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1.
J W Nichols 《Biochemistry》1988,27(6):1889-1896
Recently, rat liver nonspecific lipid transfer protein (nsLTP) was shown to form a fluorescent complex when allowed to equilibrate with self-quenching vesicles prepared from the fluorescent phospholipid 1-palmitoyl-2-[12-[(7-nitro-2,1,3-benzoxadiazol-4- yl)amino]dodecanoyl]phosphatidylcholine (P-C12-NBD-PC) [Nichols, J. W. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 14172-14177]. Investigation of the mechanism of complex formation was continued by studying the kinetics of transfer of P-C12-NBD-PC between nsLTP and phospholipid vesicles using a transfer assay based on resonance energy transfer between P-C12-NBD-PC and N-(lissamine rhodamine B sulfonyl)dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine. The principles of mass action kinetics (which predict initial lipid transfer rates as a function of protein and vesicle concentration) were used to derive equations for two distinct mechanisms: lipid transfer by the diffusion of monomers through the aqueous phase and lipid transfer during nsLTP-membrane collisions. The results of these kinetics studies indicated that the model for neither mechanism alone adequately predicted the initial rates of formation and dissolution of the P-C12-NBD-PC-nsLTP complex. The initial rate kinetics for both processes were predicted best by a model in which monomer diffusion and collision-dependent transfer occur simultaneously. These data support the hypothesis that the phospholipid-nsLTP complex functions as an intermediate in the transfer of phospholipids between membranes.  相似文献   

2.
Thermodynamics and kinetics of phospholipid monomer-vesicle interaction   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
J W Nichols 《Biochemistry》1985,24(23):6390-6398
Resonance energy transfer between acyl chain labeled (7-nitro-2,1,3-benzoxadiazol-4-yl)phosphatidylcholine (NBD-PC) and head group labeled (lissamine rhodamine B sulfonyl)phosphatidylethanolamine (N-Rh-PE) was used to monitor the rate of NBD-PC transfer between two populations of dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC) vesicles. Equilibration of NBD-PC between DOPC vesicles occurs by the diffusion of soluble monomers through the water phase, which is a first-order process. Conditions were used such that the apparent transfer rate constant is equal to the rate constant for monomer-vesicle dissociation into solution. The partition distribution of NBD-PC between DOPC vesicles and water was determined by measuring the loss of NBD-PC from vesicles into solution following the dilution of small amounts of vesicles in buffer. The acyl chain length and temperature dependence of both the rate and partition measurements were determined, and a free energy diagram for NBD-PC-soluble monomer-vesicle interactions was constructed. The conclusions of this analysis are the following: NBD-PC dissociation from and association with the bilayer require passage through a high-energy transition state resulting predominantly from enthalpic energy. The activation energy for NBD-PC-vesicle dissociation becomes more positive and the standard free energy of NBD-PC transfer from water to vesicles becomes more negative with increasing acyl chain length. The standard free energy of transfer for NBD-PC from water to vesicles results predominantly from differences in enthalpy between the membrane and water phases. The enthalpy of activation for association increases with acyl chain length and is larger than expected for an aqueous diffusion-limited process in bulk water.  相似文献   

