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1.
In membranes of the prokaryote Acholeplasma laidlawii, the physiological regulation of the two major membrane lipids, monoglucosyldiacylglycerol (MGlcDAG) and diglucosyldiacylglycerol (DGlcDAG), is governed by factors affecting the equilibria between lamellar and non-lamellar phases of the membrane lipids. The synthesis of the glucolipids is considered to be a two-step glucosylation: (i) DAG+UDP-Glc----MGlcDAG+UDP; and (ii) MGlcDAG+UDP-Glc----DGlcDAG+UPD. This was corroborated by in vivo pulse labelling experiments showing turnover of MGlcDAG but not DGlcDAG. The enzymatic synthesis of MGlcDAG was localized to fresh or freeze-dried membranes in vitro. Synthesis of DGlcDAG was minor in such membranes but of substantial magnitude in intact cells. Synthesis of MGlcDAG was stimulated by small amounts of SDS but completely inhibited upon solubilization of the membranes by a variety of detergents. The inhibitory effect of several UDP-Glc analogs on glucolipid synthesis demonstrated the importance of UDP-Glc as the sugar donor. Synthesis of both glucolipids was lost in freeze-dried plus lipid-extracted cells but restored when lipids were transferred back to the extracted cell membrane. By selectively adding specific lipids, a strong dependence on the acceptor lipid DAG, as well as the need for general matrix lipids for enzyme activity, was established. In addition, the anionic phosphatidylglycerol (PG), but not the other phospholipids, had a strong stimulatory effect. The presence of different phosphorylating agents stimulated the synthesis of DGlcDAG and partially inhibited that of MGlcDAG. This, together with the lipid dependency, may constitute mechanisms for the regulation of the enzyme activities in vivo.  相似文献   

2.
In the single membrane of Acholeplasma laidlawii, a specific glucosyltransferase (DGlcDAG synthase) synthesizes the major, bilayer-forming lipid diglucosyldiacylglycerol (DGlcDAG) from the preceding major, nonbilayer-prone monoglucosyldiacylglycerol (MGlcDAG). This is crucial for the maintenance of phase equilibria close to a potential bilayer-nonbilayer transition and a nearly constant spontaneous curvature for the membrane bilayer lipid mixture. The glucolipid pathway is also balanced against the phosphatidylglycerol (PG) pathway to maintain a certain lipid surface charge density. The DGlcDAG synthase was purified approximately 5000-fold by three chromatographic techniques and identified as a minor 40 kDa membrane protein. In CHAPS mixed micelles, a cooperative dependence on anionic lipid activators was confirmed, with PG as the best. The dependence of the enzyme on the soluble UDP-glucose substrate followed Michaelis-Menten kinetics, while the kinetics for the other (lipid) substrate MGlcDAG exhibited cooperativity, with Hill coefficients in the range of 3-5. Vmax and the Hill coefficient, but not Km, for the MGlcDAG substrate were increased by increased PG concentrations, but above 3 mol % MGlcDAG, the rate of synthesis was constant. Hence, the DGlcDAG synthase is more affected by the lipid activator than by the lipid substrate at physiological lipid concentrations. The enzyme was shown to be sensitive to curvature "stress" changes, i.e., was stimulated by various nonbilayer lipids but inhibited by certain others. Certain phosphates were also stimulatory. With the two purified MGlcDAG and DGlcDAG synthases reconstituted together in the presence of a potent nonbilayer lipid, the strong responses in the amounts of MGlcDAG and DGlcDAG synthesized mimicked the responses in vivo. This supports the important regulatory functions of these enzymes.  相似文献   

