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1.
Eukaryotic membrane proteins generally reside in membrane bilayers that have lipid asymmetry. However, in vitro studies of the impact of lipids upon membrane proteins are generally carried out in model membrane vesicles that lack lipid asymmetry. Our recently developed method to prepare lipid vesicles with asymmetry similar to that in plasma membranes and with controlled amounts of cholesterol was used to investigate the influence of lipid composition and lipid asymmetry upon the conformational behavior of the pore-forming, cholesterol-dependent cytolysin perfringolysin O (PFO). PFO conformational behavior in asymmetric vesicles was found to be distinct both from that in symmetric vesicles with the same lipid composition as the asymmetric vesicles and from that in vesicles containing either only the inner leaflet lipids from the asymmetric vesicles or only the outer leaflet lipids from the asymmetric vesicles. The presence of phosphatidylcholine in the outer leaflet increased the cholesterol concentration required to induce PFO binding, whereas phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylserine in the inner leaflet of asymmetric vesicles stabilized the formation of a novel deeply inserted conformation that does not form pores, even though it contains transmembrane segments. This conformation may represent an important intermediate stage in PFO pore formation. These studies show that lipid asymmetry can strongly influence the behavior of membrane-inserted proteins.  相似文献   

2.
The application of the theory of homeomorphic transformations of topological manifolds and the operation of the connected sum of manifolds for a formation of a topological model of membrane transformations during the division process of cellular and subcellular compartments, has been shown. The biological cell and the subcellular structures in the form of vesicles are modelled by an arrangement of two concentric spheres corresponding to the inner and outer layer of the membrane bounding the vesicle. The analysis shows eight succeeding topological stages of membrane transformations during the division process and these stages are characterised. It is concluded that there is a vectorial translocation of lipid molecules from the inner layer of the membrane bounding the vesicle before the division process to the outer layer of the membranes after the division process and there is no lipid translocation from the outer layer to the inner layers during the division process.  相似文献   

3.
We studied the interaction of the cell-penetrating peptide penetratin with mixed dioleoylphosphatidylcholine/dioleoylphoshatidylglycerol (DOPC/DOPG) unilamellar vesicles as a function of the molar fraction of anionic lipid, X(PG), by means of isothermal titration calorimetry. The work was aimed at getting a better understanding of factors that affect the peptide binding to lipid membranes and its permeation through the bilayer. The binding was well described by a surface partitioning equilibrium using an effective charge of the peptide of z(P) approximately 5.1 +/- 0.5. The peptide first binds to the outer surface of the vesicles, the effective binding capacity of which increases with X(PG). At X(PG) approximately 0.5 and a molar ratio of bound peptide-to-lipid of approximately 1/20 the membranes become permeable and penetratin binds also to the inner monolayer after internalization. The results were rationalized in terms of an "electroporation-like" mechanism, according to which the asymmetrical distribution of the peptide between the outer and inner surfaces of the charged bilayer causes a transmembrane electrical field, which alters the lateral and the curvature stress acting within the membrane. At a threshold value these effects induce internalization of penetratin presumably via inversely curved transient structures.  相似文献   

4.
Smriti  Nemergut EC  Daleke DL 《Biochemistry》2007,46(8):2249-2259
The plasma membrane of most cells contains a number of lipid transporters that catalyze the ATP-dependent movement of phospholipids across the membrane and assist in the maintenance of lipid asymmetry. The most well-characterized of these transporters is the erythrocyte aminophospholipid flippase, which selectively transports phosphatidylserine (PS) from the outer to the inner monolayer. Previous work has demonstrated that PS and to a lesser extent phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) are substrates for the flippase and that other phospholipids move across the membrane only by passive flip-flop. The present study re-evaluates these results. The incorporation and transbilayer movement of a number of short-chain (dilauroyl) phospholipid analogues in human erythrocytes was measured by observing lipid-induced changes in cell morphology, and the effect of an ATPase inhibitor (vanadate) and a sulfyhdryl reagent (N-ethylmaleimide) was determined. Incubation of cells with these lipids causes the rapid formation of echinocytes, because of the accumulation of the lipid in the outer monolayer. While dilauroylphosphatidylcholine-treated cells retained this shape, cells treated with sn-1,2-DLP-l-S, sn-1,2-DLP-d-S, or N-methyl-DLPS rapidly changed morphology to stomatocytes, which is consistent with the transport and accumulation of the lipid in the inner monolayer. A similar, although slower, stomatocytic shape change was induced by sn-2,3-DLP-l-S. Other lipids that were tested (dilauroylphosphatidylhydroxypropionate, dilauroylphosphatidylhomoserine, DLPS-methyl ester, or sn-2,3-DLP-d-S) reverted to discocytes only. In all cases, pretreatment with vanadate or N-ethylmaleimide inhibited the conversion of echinocytes to discocytes or stomatocytes. This is the first report of a protein- and energy-dependent pathway for the inwardly directed transbilayer movement of lipids other than PS and PE in the erythrocyte membrane and suggests that the flippase has broader specificity for substrates or that other lipid transporters are present.  相似文献   