3.
Concentration-dependent self-quenching of the fluorescent phospholipid N-(7-nitro-2,1,3-benzoxadiazol-4-yl)phosphatidylethanolamine (N-NBD-PE) was used to measure the rate of N-NBD-PE transfer between phosphatidylcholine-bile salt mixed micelles. In a previous study using the same technique, the rate of N-NBD-PE transfer between phosphatidylcholine-taurocholate mixed micelles was found to be several orders of magnitude faster than its transfer between phosphatidylcholine vesicles as a result of an increased rate of transfer through the water at low micelle concentrations and an increased rate of transfer during transient micelle collisions at higher micelle concentrations [Nichols, J. W. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 3925-3931]. In this study we have determined the influence of bile salt structure, incorporation of cholesterol, and temperature on the rate and mechanism of phospholipid transfer between mixed micelles. We found that both transfer pathways were a common property of mixed micelles prepared from a series of different bile salts and that the rates of transfer by both pathways increased as a function of the degree of bile salt hydrophobicity. Cholesterol incorporation into phosphatidylcholine-taurocholate mixed micelles displaced taurocholate from the micelles and resulted in an increased rate of transfer through the water and a decreased rate of transfer during micelle collisions. The temperature dependence of the transfer rates was used to calculate the activation free energy, enthalpy, and entropy for both mechanisms. The activation enthalpy was the major barrier to transfer by both mechanisms.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
The maximal equilibrium solubility of cholesterol in mixtures of phosphatidylcholine (PC)1 and bile salts depends on the cholesterol/PC ratio (Rc) and on the effective ratio (Re) between nonmonomeric bile salts and the sum (CT) of PC and cholesterol concentrations (Carey and Small, 1978; Lichtenberg et al., 1984). By contrast, the concentration of bile salts required for solubilization of liposomes made of PC and cholesterol does not depend on Rc (Lichtenberg et al., 1984 and 1988). Thus, for Rc greater than 0.4, solubilization of the PC-cholesterol liposomes yields PC-cholesterol-bile salts mixed micellar systems which are supersaturated with cholesterol. In these metastable systems, the mixed micelles spontaneously undergo partial revesiculation followed by crystallization of cholesterol. The rate of the latter processes depends upon Rc, Re, and CT. For any given Rc and Re, the rate of revesiculation increases dramatically with increasing the lipid concentration CT, reflecting the involvement of many mixed micelles in the formation of each vesicle. The rate also increases, for any given CT and Re, upon increasing the cholesterol to PC ratio, Rc, probably due to the increasing degree of supersaturation. Increasing the cholate to lipid effective ratio, Re, by elevation of cholate concentration at constant Rc and CT has a complex effect on the rate of the revesiculation process. As expected, cholate concentration higher than that required for complete solubilization at equilibrium yields stable mixed micellar systems which do not undergo revesiculation, but for lower cholate concentrations decreasing the degree of supersaturation (by increasing [cholate]) results in faster revesiculation. We interpret these results in terms of the structure of the mixed micelles; micelles with two or more PC molecules per one molecule of cholesterol are relatively stable but increasing the bile salt concentration may cause dissociation of such 1:2 cholesterol:PC complexes, hence reducing the stability of the mixed micellar dispersions. The instability of PC-cholesterol-cholate mixed systems with intermediary range of cholate to lipids ratio may be significant to gallbladder stone formation as: (a) biliary bile contains PC-cholesterol vesicles which may be, at least partially, solubilized by bile salts during the process of bile concentration in the gallbladder, resulting in mixtures similar to our model systems; and (b) the bile composition of cholesterol gallstone patients is within an intermediary range of bile salts to lipids ratio.  相似文献   

5.
Simon et al. (J. Clin. Invest., 70 (1982) 401) studied cholate binding to crude liver plasma membrane vesicles and suggested that the binding may represent mainly the binding to the receptor (carrier) on the canalicular membrane. This hypothesis was supported by finding a good correlation between the number of cholate binding sites on liver plasma membrane and the maximal rate of biliary secretion (Tm) for taurocholate. We studied bile acid binding to sinusoidal and canalicular membrane vesicles isolated from rat liver by a rapid filtration technique. Scatchard analysis of the saturation kinetics showed both [3H]cholate and [3H]chenodeoxycholate bind to two classes of binding site on each membrane. However, little difference was observed between the binding to sinusoidal and canalicular membrane vesicles for each bile acid (cholate, Kd1 = 10.4 and 19.8 microM, n1 = 31.0 23.6 pmol/mg protein, Kd2 = 1.32 and 1.73 mM, n2 = 13.1 and 23.4 nmol/mg protein; and chenodeoxycholate, Kd1 = 0.207 and 0.328 microM, n1 = 36.7 and 27.4 pmol/mg protein, Kd2 = 1.16 and 2.26 mM, and n2 = 20.6 and 24.2 nmol/mg protein; numbers show the mean values sinusoidal and canalicular membrane vesicles, respectively). Chenodeoxycholate binding to sinusoidal membrane vesicles was markedly inhibited by cholate but not by Rose bengal, an organic anion dye. These studies indicate that both membranes (sinusoidal and canalicular membrane vesicles) have two kinds of binding site for bile acids, although no clear difference in the binding properties was observed between the two membranes. Consequently, the cholate binding Simon detected may represent the binding not only to canalicular membrane vesicles but also to sinusoidal membrane vesicles.  相似文献   