3.
In membranes of Acholeplasma laidlawii a single glucosyltransferase step between the major, nonbilayer-prone monoglucosyl-diacylglycerol (MGlcDAG) and the bilayer-forming diglucosyl-diacylglycerol (DGlcDAG) is important for maintenance of lipid phase equilibria and curvature packing stress. This DGlcDAG synthase is activated in a cooperative fashion by phosphatidylglycerol (PG), but in vivo PG amounts are not enough for efficient DGlcDAG synthesis. In vitro, phospholipids with an sn-glycero-3-phosphate backbone, and no positive head group charge, functioned as activators. Different metabolic, soluble phosphates could supplement PG for activation, depending on type, amount, and valency. Especially efficient were the glycolytic intermediates fructose 1,6-bisphosphate and ATP, active at cellular concentrations on the DGlcDAG but not on the preceding MGlcDAG synthase. Potencies of different phosphatidylinositol (foreign lipid) derivatives differed with numbers and positions of their phosphate moieties. A selective stimulation of the DGlcDAG, but not the MGlcDAG synthase, by minor amounts of double-stranded DNA was additive to the best phospholipid activators. These results support two types of activator sites on the enzyme: (i) lipid-phosphate ones close to the membrane interphase, and (ii) soluble (or particulate)-phosphate ones further out from the surface. Thereby, the nonbilayer (MGlcDAG) to bilayer (DGlcDAG) lipid balance may be integrated with the metabolic status of the cell and potentially also to membrane and cell division.  相似文献   

4.
In membranes of the small prokaryote Acholeplasma laidlawii bilayer- and nonbilayer-prone glycolipids are major species, similar to chloroplast membranes. Enzymes of the glucolipid pathway keep certain important packing properties of the bilayer in vivo, visualized especially as a monolayer curvature stress ('spontaneous curvature'). Two key enzymes depend in a cooperative fashion on substantial amounts of the endogenous anionic lipid phosphatidylglycerol (PG) for activity. The lateral organization of five unsaturated A. laidlawii lipids was analyzed in liposome model bilayers with the use of endogenously produced pyrene-lipid probes, and extensive experimental designs. Of all lipids analyzed, PG especially promoted interactions with the precursor diacylglycerol (DAG), as revealed from pyrene excimer ratio (Ie/Im) responses. Significant interactions were also recorded within the major nonbilayer-prone monoglucosylDAG (MGlcDAG) lipids. The anionic precursor phosphatidic acid (PA) was without effects. Hence, a heterogeneous lateral lipid organization was present in these liquid-crystalline bilayers. The MGlcDAG synthase when binding at the PG bilayer interface, decreased acyl chain ordering (increase of membrane free volume) according to a bis-pyrene-lipid probe, but the enzyme did not influence the bulk lateral lipid organization as recorded from DAG or PG probes. It is concluded that the concentration of the substrate DAG by PG is beneficial for the MGlcDAG synthase, but that binding in a proper orientation/conformation seems most important for activity.  相似文献   

5.
Li L  Storm P  Karlsson OP  Berg S  Wieslander A 《Biochemistry》2003,42(32):9677-9686
1,2-Diacylglycerol 3-glucosyltransferase is associated with the membrane surface catalyzing the synthesis of the major nonbilayer-prone lipid alpha-monoglucosyl diacylglycerol (MGlcDAG) from 1,2-DAG in the cell wall-less Acholeplasma laidlawii. Phosphatidylglycerol (PG), but not neutral or zwitterionic lipids, seems to be essential for an active conformation and function of the enzyme. Surface plasmon resonance analysis was employed to study association of the enzyme with lipid bilayers. Binding kinetics could be well fitted only to a two-state model, implying also a (second) conformational step. The enzyme bound less efficiently to liposomes containing only zwitterionic lipids, whereas increasing molar fractions of the anionic PG or cardiolipin (CL) strongly promoted binding by improved association (k(a1)), and especially a decreased rate of return (k(d2)) from the second state. This yielded a very low overall dissociation constant (K(D)), corresponding to an essentially irreversible membrane association. Both liposome binding and consecutive activity of the enzyme correlated with the PG concentration. The importance of the electrostatic interactions with anionic lipids was shown by quenching of both binding and activity with increasing NaCl concentrations, and corroborated in vivo for an active enzyme-green fluorescent protein hybrid in Escherichia coli. Nonbilayer-prone lipids substantially enhanced enzyme-liposome binding by promoting a changed conformation (decreasing k(d2)), similar to the anionic lipids, indicating the importance of hydrophobic interactions and a curvature packing stress. For CL and the nonbilayer lipids, effects on enzyme binding and consecutive activity were not correlated, suggesting a separate lipid control of activity. Similar features were recorded with polylysine (cationic) and polyglutamate (anionic) peptides present, but here probably dependent on the selective charge interactions with the enzyme N- and C-domains, respectively. A lipid-dependent conformational change and PG association of the enzyme were verified by circular dichroism, intrinsic tryptophan, and pyrene-probe fluorescence analyses, respectively. It is concluded that an electrostatic association of the enzyme with the membrane surface is accompanied by hydrophobic interactions and a conformational change. However, specific lipids, the curvature packing stress, and proteins or small molecules bound to the enzyme can modulate the activity of the bound A. laidlawii MGlcDAG synthase.  相似文献   