5.
(1) Treatment of erythrocytes with phospholipase A2 from bee venom cleaves about 55% of the phosphatidylcholine in the outer membrane lipid layer without changing the discoid shape of the cells. All of the fatty acids and 80% of the lysophosphatidylcholine produced under this conditions can be sequentially extracted by bovine serum albumin without hemolysis of the cells. (2) The cells remain discoid up to extraction of all of the fatty acids and 15% of the lysophosphatidylcholine. Removal of a higher fraction of lysophosphatidylcholine induces formation of stomatocytes and sphero-stomatocytes, probably going along with an internalization of membrane vesicles. Stomatocytosis can be explained on the basis of the ‘bilayer couple hypothesis’ (Sheetz, M.P. and Singer, S.J. (1974) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 71, 4457–4461). The shape change will compensate for the differences in surface pressure between the two leaflets induced by selective removal of material from the outer leaf of the bilayer. (3) Increasing the shear modulus of the membrane by diamide prevents this compensatory shape change even after extraction of up to 80% of the lysophosphatidylcholine, which amounts to a loss of 34% of the phospholipids of the outer membrane layer or 22% of its area. This leads to the interesting situation of a membrane possibly having a strikingly diminished ratio of the numbers of phospholipid molecules in the outer to that in the inner lipid layer. A marked difference in surface pressures should arise in this situation, unless other compensatory mechanisms become operative. Evidence for a compensation for outer lipid loss by a constriction of the inner layer has been obtained. A compensation by transbilayer reorientation of phospholipids could not be demonstrated. This latter observation supports the concept of a stabilisation of the asymmetric phospholipid arrangement by proteins such as spectrin.  相似文献   

6.
Summary The ultrastructure and development of the amphiesma of the dinoflagellateGlenodinium foliaceum was studied using conventional electron microscopy and immunocytochemistry. Ecdysis (shedding of the flagella, the outer two membranes of the cell, and the thecal plates) was induced by centrifugation. The cells were resuspended and the thickening of the pellicle and the development of the new thecal vesicles and plates was studied over a 9 h period. After ecdysis, the thin pellicle which underlay the thecal plates in the motile cells thickens to form a complex structure of four distinct layers: an outer layer of randomly oriented fibrils, a 50 nm layer of fibrils oriented perpendicular to the dense layer, the dense layer which has a trilaminate structure, and a wide inner homogeneous layer. The new thecal vesicles form in these pelliculate cells by the migration of electron translucent amphisomal vesicles over the layer of peripheral microtubules to a position directly under the plasmalemma. The thecal vesicles then flatten and elongate. A discontinuous pellicular layer appears within them. Subsequently, the thecal vesicles widen and are filled with a fibrillogranular substance overlying the pelliculate layer. The thecal plates form on top of this fibrillogranular material. By this time, most cells have escaped from the pellicle and are motile. At first, the outer thecal vesicle membrane is continuous with the inner thecal vesicle membrane at the sutures, but when this connection is broken, the dense pelliculate layers become continuous across the suture as does the inner thecal vesicle membrane. At ecdysis, this membrane becomes the new plasmalemma of the cell. Cells at each stage of pellicle thickening and thecal development were labelled with a polydonal antiserum raised against the 70 kDa epiplasmic protein ofEuglena acus. This antiserum labelled both the thecal plates of the motile cells and the inner homogeneous layer of the pellicle of ecdysed non-motile cells. No other amphiesmal structure was labelled, nor was any intracellular compartment.Abbreviations PBS phosphate-buffered saline - PIPES piperazine-N,N-bis[2-ethane sulfonic acid]  相似文献   

