this might impact membrane function.  相似文献   

14.
Ordered lipid domains enriched in sphingolipids and cholesterol (lipid rafts) have been implicated in numerous functions in biological membranes. We recently found that lipid domain/raft formation is dependent on the sterol component having a structure that allows tight packing with lipids having saturated acyl chains (Xu, X., and London, E. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 844-849). In this study, the domain-promoting activities of various natural sterols were compared with that of cholesterol using both fluorescence quenching and detergent insolubility methods. Using model membranes, it was shown that, like cholesterol, both plant and fungal sterols promote the formation of tightly packed, ordered lipid domains by lipids with saturated acyl chains. Surprisingly ergosterol, a fungal sterol, and 7-dehydrocholesterol, a sterol present in elevated levels in Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome, were both significantly more strongly domain-promoting than cholesterol. Domain formation was also affected by the structure of the sphingolipid (or that of an equivalent "saturated" phospholipid) component. Sterols had pronounced effects on domain formation by sphingomyelin and dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine but only a weak influence on the ability of cerebrosides to form domains. Strikingly it was found that a small amount of ceramide (3 mol %) significantly stabilized domain/raft formation. The molecular basis for, and the implications of, the effects of different sterols and sphingolipids (especially ceramide) on the behavior and biological function of rafts are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
The ever-increasing amount of trans fatty acids in the human diet has been linked to a variety of afflictions, most notably coronary heart disease and arteriosclerosis. The mechanism of why the replacement of cis fatty acids with their trans counterparts can be detrimental to the health of an individual remains a mystery. Here, we compare the differences in membrane physical properties including molecular dynamics, lateral lipid packing, thermotropic phase behavior, "fluidity", lateral mobility, and permeability between model membranes (lipid monolayers and bilayers) composed of cis- and trans-containing phosphatidylcholines (PCs). The PCs tested have a total of zero, one, two, or four cis (oleic or linoleic) or trans (elaidic or linoelaidic) double bonds. These experiments all confirm the basic hypothesis that trans fatty acids produce membrane properties more similar to those of saturated chains than to those of acyl chains containing cis double bonds; i.e., cis double bonds induce much larger membrane perturbations than trans double bonds.  相似文献   

16.
It is known that ceramides can influence the lateral organization in biological membranes. In particular ceramides have been shown to alter the composition of cholesterol and sphingolipid enriched nanoscopic domains, by displacing cholesterol, and forming gel phase domains with sphingomyelin. Here we have investigated how the bilayer content of ceramides and their chain length influence sterol partitioning into the membranes. The effect of ceramides with saturated chains ranging from 4 to 24 carbons in length was investigated. In addition, unsaturated 18:1- and 24:1-ceramides were also examined. The sterol partitioning into bilayer membranes was studied by measuring the distribution of cholestatrienol, a fluorescent cholesterol analogue, between methyl-β-cyclodextrin and large unilamellar vesicle with defined lipid composition. Up to 15 mol% ceramide was added to bilayers composed of DOPC:PSM:cholesterol (3:1:1), and the effect on sterol partitioning was measured. Both at 23 and 37 °C addition of ceramide affected the sterol partitioning in a chain length dependent manner, so that the ceramides with intermediate chain lengths were the most effective in reducing sterol partitioning into the membranes. At 23 °C the 18:1-ceramide was not as effective at inhibiting sterol partitioning into the vesicles as its saturated equivalent, but at 37 °C the additional double bond had no effect. The longer 24:1-ceramide behaved as 24:0-ceramide at both temperatures. In conclusion, this work shows how the distribution of sterols within sphingomyelin-containing membranes is affected by the acyl chain composition in ceramides. The overall membrane partitioning measured in this study reflects the differential partitioning of sterol into ordered domains where ceramides compete with the sterol for association with sphingomyelin.  相似文献   