6.
In membranes of Acholeplasma laidlawii two consecutively acting glucosyltransferases, the (i) alpha-monoglucosyldiacylglycerol (MGlcDAG) synthase (alMGS) (EC ) and the (ii) alpha-diglucosyl-DAG (DGlcDAG) synthase (alDGS) (EC ), are involved in maintaining (i) a certain anionic lipid surface charge density and (ii) constant nonbilayer/bilayer conditions (curvature packing stress), respectively. Cloning of the alDGS gene revealed related uncharacterized sequence analogs especially in several Gram-positive pathogens, thermophiles and archaea, where the encoded enzyme function of a potential Streptococcus pneumoniae DGS gene (cpoA) was verified. A strong stimulation of alDGS by phosphatidylglycerol (PG), cardiolipin, or nonbilayer-prone 1,3-DAG was observed, while only PG stimulated CpoA. Several secondary structure prediction and fold recognition methods were used together with SWISS-MODEL to build three-dimensional model structures for three MGS and two DGS lipid glycosyltransferases. Two Escherichia coli proteins with known structures were identified as the best templates, the membrane surface-associated two-domain glycosyltransferase MurG and the soluble GlcNAc epimerase. Differences in electrostatic surface potential between the different models and their individual domains suggest that electrostatic interactions play a role for the association to membranes. Further support for this was obtained when hybrids of the N- and C-domain, and full size alMGS with green fluorescent protein were localized to different regions of the E. coli inner membrane and cytoplasm in vivo. In conclusion, it is proposed that the varying abilities to bind, and sense lipid charge and curvature stress, are governed by typical differences in charge (pI values), amphiphilicity, and hydrophobicity for the N- and (catalytic) C-domains of these structurally similar membrane-associated enzymes.  相似文献   