7.
One-third of the lipid A found in the Escherichia coli outer membrane contains an unsubstituted diphosphate unit at position 1 (lipid A 1-diphosphate). We now report an inner membrane enzyme, LpxT (YeiU), which specifically transfers a phosphate group to lipid A, forming the 1-diphosphate species. (32)P-labelled lipid A obtained from lpxT mutants do not produce lipid A 1-diphosphate. In vitro assays with Kdo(2)-[4'-(32)P]lipid A as the acceptor shows that LpxT uses undecaprenyl pyrophosphate as the substrate donor. Inhibition of lipid A 1-diphosphate formation in wild-type bacteria was demonstrated by sequestering undecaprenyl pyrophosphate with the cyclic polypeptide antibiotic bacitracin, providing evidence that undecaprenyl pyrophosphate serves as the donor substrate within whole bacteria. LpxT-catalysed phosphorylation is dependent upon transport of lipid A across the inner membrane by MsbA, a lipid A flippase, indicating a periplasmic active site. In conclusion, we demonstrate a novel pathway in the periplasmic modification of lipid A that is directly linked to the synthesis of undecaprenyl phosphate, an essential carrier lipid required for the synthesis of various bacterial polymers, such as peptidoglycan.  相似文献   

8.
The process of biological membrane fusion can be analysed by topological methods. Mathematical analysis of the fusion process of vesicles indicated two significant facts: the formation of an inner, transient structure (hexagonal phase - H(II)) and a translocation of some lipids within the membrane. This shift had a vector character and only occurred from the outer to the inner layer. Model membrane composed of phosphatidylcholine (PC), phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) and phosphatidylserine (PS) was studied. (31)P- and (1)H-NMR methods were used to describe the process of fusion. (31)P-NMR spectra of multilamellar vesicles (MLV) were taken at various temperatures and concentrations of Ca(2+) ions (natural fusiogenic agent). A (31)P-NMR spectrum with the characteristic shape of the H(II) phase was obtained for the molar Ca(2+)/PS ratio of 2.0. During the study, (1)H-NMR and (31)P-NMR spectra for small unilamellar vesicle (SUV), which were dependent on time (concentration of Pr(3+) ions was constant), were also recorded. The presence of the paramagnetic Pr(3+) ions permits observation of separate signals from the hydrophilic part of the inner and outer lipid bilayers. The obtained results suggest that in the process of fusion translocation of phospholipid molecules takes place from the outer to the inner layer of the vesicle and size of the vesicles increase. The NMR study has showed that the intermediate state of the fusion process caused by Ca(2+) ions is the H(II) phase. The experimental results obtained are in agreement with the topological model as well.  相似文献   

9.
Lipid organization and lipid transport processes occurring at the air-water interface of a liposome (lipid vesicle) solution are studied by conventional surface pressure-area measurements and interpreted by an adequate theory. At the interface of a dioleoyl phosphatidylcholine vesicle solution, used for demonstration, a well defined two layer structure selfassembles: vesicles disintegrate at the interface forming a surface-adsorbed lipid monolayer, which prevents further disintegration beyond about 1 dyne/cm surface pressure. A layer of vesicles now assembles in close association with the monolayer. This layer is in vesicle diffusion exchange with the solution and in lipid exchange with the monolayer. The lipid exchange occurs exclusively between the monolayer and the outer lipid layer of the vesicles; it is absent between outer and inner vesicle layers. Equilibration of the lipid density in the monolayer with that in the vesicle outer layer provides a coherent and quantitative explanation of the observed hysteresis effects and equilibrium states. The correspondence between monolayer and vesicle outer layer is traced down to equilibrium constants and rate constants and their dependences on surface pressure, vesicle size and concentration. Other alternate realizations of surface structure and exchange, including induced lipid flip-flop within vesicles or vesicle monolayer adhesion or fusion are potential applications of the proposed analysis.  相似文献   

10.
In eukaryotic cells, type 4 P-type ATPases function as phospholipid flippases, which translocate phospholipids from the exoplasmic leaflet to the cytoplasmic leaflet of the lipid bilayer. Flippases function in the formation of transport vesicles, but the mechanism remains unknown. Here, we isolate an arrestin-related trafficking adaptor, ART5, as a multicopy suppressor of the growth and endocytic recycling defects of flippase mutants in budding yeast. Consistent with a previous report that Art5p downregulates the inositol transporter Itr1p by endocytosis, we found that flippase mutations were also suppressed by the disruption of ITR1, as well as by depletion of inositol from the culture medium. Interestingly, inositol depletion suppressed the defects in all five flippase mutants. Inositol depletion also partially restored the formation of secretory vesicles in a flippase mutant. Inositol depletion caused changes in lipid composition, including a decrease in phosphatidylinositol and an increase in phosphatidylserine. A reduction in phosphatidylinositol levels caused by partially depleting the phosphatidylinositol synthase Pis1p also suppressed a flippase mutation. These results suggest that inositol depletion changes the lipid composition of the endosomal/TGN membranes, which results in vesicle formation from these membranes in the absence of flippases.  相似文献   