6.
Musatov A  Robinson NC 《Biochemistry》2002,41(13):4371-4376
Bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase (CcO), solubilized by either nonionic detergents or phospholipids, completely dimerizes upon the addition of bile salts, e.g., sodium cholate, sodium deoxycholate, or CHAPS. Bile salt induced dimerization occurs whether dodecyl maltoside, decyl maltoside, or Triton X-100 is the primary solubilizing detergent or the enzyme is dispersed in phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine, or mixtures thereof. In each case, complete CcO dimerization can be verified by sedimentation velocity and sedimentation equilibrium after correction for bound detergent and/or phospholipid. The relative concentration of the bile salt is critical for production of homogeneous, dimeric CcO. For example, enzyme solubilized by 2 mM detergent requires an equal molar concentration of sodium cholate. Similarly, enzyme dispersed in 20 mM phospholipid requires 50 mM sodium cholate, concentrations that are commonly used to reconstitute CcO into small unilamellar vesicles. Bile salts do more than just stabilize dimeric CcO and prevent detergent-induced dissociation into monomers. They are able to completely reverse detergent-induced monomerization and cause completely monomeric CcO to reassociate. Dimeric CcO so generated is no more stable than the original complex and easily dissociates into monomers if the bile salt is removed. The dimerization process is dependent upon a full complement of subunits; e.g., if subunits VIa and VIb are removed, the resulting monomeric CcO will not reassociate upon the addition of sodium cholate. These results support four important consequences: (1) dissociation of dimeric CcO into monomers is reversible; (2) stable dimers can be produced under solution conditions; (3) dimers can be stabilized even at relatively high pH and low enzyme concentration; and (4) subunits VIa and VIb are required for dimerization.  相似文献   

7.
The interaction of the bile salt cholate with unilamellar vesicles was studied. At low cholate content, equilibrium binding measurements with egg yolk lecithin membranes suggest that cholate binds to the outer vesicle leaflet. At increasing concentrations, further bile salt binding to the membrane is hampered. Before the onset of membrane solubilization, diphenylhexatriene fluorescence anisotropy decreases to a shallow minimum. It then increases to the initial value in the cholate concentration range of membrane solubilization. At still higher cholate concentrations, a drop in fluorescence anisotropy indicates the transformation of mixed disk micelles into spherical micelles. Perturbation of the vesicle membranes at molar ratios of bound cholate/lecithin exceeding 0.15 leads to a transient release of oligosaccharides from intravesicular space. The cholate concentrations required to induce the release depend on the size of the entrapped sugars. Cholesterol stabilizes the membrane, whereas, in spite of enhanced membrane order, sphingomyelin destabilizes the membrane against cholate. Freeze-fracture electron microscopy and phosphorus-31 nuclear magnetic resonance (31P NMR) also reflect a change in membrane structure at maximal cholate binding to the vesicles. In 31P NMR spectra, superimposed on the anisotropic line typically found in phospholipid bilayers, an isotropic peak was found. This signal is most probably due to the formation of smaller vesicles after addition of cholate. The results were discussed with respect to bile salt/membrane interactions in the liver cell. It is concluded that vesicular bile salt transport in the cytoplasm is unlikely and that cholate binding is restricted to the outer leaflet of the canalicular part of the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