7.
The two dominant glucolipids in Acholeplasma laidlawii, viz., 1,2-diacyl-3-O-(alpha-D-glucopyranosyl)-sn-glycerol (MGlcDG) and 1,2-diacyl-3-O-[alpha-D-glucopyranosyl-(1----2)-O-alpha-D-glucopyranosyl ]- sn-glycerol (DGlcDG), have markedly different phase behavior. MGlcDG has an ability to form nonlamellar phases, whereas DGlcDG only forms lamellar phases. For maintenance of a stable lipid bilayer, the polar headgroup composition in A. laidlawii is metabolically regulated in vivo, in response to changes in the growth conditions [Wieslander et al. (1980) Biochemistry 19, 3650; Lindblom et al. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 7502]. To investigate the mechanism behind the lipid regulation, we have here studied bilayers of mixtures of unsaturated MGlcDG and DGlcDG, containing a small fraction of biosynthetically incorporated perdeuterated palmitic acid, with 2H NMR. The order-parameter profile of the acyl chains and an apparent transverse spin relaxation rate (R2) were determined from dePaked quadrupole-echo spectra. The order of the acyl chains in DGlcDG-d31 increases upon addition of protonated MGlcDG, whereas the order of MGlcDG-d31 decreases when DGlcDG is added. The variation of order with lipid composition is rationalized from simple packing constraints. R2 increases linearly with the square of the order parameter (S2) up to S approximately 0.14; then, R2 goes through a maximum and decreases. The increase in R2 with S2, as well as the magnitude of R2, is largest for pure MGlcDG-d31, smallest for DGlcDG-d31, and similar for mixtures with the same molar ratio of MGlcDG/DGlcDG but with the deuterium label on different lipids.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
The mechanisms by which lipid bilayer properties govern or influence membrane protein functions are little understood, but a liquid-crystalline state and the presence of anionic and nonbilayer (NB)-prone lipids seem important. An Escherichia coli mutant lacking the major membrane lipid phosphatidylethanolamine (NB-prone) requires divalent cations for viability and cell integrity and is impaired in several membrane functions that are corrected by introduction of the "foreign" NB-prone neutral glycolipid alpha-monoglucosyldiacylglycerol (MGlcDAG) synthesized by the MGlcDAG synthase from Acholeplasma laidlawii. Dependence on Mg(2+) was reduced, and cellular yields and division malfunction were greatly improved. The increased passive membrane permeability of the mutant was not abolished, but protein-mediated osmotic stress adaptation to salts and sucrose was recovered by the presence of MGlcDAG. MGlcDAG also restored tryptophan prototrophy and active transport function of lactose permease, both critically dependent on phosphatidylethanolamine. Three mechanisms can explain the observed effects: NB-prone MGlcDAG improves the quenched lateral pressure profile across the bilayer; neutral MGlcDAG dilutes the high anionic lipid surface charge; MGlcDAG provides a neutral lipid that can hydrogen bond and/or partially ionize. The reduced dependence on Mg(2+) and lack of correction by high monovalent salts strongly support the essential nature of the NB properties of MGlcDAG.  相似文献   

9.
To determine the specific role lipids play in membrane protein topogenesis in vivo, the orientation with respect to the membrane bilayer of Escherichia coli lactose permease (LacY) transmembrane (TM) domains and their flanking extramembrane domains was compared after assembly in native membranes and membranes with genetically modified lipid content using the substituted cysteine accessibility method for determining TM domain mapping. LacY assembled in the absence of the major membrane lipid phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) does not carry out uphill transport of substrate and displays an inverted orientation for the N-terminal six-TM domain helical bundle (Bogdanov, M., Heacock, P. N., and Dowhan, W. (2002) EMBO J. 21, 2107-2116). Strikingly, the replacement of PE in vivo by the foreign lipid monoglucosyldiacylglycerol (MGlcDAG), synthesized by the Acholeplasma laidlawii MGlcDAG synthase, restored uphill transport and supported the wild type TM topology of the N-terminal helical bundle of LacY. An interchangeable role in defining membrane protein TM domain orientation and supporting function is played by the two most abundant lipids, PE and MGlcDAG, in gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria, respectively. Therefore, these structurally diverse lipids endow the membrane with similar properties necessary for the proper organization of protein domains in LacY that are highly sensitive to lipids as topological determinants.  相似文献   

10.
Lindblom G  Orädd G  Rilfors L  Morein S 《Biochemistry》2002,41(38):11512-11515
Lipid lateral diffusion coefficients have been directly determined by pulsed field gradient NMR spectroscopy on macroscopically aligned, fully hydrated lamellar phases containing dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine and total lipid extracts from Acholeplasma laidlawii and Escherichia coli. The temperature dependence of the diffusion coefficient was of the Arrhenius type in the temperature interval studied. The sharp increase in the diffusion coefficient at the growth temperature of E. coli obtained by FRAP measurements, using a fluorescent probe molecule (Jin, A. J., Edidin, M., Nossal, R., and Gershfeld, N. L. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 13275-13278), was not observed. Thus, we conclude that the lipid structural properties (i.e., those affecting the lipid phase behavior), rather than the lipid dynamics, are involved in the adjustment of the membrane lipid composition. Further support for this conclusion is given by the finding that lipid extracts from A. laidlawii grown at different temperatures have about the same diffusion coefficients. Finally, the lipid lateral diffusion in bilayers of phospholipids was found to be much faster than that in bilayers of mainly glucolipids, which can be understood in terms of a free volume theory for the diffusion process.  相似文献   

