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We have studied the permeability of a series of hydrophilic amides and ureas through the red cell membrane by determining the three phenomenological coefficients which describe solute-membrane interaction: the hydraulic permeability (Lp), the phenomenological permeability coefficient (omega i) and the reflection coefficient (sigma i). In 55 experiments on nine solutes, we have determined that the reflection coefficient (after a small correction for solute permeation by membrane dissolution) is significantly less than 1.0 (P less than 0.003, t-test), which provides very strong evidence that solute and water fluxes are coupled as they cross the red cell membrane. It is proposed that the aqueous channel is a tripartite assembly, comprising H-bond exchange regions at both faces of the membrane, joined by a narrower sieve-specific region which crosses the lipid. The solutes bind to the H-bond exchange regions to exchange their solvation shell with the H-bonds of the channel; the existence of these regions is confirmed by the finding that the permeation of all the amides and ureas requires binding to well-characterized sites with Km values of 0.1-0.5 M. The sieve-specific regions provide the steric restraints which govern the passage of the solutes according to their size; their existence is shown by the findings that: (1) the reflection coefficient (actually the function [1-corrected sigma i]) is linearly dependent upon the solute molecular diameter; and (2) the permeability coefficient is linearly dependent upon solute molar volume. These several observations, taken together, provide strong arguments which lead to the conclusion that the amides and urea cross the red cell membrane in an aqueous pore.  相似文献   

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Interaction of the cell‐penetrating peptide (CPP) cysteine‐transportan (Cys‐TP) with model lipid membranes was examined by spin‐label electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR). Membranes were labeled with lipophilic spin probes and the influence of Cys‐TP on membrane structure was studied. The influence of Cys‐TP on membrane permeability was monitored by the reduction of a liposome‐trapped water‐soluble spin probe. Cys‐TP caused lipid ordering in membranes prepared from pure dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and in DMPC membranes with moderate cholesterol concentration. In addition, Cys‐TP caused a large increase in permeation of DMPC membranes. In contrast, with high cholesterol content, at which model lipid membranes are in the so‐called liquid‐ordered phase, no effect of Cys‐TP was observed, either on the membrane structure or on the membrane permeability. The interaction between Cys‐TP and the lipid membrane therefore depends on the lipid phase. This could be of great importance for understanding of the CPP–lipid interaction in laterally heterogeneous membranes, while it implies that the CPP–lipid interaction can be different at different points along the membrane. Copyright © 2008 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

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The interactions between amphotericin B and sterol-containing model membranes were monitored by 2H-NMR of deuterium-labelled dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC), cholesterol and epicholesterol. The addition of amphotericin B to a cholesterol/DMPC (3:7) system was perceived differently by the lipid, depending upon the depth in the bilayer: no structural change was manifest in the acyl chain region associated with the plateau in molecular ordering (C4'), whereas the lipid clearly senses two environments near the center of the bilayer (C13', C14'). The amount as well as the ordering properties of the more ordered antibiotic-induced component, sensed at C14', increased with decreasing temperature. The structural parameters of deuterium-labelled cholesterol in cholesterol/DMPC mixtures were unchanged upon addition of amphotericin B, regardless of the bilayer depth. Upon addition of amphotericin B, the lipid T1 values are unchanged, whereas the T2 values are reduced by a factor of 2. The minimum in T1 observed for cholesterol in DMPC at 32-35 degrees C was shifted towards 38-40 degrees C in the presence of amphotericin B. Epicholesterol-containing dispersions of DMPC had properties similar to those of their cholesterol-containing analogs; a noticeable difference between the systems was an approx. 10% increase in the segmental order parameters on the addition of amphotericin B to the system containing the alpha-isomer of cholesterol. The concept of a dynamic complexation between amphotericin B and sterol is discussed.  相似文献   

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A W Scotto  D Zakim 《Biochemistry》1986,25(7):1555-1561
The presence of cholesterol in small unilamellar vesicles (ULV) of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) catalyzes fusion of the vesicles at temperatures below the upper limit for the gel to liquid-crystalline phase transition of the DMPC. The extent to which ULV grow depends on the concentration of cholesterol in the vesicles and on temperature. Maximum growth occurs at 21 degrees C. It decreases as the temperature is lowered below 21 degrees C. Growth does not occur at temperatures above the phase transition. In addition, the presence of cholesterol in ULV of DMPC catalyzes the insertion of integral membrane proteins into the vesicles. Thus, bacteriorhodopsin from Halobacterium halobrium, UDPglucuronosyltransferase (EC 2.4.1.17) from pig liver microsomes, and cytochrome oxidase from beef heart mitochondria formed stable lipid-protein complexes spontaneously when added to ULV containing cholesterol at temperatures under which these vesicles would fuse. Incorporation of these proteins into the ULV of DMPC did not occur in the absence of cholesterol or in the presence of cholesterol when the temperature of the system was above that for the phase transition. It appears that cholesterol lowers the energy barrier for fusion of ULV of DMPC and for insertion of integral membrane proteins into these bilayers. Studies with bacteriorhodopsin suggest that the energy barrier for insertion of proteins into ULV containing cholesterol is smaller than the energy barrier for fusion of the ULV with each other.  相似文献   