8.
We have demonstrated in vitro the efficacy of the taurine-conjugated dihydroxy bile salts deoxycholate and chenodeoxycholate in solubilizing both cholesterol and phospholipid from hamster liver bile-canalicular and contiguous membranes and from human erythrocyte membrane. On the other hand, the dihydroxy bile salt ursodeoxycholate and the trihydroxy bile salt cholate solubilize much less lipid. The lipid solubilization by the four bile salts correlated well with their hydrophobicity: glycochenodeoxycolate, which is more hydrophobic than the tauro derivative, also solubilized more lipid. All the dihydroxy bile salts have a threshold concentration above which lipid solubilization increases rapidly; this correlates approximately with the critical micellar concentration. The non-micelle-forming bile salt dehydrocholate solubilized no lipid at all up to 32 mM. All the dihydroxy bile acids are much more efficient at solubilizing phospholipid than cholesterol. Cholate does not show such a pronounced discrimination. Lipid solubilization by chenodeoxycholate was essentially complete within 1 min, whereas that by cholate was linear up to 5 min. Maximal lipid solubilization with chenodeoxycholate occurred at 8-12 mM; solubilization by cholate was linear up to 32 mM. Ursodeoxycholate was the only dihydroxy bile salt which was able to solubilize phospholipid (although not cholesterol) below the critical micellar concentration. This similarity between cholate and ursodeoxycholate may reflect their ability to form a more extensive liquid-crystal system. Membrane specificity was demonstrated only inasmuch as the lower the cholesterol/phospholipid ratio in the membrane, the greater the fractional solubilization of cholesterol by bile salts, i.e. the total amount of cholesterol solubilized depended only on the bile-salt concentration. On the other hand, the total amount of phospholipid solubilized decreased with increasing cholesterol/phospholipid ratio in the membrane.  相似文献   

9.
Nonspecific high affinity binding of bile salts to carboxylester lipases   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The interactions with bile salts of carboxylester lipases (EC 3.1.1.13) from human pancreatic juice and pig pancreas were characterized by physical methods. Bile salts cause a decrease in the fluorescence intensity of the proteins at the emission maximum of 333-335 nm. The concentration dependence of this decrease shows saturation behavior, is relatively nonspecific with respect to bile salt conjugation or the presence of the 7 alpha-hydroxyl group, and is consistent with a 1:1 interaction between enzyme and bile salt. Direct measurement of the binding of [3H]cholate by equilibrium dialysis supports the stoichiometry. Other detergents also bind, causing fluorescence changes, but with much lower affinities. Binding of taurocholate to the monomeric pig enzyme is enhanced by increasing ionic strength, indicating the predominance of hydrophobic interactions. In the range of pH 5.5-6.8, binding is pH-independent with dissociation constants of 3-20 microM. At higher pH, affinity is greatly reduced and the fluorescence spectrum changes, indicating the importance of a protonated group for efficient interaction. Occupancy of the bile salt binding site partially stabilizes the enzyme against inactivation by heat but not trypsin. However, circular dichroism spectra do not indicate that bile salt binding is accompanied by any change in secondary structure. The monomeric pig enzyme binds to the argon/water interface in the presence of bile salts and binding of taurocholate to diisopropylphosphoryl-enzyme is similar to that measured with native enzyme. These results suggest that surface binding and catalysis occur at sites distinct from the bile salt binding site of the enzyme. Stabilization of the monomeric pig enzyme against denaturation at high energy surfaces occurs concomitantly with occupancy of the bile salt binding site. Overall, the data suggest that an important role of bile salts in vivo is to stabilize these enzymes at lipid-water interfaces.  相似文献   

10.
Synthesis of bile salts is regulated through negative feedback inhibition by bile salts returning to the liver. Individual bile salts have not been distinguished with regard to inhibitory potential. We assessed inhibition of bile salt synthesis by either cholate or its taurine conjugate in bile fistula rats. After allowing synthesis to maximize, baseline synthesis was determined by measuring bile salt output in four consecutive 6-hr periods. Next, sodium cholate (+[(14)C]cholate) or taurocholate (+[(14)C]taurocholate) was infused into the jugular vein for 36 hr and bile was collected in 6-hr aliquots. Hepatic flux of exogenous bile salt was determined by measuring output of radioactivity in bile divided by specific activity of the infusate. Synthesis was determined during the last four 6-hr periods of infusion by subtracting exogenous bile salt secretion from the total bile salt output. Thirteen studies using cholate and 13 using taurocholate were performed. Hepatic flux of infused bile salt varied from 1 to 12 micro mol/100 g per rat per hr. Percent suppression of synthesis varied directly with hepatic flux of exogenous bile salt for both cholate and taurocholate in a linear fashion (r = 0.66, P < 0.01 and r = 0.87, P < 0.0005, respectively). Slope of the taurocholate line was 7.82 (% suppression/ micro mol per 100 g per hr), while slope of the cholate line was 3.66 (P < 0.05), indicating that taurocholate was approximately twice as potent as cholate in suppression of synthesis. At fluxes of 10-12 micro mol/100 g per hr, taurocholate suppressed synthesis 84 +/- 8 (SEM) % while cholate suppressed synthesis only 42 +/- 12% (P < 0.02). The x-intercept of the taurocholate line was 0.65 ( micro mol/100 g per hr), while that of the cholate line was -1.01 (NS) suggesting that the threshold for initial suppression of synthesis did not differ for these two bile salts. We conclude that taurocholate is a more effective inhibitor of hepatic bile salt synthesis than cholate, and that intestinal deconjugation of bile salts may play a role in the regulation of synthesis.-Pries, J. M., A. Gustafson, D. Wiegand, and W. C. Duane. Taurocholate is more potent than cholate in suppression of bile salt synthesis in the rat.  相似文献   