17.
M B Sankaram  T E Thompson 《Biochemistry》1990,29(47):10676-10684
The effect of cholesterol on the acyl chain order of three glycerophosphocholines with 14, 16, and 18 carbons per acyl chain, namely, di(14:0)PC, di(16:0)PC, and di(18:0)PC, above the gel to liquid-crystalline phase transition temperature was investigated by using 2H nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Average acyl chain lengths were calculated from the segmental order parameters (Smol) for the sn-1 and the sn-2 chains in the absence of cholesterol and at 3:1, 2:1, and 1:1 mole ratios of phospholipid-cholesterol. The three binary mixtures of cholesterol with phosphatidylcholines are in the liquid-ordered (lo) phase. For all the three phosphatidylcholine-cholesterol systems, the distance from the carbonyl groups to the terminal methyl groups is shorter than the length of the cholesterol molecule. A molecular model for the lo phase consistent with these observations has in a statistical sense a part of each cholesterol molecule in one monolayer extending into the other monolayer. This results in a packing arrangement akin to that in interdigitated systems. On the basis of the effect of cholesterol on phospholipid acyl chain orientational order, it is suggested that the liquid-disordered (ld) phase at low cholesterol concentrations corresponds to a packing mode in which the cholesterol molecule spans the entire transbilayer hydrophobic region. A molecular mechanism is proposed in which increasing the concentration of cholesterol has the effect of stretching the acyl chains of phospholipids by increasing the population of trans conformers up to a stage where the hydrophobic length is considerably longer than the cholesterol molecule. Beyond this concentration, the partially interdigitated phase forms.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Deuterium ((2)H) NMR spectroscopy provides detailed information regarding the structural fluctuations of lipid bilayers, including both the equilibrium properties and dynamics. Experimental (2)H NMR measurements for the homologous series of 1, 2-diacyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholines with perdeuterated saturated chains (from C12:0 to C18:0) have been performed on randomly oriented, fully hydrated multilamellar samples. For each lipid, the C-D bond order parameters have been calculated from de-Paked (2)H NMR spectra as a function of temperature. The experimental order parameters were analyzed using a mean-torque potential model for the acyl chain segment distributions, and comparison was made with the conventional diamond lattice approach. Statistical mechanical principles were used to relate the measured order parameters to the lipid bilayer structural parameters: the hydrocarbon thickness and the mean interfacial area per lipid. At fixed temperature, the area decreases with increasing acyl length, indicating increased van der Waals attraction for longer lipid chains. However, the main effect of increasing the acyl chain length is on the hydrocarbon thickness rather than on the area per lipid. Expansion coefficients of the structural parameters are reported and interpreted using an empirical free energy function that describes the force balance in fluid bilayers. At the same absolute temperature, the phosphatidylcholine (PC) series exhibits a universal chain packing profile that differs from that of phosphatidylethanolamines (PE). Hence, the lateral packing of phospholipids is more sensitive to the headgroup methylation than to the acyl chain length. A fit to the area per lipid for the PC series using the empirical free energy function shows that the PE area represents a limiting value for the packing of fluid acyl chains.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of cholesterol on phospholipid acyl chain packing in bilayers consisting of highly unsaturated acyl chains in the liquid crystalline phase was examined for a series of symmetrically and asymmetrically substituted phosphatidylcholines (PCs). The time-resolved fluorescence emission and decay of fluorescence anisotropy of 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene (DPH) was used to characterize equilibrium and dynamic structural properties of bilayers containing 30 mol % cholesterol. The bilayers were composed of symmetrically substituted PCs with acyl chains of 14:0, 18:1n9, 20:4n6, or 22:6n3, containing 0, 1, 4, or 6 double bonds, respectively, and mixed-chain PCs with a saturated 16:0 sn-1 chain and 1, 4, or 6 double bonds in the sn-2 chain. DPH excited-state lifetime was fit to a Lorentzian lifetime distribution, the center of which was increased 1-2 ns by 30 mol % cholesterol relative to the cholesterol-free bilayers. Lifetime distributions were dramatically narrowed by the addition of cholesterol in all bilayers except the two consisting of dipolyunsaturated PCs. DPH anisotropy decay was interpreted in terms of the Brownian rotational diffusion model. The effect of cholesterol on both the perpendicular diffusion coefficient D perpendicular and the orientational distribution function f(theta) varied with acyl chain unsaturation. In all bilayers, except the two dipolyunsaturated PCs, 30 mol % cholesterol dramatically slowed DPH rotational motion and restricted DPH orientational freedom. The effect of cholesterol was especially diminished in di-22:6n3 PC, suggesting that this phospholipid may be particularly effective at promoting lateral domains, which are cholesterol-rich and unsaturation-rich, respectively. The results are discussed in terms of a model for lipid packing in membranes containing cholesterol and PCs with highly unsaturated acyl chains.  相似文献   

20.
Sphingomyelin (SM) is a major phospholipid in most cell membranes. SMs are composed of a long-chain base (often sphingosine, 18:1(Δ4t)), and N-linked acyl chains (often 16:0, 18:0 or 24:1(Δ15c)). Cholesterol interacts with SM in cell membranes, but the acyl chain preference of this interaction is not fully elucidated. In this study we have examined the effects of hydrophobic mismatch and interdigitation on cholesterol/sphingomyelin interaction in complex bilayer membranes. We measured the capacity of cholestatrienol (CTL) and cholesterol to form sterol-enriched ordered domains with saturated SM species having different chain lengths (14 to 24 carbons) in ternary bilayer membranes. We also determined the equilibrium bilayer partitioning coefficient of CTL with 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC) membranes containing 20mol% of saturated SM analogs. Ours results show that while CTL and cholesterol formed sterol-enriched domains with both short and long-chain SM species, the sterols preferred interaction with 16:0-SM over any other saturated chain length SM analog. When CTL membrane partitioning was determined with fluid POPC bilayers containing 20mol% of a saturated chain length SM analog, the highest affinity was seen with 16:0-SM (both at 23 and 37°C). These results indicate that hydrophobic mismatch and/or interdigitation attenuate sterol/SM association and thus affect lateral distribution of sterols in the bilayer membrane.  相似文献   

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