11.
Lipid organization and lipid transport processes occurring at the air-water interface of a liposome (lipid vesicle) solution are studied by conventional surface pressure-area measurements and interpreted by an adequate theory. At the interface of a dioleoyl phosphatidylcholine vesicle solution, used for demonstration, a well defined two layer structure selfassembles: vesicles disintegrate at the interface forming a surface-adsorbed lipid monolayer, which prevents further disintegration beyond about 1 dyne/cm surface pressure. A layer of vesicles now assembles in close association with the monolayer. This layer is in vesicle diffusion exchange with the solution and in lipid exchange with the monolayer. The lipid exchange occurs exclusively between the monolayer and the outer lipid layer of the vesicles; it is absent between outer and inner vesicle layers. Equilibration of the lipid density in the monolayer with that in the vesicle outer layer provides a coherent and quantitative explanation of the observed hysteresis effects and equilibrium states. The correspondence between monolayer and vesicle outer layer is traced down to equilibrium constants and rate constants and their dependences on surface pressure, vesicle size and concentration. p] Other alternate realizations of surface structure and exchange, including induced lipid flip-flop within vesicles or vesicle monolayer adhesion or fusion are potential applications of the proposed analysis.  相似文献   

12.
Romsicki Y  Sharom FJ 《Biochemistry》2001,40(23):6937-6947
The P-glycoprotein multidrug transporter acts as an ATP-powered efflux pump for a large variety of hydrophobic drugs, natural products, and peptides. The protein is proposed to interact with its substrates within the hydrophobic interior of the membrane. There is indirect evidence to suggest that P-glycoprotein can also transport, or "flip", short chain fluorescent lipids between leaflets of the membrane. In this study, we use a fluorescence quenching technique to directly show that P-glycoprotein reconstituted into proteoliposomes translocates a wide variety of NBD lipids from the outer to the inner leaflet of the bilayer. Flippase activity depended on ATP hydrolysis at the outer surface of the proteoliposome, and was inhibited by vanadate. P-Glycoprotein exhibited a broad specificity for phospholipids, and translocated phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylserine, and sphingomyelin. Lipid derivatives that were flipped included molecules with long, short, unsaturated, and saturated acyl chains and species with the NBD group covalently linked to either acyl chains or the headgroup. The extent of lipid translocation from the outer to the inner leaflet in a 20 min period at 37 degrees C was directly estimated, and fell in the range of 0.36-1.83 nmol/mg of protein. Phospholipid flipping was inhibited in a concentration-dependent, saturable fashion by various substrates and modulators, including vinblastine, verapamil, and cyclosporin A, and the efficiency of inhibition correlated well with the affinity of binding to Pgp. Taken together, these results suggest that P-glycoprotein carries out both lipid translocation and drug transport by the same path. The transporter may be a generic flippase for hydrophobic molecules with the correct steric attributes that are present within the membrane interior.  相似文献   

13.
Proteo-giant liposomes were electroformed from a mixture of lecithin vesicles and inside-out vesicles from erythrocytes. After addition of Mg-ATP in the vicinity of the proteo-giant liposomes, small buds appeared on the liposome surfaces, which—via an increase in lipids in the outer monolayer—demonstrated the active transport of lipids from the inner to the outer monolayer, indicating flippase activity.  相似文献   

14.
Epand RF  Martinou JC  Montessuit S  Epand RM 《Biochemistry》2003,42(49):14576-14582
It is known that the proapoptotic protein Bax facilitates the formation of pores in bilayers, resulting in the release of proteins from the intermitochondrial space. We demonstrate that another consequence of the interaction of Bax with membranes is an increase in the rate of lipid transbilayer diffusion. We use two independent assays for transbilayer diffusion, one involving the formation of asymmetric liposomes by placing a pyrene-labeled lipid into the outer monolayer of preformed vesicles and another assay based on the initial preparation of liposomes having an asymmetric transbilayer distribution of lipids. With both methods we find that oligomeric BaxDeltaC or full-length Bax in the presence of tBid, but not monomeric full-length Bax, strongly promotes the rate of transbilayer diffusion. Although biological membranes exhibit rates of lipid transbilayer diffusion of minutes or less, they are able to maintain an asymmetric distribution of lipids across the bilayer. In the case of mitochondria, cardiolipin is sequestered on the inner leaflet of the inner mitochondrial membrane. However, during apoptosis this lipid translocates to the outer surface of the outer mitochondrial membrane. This phenomenon must involve an increase in the rate of transbilayer diffusion. The results of the present paper demonstrate that an activated form of Bax can cause this increased rate.  相似文献   