11.
Synthesis of the nonbilayer-prone alpha-monoglucosyldiacylglycerol (MGlcDAG) is crucial for bilayer packing properties and the lipid surface charge density in the membrane of Acholeplasma laidlawii. The gene for the responsible, membrane-bound glucosyltransferase (alMGS) (EC ) was sequenced and functionally cloned in Escherichia coli, yielding MGlcDAG in the recombinants. Similar amino acid sequences were encoded in the genomes of several Gram-positive bacteria (especially pathogens), thermophiles, archaea, and a few eukaryotes. All of these contained the typical EX(7)E catalytic motif of the CAZy family 4 of alpha-glycosyltransferases. The synthesis of MGlcDAG by a close sequence analog from Streptococcus pneumoniae (spMGS) was verified by polymerase chain reaction cloning, corroborating a connection between sequence and functional similarity for these proteins. However, alMGS and spMGS varied in dependence on anionic phospholipid activators phosphatidylglycerol and cardiolipin, suggesting certain regulatory differences. Fold predictions strongly indicated a similarity for alMGS (and spMGS) with the two-domain structure of the E. coli MurG cell envelope glycosyltransferase and several amphipathic membrane-binding segments in various proteins. On the basis of this structure, the alMGS sequence charge distribution, and anionic phospholipid dependence, a model for the bilayer surface binding and activity is proposed for this regulatory enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
A basis for the reorganization of the bilayer structure in biological membranes is the different aggregate structures formed by lipids in water. The phase equilibria of all individual lipids and several in vivo polar lipid mixtures from acyl chain modified membranes of Acholeplasma laidlawii were investigated with different NMR techniques. All dioleoyl (DO) polar lipids, except monoglucosyldiglyceride (MGDG), form lamellar liquid crystalline (L alpha) phases only. The phase diagram of DOMGDG reveals reversed cubic (III), reversed hexagonal (HII), and L alpha phases. In mixtures of DOMGDG and dioleoyldiglycosyldiglyceride (DODGDG), the formation of an III (or HII) phase is enhanced by DOMGDG and low hydration or high temperatures. For in vivo mixtures of all polar DO lipids, a transition from an L alpha to an III phase is promoted by low hydration or high temperatures (50 degrees C). The phospholipids are incorporated in this III phase. Likewise, III and HII phases are formed at similar temperatures in a series of in vivo mixtures with different extents of acyl chain unsaturation. However, their melting temperatures (Tm) vary in an expected manner. All cubic and hexagonal phases, except the III phase with DOMGDG, exist in equilibrium with excess water. The maximum hydration of MGDG and DGDG is similar and increases with acyl chain unsaturation but is substantially lower than that for, e.g., phosphatidylcholine. The translational diffusion of the lipids in the cubic phases is rapid, implying bicontinuous structures. However, their appearances in freeze-fracture electron microscope pictures are different. The III phase of DOMGDG belongs to the Ia3d space group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
We have studied the biosynthetic regulation of the membrane lipid polar headgroup distribution in Acholeplasma laidlawii B cells made fatty acid auxotrophic by growth in the presence of the biotin-binding agent avidin to test whether this organism has the ability to coherently regulate the lamellar/nonlamellar phase propensity of its membrane lipids. The addition of various single normal growth-supporting exogenous fatty acids to such cell cultures produces fatty acid-homogeneous cells in which the hydrocarbon chain length and structure of the fatty acyl chains of the membrane lipids can be independently varied. Moreover, in analyzing our results, we consider the fact that the individual membrane lipid classes of this organism can form either normal micellar, lamellar, or reversed cubic or hexagonal phases in isolation (Lewis, R. N. A. H., and McElhaney, R. N. (1995) Biochemistry 34, 13818-13824). When A. laidlawii cells are highly enriched in one of a homologous series of methyl isobranched, methyl anteisobranched, or omega-cyclohexyl fatty acids, neither the ratio of normal micellar/lamellar nor of inverted cubic or hexagonal/lamellar phase-forming lipids are coherently regulated, and in fact in the former case, the changes in lipid polar headgroup composition observed are generally in a direction opposite to that required to maintain the overall lamellar/nonlamellar phase preference of the total membrane lipids constant when hydrocarbon chain length is varied. Similarly, when lipid hydrocarbon structure is varied at a constant effective chain length, a similar lack of coherent regulation of membrane lipid polar headgroup distribution is also observed, although in this case a weak overall trend in the expected direction occurs. We also confirm our previous finding (Foht, P. J., Tran, Q. M., Lewis, R. N. A. H., and McElhaney, R. N. (1995) Biochemistry 34, 13811-13817) that the ratio of inverted phase-forming monoglucosyl diacylglycerol to the lamellar phase-forming glycolipid diglucosyl diacylglycerol, previously used to estimate membrane lipid phase preference in A. laidlawii A and B, is not by itself a reliable indicator of the overall lamellar/nonlamellar phase propensity of the total membrane lipids of these organisms. Our results indicate that A. laidlawii B lacks a coherent mechanism to biosynthetically regulate the polar headgroup distribution of its membrane lipids to maintain the micellar/lamellar/inverted phase propensity constant in the face of induced variations in either the chain length or the structure of its lipid hydrocarbon chains. Finally, we suggest that the lack of a coherent regulatory mechanism to regulate the overall phase-forming propensity of the total membrane lipids of this organism under these circumstances may result in part from its inability to optimize all of the biologically relevant physical properties of its membrane lipid bilayer simultaneously.  相似文献   