11.
Unconjugated bilirubin (bilirubin-IX alpha), the hydrophobic end product of heme degradation, is esterified in the hepatocyte endoplasmic reticulum to water-soluble conjugates prior to excretion in bile. To characterize the process of intracellular bilirubin transport, the kinetic and thermodynamic activation parameters for the spontaneous transfer of bilirubin between small unilamellar egg lecithin vesicles were determined. Bilirubin-IX alpha was added to donor vesicles labeled with the fluorescent phospholipid probe, (5-(dimethylamino)naphthalene-1-sulfonyl) dipalmitoyl-L-alpha-phosphatidylethanolamine (dansyl-PE). When bound to the donor vesicles, bilirubin quenches the dansyl probe fluorescence through resonance energy transfer. The movement of bilirubin from dansyl-labeled donor vesicles to unlabeled acceptor vesicles was monitored directly by the reemergence of dansyl fluorescence over time. Vesicle fusion and intervesicle transfer of the dansyl-PE probe were excluded by quasielastic light scattering and fluorescence resonance energy transfer studies. Stopped-flow analysis demonstrated that the transfer of bilirubin was described by a single-exponential function with a mean half-time of 2.0 +/- 0.1 ms (+/- SD) at 37 degrees C. The rate of bilirubin transfer was independent of acceptor vesicle concentration and decreased with increasing buffer ionic strength, indicating that intermembrane transfer occurred via aqueous diffusion, rather than vesicle collisions. The free energy of activation (delta G++) for the dissociation of bilirubin from donor vesicles was 14.2 kcal.mol-1. These studies suggest that bilirubin is associated with phospholipid bilayers at the membrane-water interface. We postulate that the movement of unconjugated bilirubin between intracellular membranes occurs via spontaneous transfer through the aqueous phase.  相似文献   

12.
The binding interaction of bone Gla protein (BGP), or osteocalcin, to phospholipid vesicles in the presence of calcium has been investigated. Two separate indirect methodologies involving displacement of pyrene-modified Factor Va bound to phospholipid vesicles, and competition with several coagulation proteins in a prothrombin activation assay were performed. Titration of BGP into a cuvette containing phospholipid vesicles (75:25, L-alpha-phosphatidylcholine/L-alpha-phosphatidylserine (PCPS] saturated with pyrene-modified Factor Va resulted in a systematic decrease in steady-state anisotropy, suggesting competition for membrane binding sites with pyrene-modified Factor Va. BGP was also found to inhibit thrombin generation in the prothrombin activation assay. Approximately 50% inhibition was observed at 3 microM BGP under phospholipid-limiting (0.5 microM PCPS) concentrations. No inhibition was observed under phospholipid excess (30 microM PCPS) concentrations. Direct measurement of phospholipid binding was measured using equilibrium gel filtration. Elution profiles using fixed lipid (3.4 mumol of PCPS) and varying BGP concentrations (1-17 microM) in the presence of 3 mM CaCl2 showed a BGP-phospholipid association. Quantitation of determined isotherm yielded a dissociation constant of 6 +/- 1 microM with a stoichiometry of 102 +/- 9 BGP molecules/vesicle at saturation (35 PCPS lipids/BGP) in the presence of 3 mM CaCl2. These results support the hypothesis that protein gamma-carboxylation events are coincident with membrane binding potential.  相似文献   