15.
The study presents an application of the theory of homeomorphic transformations of topological manifolds and the operation of the connected sum of manifolds for topological analysis of membrane transformations during the fusion process between cellular and subcellular compartments. The biological cell and the subcellular structures in the form of vesicles are modelled by an arrangement of two concentric spheres corresponding to the inner and outer layer of the membrane bounding the vesicles. The analysis shows eight succeeding topological stages of membrane transformations during the fusion process and these stages are characterized. It is concluded that there is a vectorial translocation of lipid molecules from the outer layers of the membranes before the fusion process to the internal layer of the membrane bounding the vesicle after the fusion process and there is no lipid translocation in the reverse direction.  相似文献   

16.
The asymmetric transbilayer distribution of phosphatidylserine (PS) in the mammalian plasma membrane and secretory vesicles is maintained, in part, by an ATP-dependent transporter. This aminophospholipid "flippase" selectively transports PS to the cytosolic leaflet of the bilayer and is sensitive to vanadate, Ca(2+), and modification by sulfhydryl reagents. Although the flippase has not been positively identified, a subfamily of P-type ATPases has been proposed to function as transporters of amphipaths, including PS and other phospholipids. A candidate PS flippase ATP8A1 (ATPase II), originally isolated from bovine secretory vesicles, is a member of this subfamily based on sequence homology to the founding member of the subfamily, the yeast protein Drs2, which has been linked to ribosomal assembly, the formation of Golgi-coated vesicles, and the maintenance of PS asymmetry. To determine if ATP8A1 has biochemical characteristics consistent with a PS flippase, a murine homologue of this enzyme was expressed in insect cells and purified. The purified Atp8a1 is inactive in detergent micelles or in micelles containing phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidic acid, or phosphatidylinositol, is minimally activated by phosphatidylglycerol or phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), and is maximally activated by PS. The selectivity for PS is dependent upon multiple elements of the lipid structure. Similar to the plasma membrane PS transporter, Atp8a1 is activated only by the naturally occurring sn-1,2-glycerol isomer of PS and not the sn-2,3-glycerol stereoisomer. Both flippase and Atp8a1 activities are insensitive to the stereochemistry of the serine headgroup. Most modifications of the PS headgroup structure decrease recognition by the plasma membrane PS flippase. Activation of Atp8a1 is also reduced by these modifications; phosphatidylserine-O-methyl ester, lysophosphatidylserine, glycerophosphoserine, and phosphoserine, which are not transported by the plasma membrane flippase, do not activate Atp8a1. Weakly translocated lipids (PE, phosphatidylhydroxypropionate, and phosphatidylhomoserine) are also weak Atp8a1 activators. However, N-methyl-phosphatidylserine, which is transported by the plasma membrane flippase at a rate equivalent to PS, is incapable of activating Atp8a1 activity. These results indicate that the ATPase activity of the secretory granule Atp8a1 is activated by phospholipids binding to a specific site whose properties (PS selectivity, dependence upon glycerol but not serine, stereochemistry, and vanadate sensitivity) are similar to, but distinct from, the properties of the substrate binding site of the plasma membrane flippase.  相似文献   