14.
We have systematically investigated the effect of variations in growth temperature, fatty acid composition and cholesterol content on the membrane lipid polar headgroup composition of Acholeplasma laidlawii B. Two important lipid compositional parameters have been determined from such an analysis. The first parameter studied was the ratio of the two major neutral glycolipids of this organism, monoglucosyldiacylglycerol (MGDG) and diglucosyldiacylglycerol (DGDG). As the former lipid prefers to exist in a reversed hexagonal phase at higher temperatures, with unsaturated fatty acyl chains or in the presence of cholesterol, the ratio of these two lipids reflects the phase state preference of the total A. laidlawii membrane lipids. Although we find that the MGDG/DGDG ratio is reduced in response to an increase in fatty acid unsaturation, increases in growth temperature or cholesterol content reduce this ratio only in cells enriched in a saturated but not an unsaturated fatty acid. The second parameter studied was the ratio of these neutral glycolipids to the only phosphatide in the A. laidlawii membrane, phosphatidylglycerol (PG); this parameter reflects the relative balance of uncharged and charged lipids in the membrane of this organism. We find that the MGDG + DGDG/PG ratio is lowest in cells enriched in the saturated fatty acid even though these cells already have the highest lipid bilayer surface charge density. Moreover, this ratio is not consistently related to growth temperature or changes in cholesterol levels, as expected. We therefore conclude that A. laidlawii strain B, apparently unlike strain A, does not possess coherent regulatory mechanisms for maintaining either the phase preference or the surface charge density of its membrane lipid constant in response to variations in growth temperature, fatty acid composition or cholesterol content.  相似文献   