13.
Preincubation of rat liver microsomal vesicles at 37 degrees C in the presence of [3H]cholesterol/phospholipid liposomes results in a net transfer of cholesterol from liposomes to microsomal vesicles. This transfer follows first-order kinetics. For similar concentrations of the donor vesicles, rates of transfer are about 6-8 times lower with cholesterol/sphingomyelin liposomes compared with cholesterol/phosphatidylcholine liposomes. Also, transfer of cholesterol from cholesterol/sphingomyelin liposomes to microsomal vesicles reveals a larger activation energy than for the process from cholesterol/phosphatidylcholine liposomes. There is a significant correlation between the amount of liposomal cholesterol transferred to microsomal vesicles during preincubation and the increase found with acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase activity in these microsomes over their corresponding controls. If, however, liposomes made solely of phospholipids are substituted for the cholesterol/phospholipid liposomes in the preincubation system containing microsomal vesicles, then the acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase activity is decreased compared with the corresponding control system. Both sphingomyelin and phosphatidylcholine liposomes are equally effective in decreasing the enzyme activity. These results offer direct kinetic evidence for the positive correlation between cholesterol and sphingomyelin found in vivo in biological membranes.  相似文献   

14.
We describe the rapid incorporation of the CHAPS solubilized dihydropyridine receptor into phospholipid vesicles. A series of sucrose gradient sedimentation experiments demonstrate that the (+)-[3H]PN200-110-labeled dihydropyridine receptor is associated with lipid vesicles following detergent removal by Extracti-gel chromatography. Solubilization of the receptor results in a loss of (+)-[3H]PN200-110 binding affinity relative to that observed in native membranes; the high affinity binding of (+)-[3H]PN200-110 can be restored upon reincorporation of the receptor into phospholipid vesicles. Similarly, the incorporation of the receptor restores its stability to incubation at 37 degrees C relative to that of the detergent solubilized receptor, thereby mimicking the properties of the membrane bound form of the receptor. The dissociation rate of (+)-[3H]PN200-110 from the reconstituted receptor is shown to be allosterically regulated by verapamil and diltiazem, indicating that the binding sites for these calcium antagonists have been inserted along with the dihydropyridine receptor into phospholipid vesicles. The results presented in this report, thus demonstrate the successful reconstitution of the dihydropyridine receptor into phospholipid vesicles by a variety of criteria. The reconstitution method described here is rapid and efficient, and should now facilitate structure-function studies of this receptor and its interrelationships with other regulatory components of the voltage-sensitive calcium channel system.  相似文献   

15.
Cholesterol, despite its poor solubility in aqueous solutions, exchanges efficiently between membranes. Movement of cholesterol between different subcellular membranes in the hepatocyte is necessary for assembly of lipoproteins, biliary cholesterol secretion, and bile acid synthesis. Factors which initiate and facilitate transfer of cholesterol between different membranes in the hepatocyte are incompletely understood. It is known that cholesterol secretion into the bile is linked to bile salt secretion. In the present study, we investigated the effects of bile salts of different physicochemical properties at submicellar concentrations (150- 600 microM) on the transfer of [14C]cholesterol from hepatocytes, or crude hepatocellular membranes (donors), to rat high density lipoproteins (acceptor). Bile salts included taurine conjugates of ursodeoxycholic acid (TUDCA), hyodeoxycholic acid (THDCA), cholic acid (TCA), chenodeoxycholic acid (TCDCA), and deoxycholic acid (TDCA). High density lipoprotein (HDL) was separated from hepatocellular membranes and the transfer of [14C]cholesterol from the membranes to HDL was quantitatively determined. In the absence of HDL, [14C]cholesterol remained confined to the membrane fraction. Following addition of HDL, [4-14C]cholesterol in the HDL fraction increased linearly over time. Addition of hydrophilic bile salts (TUDCA and THDCA) increased transfer of [4-14C]cholesterol to HDL only minimally. By contrast, more hydrophobic bile salts stimulated transfer of labeled cholesterol to HDL, and their potency increased in order of increasing hydrophobicity (TCA less than TCDCA less than TDCA). Both for single bile salts and mixtures of bile salts at a total bile salt concentration of 0.30 mM, the rate of cholesterol transfer exhibited a strong linear correlation with a bile salt monomeric hydrophobicity index (r = 0.95; P less than 0.001).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
A new stable isotope procedure has been developed and validated in rats, applying [1-(13)C]acetate infusion to quantify the production of bile salts from de novo synthesized cholesterol making use of the mass isotopomer distribution analysis (MIDA) principle. Ions (m/z) 458-461, 370-373 and 285-288 were monitored by GC/MS (EI-mode) for the methyl trimethylsilylether derivatives of cholate, chenodeoxycholate and beta-muricholate, respectively. Rats with intact exteriorized enterohepatic circulation and rats with chronic bile diversion were infused with [1-(13)C]acetate for up to 14 h. After 10 h of infusion the enterohepatic circulation of the intact group was interrupted to deplete the existing bile salt pool (acute bile diversion). The fractions of biliary cholesterol and individual bile salts derived from newly synthesized cholesterol were determined by MIDA at t=14 h. In rats with acute bile diversion, these fractions were 20, 25, 27 and 23% for biliary cholesterol, cholate, chenodeoxycholate and beta-muricholate, respectively. After bile diversion for 8 days to induce hepatic cholesterol and bile salt synthesis, these fractions increased significantly to 32, 47, 41 and 47%, respectively. Calculated enrichments of the acetyl-CoA precursor pools were similar for all bile salts and biliary cholesterol within the two rat groups. However, chronic enterohepatic interruption decreased the acetyl-CoA pool size almost two-fold. We conclude that MIDA is a validated new stable isotope technique for studying the synthetic pathway from acetyl-CoA to bile salts. This technique provides an important new tool for studying bile salt metabolism in humans using stable isotopes.  相似文献   