17.
Sanyal S  Frank CG  Menon AK 《Biochemistry》2008,47(30):7937-7946
Transbilayer movement, or flip-flop, of lipids across the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is required for membrane biogenesis, protein glycosylation, and GPI anchoring. Specific ER membrane proteins, flippases, are proposed to facilitate lipid flip-flop, but no ER flippase has been biochemically identified. The glycolipid Glc 3Man 9GlcNAc 2-PP-dolichol is the oligosaccharide donor for protein N-glycosylation reactions in the ER lumen. Synthesis of Glc 3Man 9GlcNAc 2-PP-dolichol is initiated on the cytoplasmic side of the ER and completed on the lumenal side, requiring flipping of the intermediate Man 5GlcNAc 2-PP-dolichol (M5-DLO) across the ER. Here we report the reconstitution of M5-DLO flipping in proteoliposomes generated from Triton X-100-extracted Saccharomyces cerevisiae microsomal proteins. Flipping was assayed by using the lectin Concanavalin A to capture M5-DLOs that had been translocated from the inner to the outer leaflet of the vesicles. M5-DLO flipping in the reconstituted system was ATP-independent and trypsin-sensitive and required a membrane protein(s) that sedimented at approximately 4 S. Man 7GlcNAc 2-PP-dolichol, a higher-order lipid intermediate, was flipped >10-fold more slowly than M5-DLO at 25 degrees C. Chromatography on Cibacron Blue dye resin enriched M5-DLO flippase activity approximately 5-fold and resolved it from both the ER glycerophospholipid flippase activity and the genetically identified flippase candidate Rft1 [Helenius, J., et al. (2002) Nature 415, 447-450]. The latter result indicates that Rft1 is not the M5-DLO flippase. Our data (i) demonstrate that the ER has at least two distinct flippase proteins, each specifically capable of translocating a class of phospholipid, and (ii) provide, for the first time, a biochemical means of identifying the M5-DLO flippase.  相似文献   

18.
Asymmetry of inner and outer leaflet lipid composition is an important characteristic of eukaryotic plasma membranes. We previously described a technique in which methyl-β-cyclodextrin-induced lipid exchange is used to prepare biological membrane-like asymmetric small unilamellar vesicles (SUVs). Here, to mimic plasma membranes more closely, we used a lipid-exchange-based method to prepare asymmetric large unilamellar vesicles (LUVs), which have less membrane curvature than SUVs. Asymmetric LUVs in which sphingomyelin (SM) or SM + 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine was exchanged into the outer leaflet of vesicles composed of 1,2-dioleoyl-phosphatidylethanolamine (DOPE) and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylserine (POPS) were prepared with or without cholesterol. Approximately 80–100% replacement of outer leaflet DOPE and POPS was achieved. At room temperature, SM exchange into the outer leaflet increased the inner leaflet lipid order, suggesting significant interleaflet interaction. However, the SM-rich outer leaflet formed an ordered state, melting with a midpoint at ∼37°C. This was about the same value observed in pure SM vesicles, and was significantly higher than that observed in symmetric vesicles with the same SM content, which melted at ∼20°C. In other words, ordered state formation by outer-leaflet SM in asymmetric vesicles was not destabilized by an inner leaflet composed of DOPE and POPS. These properties suggest that the coupling between the physical states of the outer and inner leaflets in these asymmetric LUVs becomes very weak as the temperature approaches 37°C. Overall, the properties of asymmetric LUVs were very similar to those previously observed in asymmetric SUVs, indicating that they do not arise from the high membrane curvature of asymmetric SUVs.  相似文献   

19.
Transbilayer migration of membrane phospholipid arising from membrane insertion of the terminal human complement proteins has been investigated. Asymmetric vesicles containing pyrene-labeled phosphatidylcholine (pyrenePC) concentrated in the inner monolayer were prepared by outer monolayer exchange between pyrenePC-containing large unilamellar vesicles and excess (unlabeled) small unilamellar vesicles, using bovine liver phosphatidylcholine-specific exchange protein. After depletion of pyrenePC from the outer monolayer, the asymmetric large unilamellar vesicles were isolated by gel filtration and exposed to the purified C5b-9 proteins at 37 degrees C. Transbilayer exchange of phospholipid between inner and outer monolayers during C5b-9 assembly was monitored by changes in pyrene excimer and monomer fluorescence. Membrane deposition of the C5b67 complex (by incubation with C5b6 + C7) caused no change in pyrenePC fluorescence. Addition of C8 to the C5b67 vesicles resulted in a dose-dependent decrease in the excimer/monomer ratio. This change was observed both in the presence and absence of complement C9. No change in fluorescence was observed for control vesicles exposed to C8 (in the absence of membrane C5b67), or upon C5b-9 addition to vesicles containing pyrenePC symmetrically distributed between inner and outer monolayers. These data suggest that a transbilayer exchange of phospholipid between inner and outer monolayers is initiated upon C8 binding to C5b67. The fluorescence data were analyzed according to a "random walk" model for excimer formation developed for the case where pyrenePC is asymmetrically distributed between lipid bilayers. Based on this analysis, we estimate that a net transbilayer migration of approximately 1% of total membrane phospholipid is initiated upon C8 binding to C5b67. The potential significance of this transbilayer exchange of membrane phospholipid to the biological activity of the terminal complement proteins is considered.  相似文献   

20.
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