15.
Giant unilamellar vesicles composed of a ternary mixture of phospholipids and cholesterol exhibit coexisting liquid phases over a range of temperatures and compositions. A significant fraction of lipids in biological membranes are charged. Here, we present phase diagrams of vesicles composed of phosphatidylcholine (PC) lipids, which are zwitterionic; phosphatidylglycerol (PG) lipids, which are anionic; and cholesterol (Chol). Specifically, we use DiPhyPG-DPPC-Chol and DiPhyPC-DPPG-Chol. We show that miscibility in membranes containing charged PG lipids occurs over similarly high temperatures and broad lipid compositions as in corresponding membranes containing only uncharged lipids, and that the presence of salt has a minimal effect. We verified our results in two ways. First, we used mass spectrometry to ensure that charged PC/PG/Chol vesicles formed by gentle hydration have the same composition as the lipid stocks from which they are made. Second, we repeated the experiments by substituting phosphatidylserine for PG as the charged lipid and observed similar phenomena. Our results consistently support the view that monovalent charged lipids have only a minimal effect on lipid miscibility phase behavior in our system.  相似文献   

16.
Perdeuterated indole-d6 and N-methylated indole-d6 were solubilized in lamellar liquid crystalline phases composed of either 1,2-diacyl-glycero-3-phosphocholine (14:0)/water or 1,2-dialkyl-glycero-3-phosphocholine(14:0/water. The molecular ordering of the tryptophan analogs was determined from deuteron quadrupole splittings observed in 2H-NMR spectra on macroscopically aligned lipid bilayers. NMR spectra were recorded with the bilayers oriented perpendicular to or parallel with the external magnetic field, and the values of the splittings differed by a factor of 2 between these distinct orientations, indicating fast rotational motion of the molecules about an axis parallel to the bilayer normal. In all cases the splittings were found to decrease with increasing temperature. Relatively large splittings were observed in all systems, demonstrating that the tryptophans partition into a highly anisotropic environment. Solubilization most likely occurs at the lipid/water interface, as indicated by 1H-NMR chemical shift studies. The 2H-NMR spectra obtained for each analog were found to be rather similar in ester and ether lipids, but with smaller splittings in the ether lipid under similar conditions. The difference was slightly less for the indole molecule. Furthermore, in both lipid systems the positions of the splittings from indole were different from those of N-methyl indole. The results suggest that 1) the tryptophan analogs are solubilized in the interfacial region of the lipid bilayer, 2) the behavior may be modulated by hydrogen bonding in the case of indole, and 3) hydrogen bonding with the lipid carbonyl groups is not likely to play a major role in the solubilization of single indole molecules in the ester lipid bilayer interface.  相似文献   

17.
In membranes of Acholeplasma laidlawii, lipid composition is regulated as a function of several stimuli affecting the volume and length of the hydrocarbon chains and the hydrocarbon-water interfacial area. This regulation is vizualized as changes in the relative amounts of the major polar lipids monoglucosyl diglyceride and diglucosyl diglyceride. These lipids form reversed hexagonal and lamellar phases with water, respectively. However, mixtures of the two lipids, in the molar proportions found in the A. laidlawii membrane, form a lamellar phase. By adjustment of the glycolipid ratio as a response to environmental stimuli, a certain stability of the lamellar membrane is maintained. In growing cells with oleoyl membrane lipids, a transmembrane electrical potential of approximately -50 mV (inside negative), but no transmembrane pH difference, was found. Addition of the K+ ionophore valinomycin caused a rapid and dose-dependent hyperpolarization remaining for at least 7 h. Simultaneously, a rapid and lasting metabolic decrease in the ratio monoglucosyl diglyceride/diglucosyl diglyceride occurred. The increase in potential and the decrease in the lipid ratio were both reversed in a dose-dependent manner by extracellular KCl. Likewise, the lipophilic cation tetraphenylphosphonium caused a dose-dependent decrease in membrane potential and an increase in the monoglucosyl diglyceride/diglucosyl diglyceride ratio, respectively. The ionophores monensin and particularly nigericin had similar but less pronounced effects on the potential and lipid ratios as valinomycin. The uncoupler carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone had no effect on cell growth, membrane potential, or lipid regulation at 10 microM. These dissimilar structures and the low concentrations used make a direct disturbance of drug molecules on lipid packing in membranes less likely.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Giant unilamellar vesicles composed of a ternary mixture of phospholipids and cholesterol exhibit coexisting liquid phases over a range of temperatures and compositions. A significant fraction of lipids in biological membranes are charged. Here, we present phase diagrams of vesicles composed of phosphatidylcholine (PC) lipids, which are zwitterionic; phosphatidylglycerol (PG) lipids, which are anionic; and cholesterol (Chol). Specifically, we use DiPhyPG-DPPC-Chol and DiPhyPC-DPPG-Chol. We show that miscibility in membranes containing charged PG lipids occurs over similarly high temperatures and broad lipid compositions as in corresponding membranes containing only uncharged lipids, and that the presence of salt has a minimal effect. We verified our results in two ways. First, we used mass spectrometry to ensure that charged PC/PG/Chol vesicles formed by gentle hydration have the same composition as the lipid stocks from which they are made. Second, we repeated the experiments by substituting phosphatidylserine for PG as the charged lipid and observed similar phenomena. Our results consistently support the view that monovalent charged lipids have only a minimal effect on lipid miscibility phase behavior in our system.  相似文献   