17.
Structural basis for bile salt inhibition of pancreatic phospholipase A2   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Bile salt interactions with phospholipid monolayers of fat emulsions are known to regulate the actions of gastrointestinal lipolytic enzymes in order to control the uptake of dietary fat. Specifically, on the lipid/aqueous interface of fat emulsions, the anionic portions of amphipathic bile salts have been thought to interact with and activate the enzyme group-IB phospholipase A2 (PLA2) derived from the pancreas. To explore this regulatory process, we have determined the crystal structures of the complexes of pancreatic PLA2 with the naturally occurring bile salts: cholate, glycocholate, taurocholate, glycochenodeoxycholate, and taurochenodeoxycholate. The five PLA2-bile salt complexes each result in a partly occluded active site, and the resulting ligand binding displays specific hydrogen bonding interactions and extensive hydrophobic packing. The amphipathic bile salts are bound to PLA2 with their polar hydroxyl and sulfate/carboxy groups oriented away from the enzyme's hydrophobic core. The impaired catalytic and interface binding functions implied by these structures provide a basis for the previous numerous observations of a biphasic dependence of the rate of PLA2 catalyzed hydrolysis of zwitterionic glycerophospholipids in the presence of bile salts. The rising or activation phase is consistent with enhanced binding and activation of the bound PLA2 by the bile salt induced anionic charge in a zwitterionic interface. The falling or inhibitory phase can be explained by the formation of a catalytically inert stoichiometric complex between PLA2 and any bile salts in which it forms a stable complex. The model provides new insight into the regulatory role that specific PLA2-bile salt interactions are likely to play in fat metabolism.  相似文献   