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A short pulse saturation recovery electron spin resonance technique has been used to study the effects of polar carotenoid-lutein and cholesterol on interactions of 14N:15N stearic acid spin-label pairs in fluid-phase phosphatidylcholine (PC) membranes. Bimolecular collisions for pairs consisting of various combinations of [14N]-16-, [14N]-10-, [14N]-7-, or [14N]-5-doxylstearate and [15N]-16-doxylstearate in dimyristoyl-PC (DMPC) or egg yolk PC (EYPC) membranes were measured at 27 degrees C. In the absence and presence of lutein or cholesterol for both lipid systems, the collision rates were ordered as 16:5 < 16:7 < 16:10 < 16:16. For all spin-label pairs studied, interaction frequencies were greater in DMPC than in EYPC. Polar carotenoid-lutein reduces the collision frequency for all spin-label pairs, whereas cholesterol reduces the collision frequency for 16:5 and 16:7 pairs and increases the collision frequency in the membrane center for 16:10 and 16:16 pairs. The presence of unsaturated alkyl chains greatly reduces the effect of lutein but magnifies the effect of cholesterol in the membrane center. The observed differences in the effects of these modifiers on alkyl chain bending result from differences in the structure of cholesterol and polar carotenoid and from their different localization within the lipid bilayer membrane. These studies further confirm the occurrence of vertical fluctuations of alkyl chain ends toward the bilayer surface.  相似文献   

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The transport of sterols incorporated into the lecithin bilayer of small unilamellar liposomes through a model membrane was studied. A two-chamber diffusion cell containing liposomes with incorporated [4-14C]cholesterol or β-[4-14C]sitosterol in the donor chamber and liposomes with unlabeled cholesterol in the receiver chamber was used. The permeability coefficients of the sterols through silastic rubber membranes which served as a model membrane were measured. The permeability for cholesterol incorporated into liposomes in a phosphatidyl choline/cholesterol molar ratio of 1 : 1, produced by sonication for 1 h, and subsequent centrifugation at 100000 × g for 1 h, was 1.6 · 10?8 cm sec?1. Dilution of the liposome suspension did not change the permeability coefficient significantly. The permeability coefficient of sitosterol incorporated into liposomes was about 4-times smaller than that of cholesterol. These results suggest that the sterols were delivered to the silastic membrane by the intact liposomes and that free solute was not involved in the transport to the membrane to a significant degree. The large differences in the permeability coefficients between cholesterol and sitosterol indicate that an aqueous interfacial barrier was crossed by the sterol during the delivery to the membrane.  相似文献   

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The interaction free energy of dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) and two types phospholipid membranes has been assessed from measurements of vapor pressure. The lipids were phosphatidyl cholines with respectively (14:0/14:0) (DMPC) and (16:0/18:1) (POPC) fatty acid chains. The results were expressed in terms of the iso-osmolal preferential interaction parameter, Gamma(mu1), which remained negative under all experimental conditions investigated here. This shows that water-membrane interactions are more favorable than DMSO-membrane interactions. This condition is known as preferential exclusion of DMSO (or preferential hydration of the membrane), and implies that the local (interfacial) concentration of the solute is reduced compared to the bulk. At room temperature and 1 m DMSO, Gamma(mu1) was -0.3 to -0.4 for both lipids. This corresponds to a sizable reduction in the DMSO concentration in a zone including at least the first two hydration layers of the membrane. Possible origins of the preferential exclusion are discussed. As a direct consequence of the pronounced preferential exclusion, DMSO generates an osmotic stress at the membrane interface. This tends to stabilize lipid phases of low surface areas and to withdraw water from multilamellar stacks of membranes. Based on this, we suggest that the preferential exclusion of DMSO explains both the modulation of phase behavior and the constriction of multilamellar aggregates induced by this solute.  相似文献   