19.
We investigate the role of anionic lipids in the binding to, and subsequent movement of charged protein groups in lipid membranes, to help understand the role of membrane composition in all membrane-active protein sequences. We demonstrate a small effect of phosphatidylglycerol (PG) lipids on the ability of an arginine (Arg) side chain to bind to, and cross a lipid membrane, despite possessing a neutralizing charge. We observe similar membrane deformations in lipid bilayers composed of phosphatidylcholine (PC) and PC/PG mixtures, with comparable numbers of water and lipid head groups pulled into the bilayer hydrocarbon core, and prohibitively large ~20 kcal/mol barriers for Arg transfer across each bilayer, dropping by just 2-3 kcal/mol due to the binding of PG lipids. We explore the causes of this small effect of introducing PG lipids and offer an explanation in terms of the limited membrane interaction for the choline groups of PC lipids bound to the translocating ion. Our calculations reveal a surprising lack of preference for Arg binding to PG lipids themselves, but a small increase in interfacial binding affinity for lipid bilayers containing PG lipids. These results help to explain the nature of competitive lipid binding to charged protein sequences, with implications for a wide range of membrane binding domains and cell perturbing peptides.  相似文献   

20.
The hydration properties and the phase structure of 1,2-di-O-tetradecyl-3-O(3-O-methyl-beta-D-glucopyranosyl)-sn-glycerol (3-O-Me-beta-D-GlcDAIG) in water have been studied via differential scanning calorimetry, 1H-NMR and 2H-NMR spectroscopy, and x-ray diffraction. Results indicate that this lipid forms a crystalline (Lc) phase up to temperatures of 60-70 degrees C, where a transition through a metastable reversed hexagonal (Hll) phase to a reversed micellar solution (L2) phase occurs. Experiments were carried out at water concentrations in a range from 0 to 35 wt%, which indicate that all phases are poorly hydrated, taking up < 5 mol water/mol lipid. The absence of a lamellar liquid crystalline (L alpha) phase and the low levels of hydration measured in the discernible phases suggest that the methylation of the saccharide moiety alters the hydrogen bonding properties of the headgroup in such a way that the 3-O-Me-beta-D-GlcDAIG headgroup cannot achieve the same level of hydration as the unmethylated form. Thus, in spite of the small increase in steric bulk resulting from methylation, there is an increase in the tendency of 3-O-Me-beta-D-GlcDAIG to form nonlamellar structures. A similar phase behavior has previously been observed for the Acholeplasma laidlawii A membrane lipid 1,2-diacyl-3-O-(6-O-acyl-alpha-D-glucopyranosyl)-sn-glycerol in water (Lindblom et al. 1993. J. Biol. Chem. 268:16198-16207). The phase behavior of the two lipids suggests that hydrophobic substitution of a hydroxyl group in the sugar ring of the glucopyranosylglycerols has a very strong effect on their physicochemical properties, i.e., headgroup hydration and the formation of different lipid aggregate structures.  相似文献   

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