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Ouellet M  Doucet JD  Voyer N  Auger M 《Biochemistry》2007,46(22):6597-6606
We have investigated the interaction between a synthetic amphipathic 14-mer peptide and model membranes by solid-state NMR. The 14-mer peptide is composed of leucines and phenylalanines modified by the addition of crown ethers and forms a helical amphipathic structure in solution and bound to lipid membranes. To shed light on its membrane topology, 31P, 2H, 15N solid-state NMR experiments have been performed on the 14-mer peptide in interaction with mechanically oriented bilayers of dilauroylphosphatidylcholine (DLPC), dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC), and dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC). The 31P, 2H, and 15N NMR results indicate that the 14-mer peptide remains at the surface of the DLPC, DMPC, and DPPC bilayers stacked between glass plates and perturbs the lipid orientation relative to the magnetic field direction. Its membrane topology is similar in DLPC and DMPC bilayers, whereas the peptide seems to be more deeply inserted in DPPC bilayers, as revealed by the greater orientational and motional disorder of the DPPC lipid headgroup and acyl chains. 15N{31P} rotational echo double resonance experiments have also been used to measure the intermolecular dipole-dipole interaction between the 14-mer peptide and the phospholipid headgroup of DMPC multilamellar vesicles, and the results indicate that the 14-mer peptide is in contact with the polar region of the DMPC lipids. On the basis of these studies, the mechanism of membrane perturbation of the 14-mer peptide is associated to the induction of a positive curvature strain induced by the peptide lying on the bilayer surface and seems to be independent of the bilayer hydrophobic thickness.  相似文献   

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The effect of the inclusion of phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), a phospholipid with unusual packing properties, on the substrate properties of protein-lipid complexes toward lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) has been studied. Recombinant particles of apolipoprotein A-I with dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC), dilauroylphosphatidylethanolamine (DLPE) and cholesterol were prepared at a molar ratio of 1:140:14 (A-I/DMPC/cholesterol) or 1:70:70:14 (A-I/DMPC/DLPE/cholesterol); the efficiency of cholesterol incorporation into complexes containing phosphatidylethanolamine was found to be very pH-dependent, with enhanced cholesterol incorporation at elevated pH values. By incubating the complexes with either purified human LCAT or the d greater than 1.21 g/ml fraction of rat serum as a source of LCAT activity, it was found that a high degree of cholesterol esterification could be achieved with either complex; however, the DLPE-containing complex possessed a much smaller Stokes' diameter than the DMPC-only particle despite compositional similarities between these complexes. With respect to particle diameter the DLPE-containing particles behaved more like complexes prepared with egg yolk lecithin than did complexes prepared with DMPC alone. When human LDL was added to the incubations to provide a source of additional cholesterol, the products were markedly different. Concomitant with an increased cholesteryl ester core was an increase in the protein stoichiometry in both types of particles, from 2 to 3 or 4 apo A-I per particle. The proportion of DLPE to DMPC in the products was reduced from 1:1 to 0.3:1, reflecting a preferential hydrolysis of PE by LCAT, and the Stokes' diameters of the DMPC-only and the DLPE-containing complexes were closely similar. We conclude that the presence of elevated proportions of certain phospholipid species may significantly alter both the physical properties of the particles and their substrate properties with regard to reactions with enzymes of lipid metabolism.  相似文献   

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The low permeability of the mycobacterial cell wall is thought to contribute to the intrinsic drug resistance of mycobacteria. In this study, the permeability of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis cell wall is studied by computer simulation. Thirteen known drugs with diverse chemical structures were modeled as solutes undergoing transport across a model for the M. tuberculosis cell wall. The properties of the solute-membrane complexes were investigated by means of molecular dynamics simulation, especially the diffusion coefficients of the solute molecules inside the cell wall. The molecular shape of the solute was found to be an important factor for permeation through the M. tuberculosis cell wall. Predominant lateral diffusion within, as opposed to transverse diffusion across, the membrane/cell wall system was observed for some solutes. The extent of lateral diffusion relative to transverse diffusion of a solute within a biological cell membrane may be an important finding with respect to absorption distribution, metabolism, elimination, and toxicity properties of drug candidates. Molecular similarity measures among the solutes were computed, and the results suggest that compounds having high molecular similarity will display similar transport behavior in a common membrane/cell wall environment. In addition, the diffusion coefficients of the solute molecules across the M. tuberculosis cell wall model were compared to those across the monolayers of dipalmitoylphosphatidylethanolamine and dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine, are two common phospholipids in bacterial and animal membranes. The differences among these three groups of diffusion coefficients were observed and analyzed.  相似文献   

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