18.
Pancreatic phospholipase A2 (PLA2)-catalyzed hydrolysis of egg yolk phosphatidylcholine (PC) in mixed PC-cholate systems depends upon composition, structure, and size of the mixed aggregates. The hydrolysis of PC-cholate-mixed micelles made of an equal number of PC and cholate molecules is consistent with a Km of about 1 mM and a turnover number of about 120 s-1. Increasing the cholate/PC ratio in the micelles results in a decreased initial velocity. Hydrolysis of cholate-containing unilamellar vesicles is very sensitive to the ratio of cholate to PC in the vesicles. The hydrolysis of vesicles with an effective cholate/PC ratio greater than 0.27 is similar to that of the mixed micelles. The time course of hydrolysis of vesicles with lower effective ratios is similar to that exhibited by pure dipalmitoyl-phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) large unilamellar vesicles in the thermotropic phase transition region. In the latter two cases, the rate of hydrolysis increases with time until substrate depletion becomes significant. The reaction can be divided phenomenologically into two phases: a latency phase where the amount of product formed is a square function of time (P(t) = At2) and a phase distinguished by a sudden increase in activity. The parameter A, which describes the activation rate of the enzyme during the initial phase in a quantitative fashion, increases with increasing [PLA2], decreasing [PC], decreasing vesicle size, and increasing relative cholate content of the vesicles. The effect of [PLA2] and [PC] on the hydrolysis reaction is similar to that found with pure DPPC unilamellar vesicles in their thermotropic phase transition region. The effect of cholate on the hydrolysis reaction is similar to that of temperature variation within the phase transition of temperature variation within the phase transition of DPPC. These results are consistent with our previously proposed model, which postulates that activation of PLA2 involves dimerization of the enzyme on the substrate surface and that the rate of activation is directly proportional to the magnitude of lipid structural fluctuations. It is suggested that large structural fluctuations, which exist in the pure lipid system in the phase transition range, are introduced into liquid crystalline vesicles by the presence of cholate and thus promote activation of the enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
F Darchen  D Scherman  J P Henry 《Biochemistry》1989,28(4):1692-1697
The binding of [3H]reserpine ([3H]RES) to purified bovine chromaffin granule membranes has been studied at low membrane concentration. Saturation isotherms indicated a dissociation equilibrium constant KD of 30 pM and a density of binding sites of 8 pmol/mg of protein at 30 degrees C. The association rate constant was 4.0 X 10(5) M-1 s-1, and the calculated dissociation rate constant was 1.2 X 10(-5) s-1, corresponding to a half-lifetime of about 16 h. Although this dissociation was too low to be measured directly, [3H]RES binding was indeed reversible since it was lost after addition of the detergent Triton X-100. Dihydrotetrabenazine (TBZOH) inhibited [3H]RES binding in a time-dependent manner, EC50 varying from 37 nM after a 1-h incubation to 600 nM after 16 h. On the contrary, [3H]RES binding inhibition by the substrate noradrenaline was time independent. It is proposed that the transporter exists in two different conformations which bind exclusively either tetrabenazine (TBZ) or RES and which are in equilibrium. The effects of detergents were consistent with this two-conformation model. The transporter solubilized by cholate bound [3H]TBZOH, but not [3H]RES. On the other hand, addition of cholate to membrane-bound [3H]RES solubilized the membrane without releasing the ligand from its binding site. It is proposed that the TBZ-binding conformation is obtained by solubilization with cholate and that RES stabilizes the RES-binding conformation, allowing its solubilization by this detergent.  相似文献   

20.
The growth of Clostridium group P strain C48-50 [an anaerobe that contains 12alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (12alpha-HSDH) in the absence of other dehydrogenases active upon bile salts] is greatly enhanced by the addition of 2.0% d-fructose or d-glucose to the growth medium. Other sugars were less effective. The production of NADP-dependent 12alpha-HSDH paralleled the growth of the organism which was optimal at 72 hr. Growth (and enzyme production) were suppressed by the addition of bile salt to the medium; the order of suppression was deoxycholate > chenodeoxycholate > cholate; 1 mM of either of the dihydroxy-bile salts inhibited 96% of the growth and 100% of the enzyme production. Kinetic studies on cell-free preparations of 12alpha-HSDH revealed a pH optimum of 7.8 with greater linearity of NADP evolution with time occurring only at more alkaline pH values (9-10). Lineweaver-Burke plots revealed Michaelis constant (K(m)) values in the range of 3-5 x 10(-4) M for deoxycholate and its glycine and taurine conjugates, while higher values were found for cholate and conjugates (K(m) value for taurocholate was 3 x 10(-3) M). Although there was no activity with NAD, 12alpha-HSDH was shown to bind onto both NAD- and NADP-Sepharose columns, with stronger binding on the latter. The enzyme was purified 20-fold by NAD-Sepharose chromatography. The molecular weight was estimated at 100,000 by Sephadex G-200 and a series of molecular weight markers. Substrate specificity studies showed that a variety of bile salts containing 12alpha-OH groups reacted; notably, the 3alpha-sulfates of cholate and deoxycholate were nonsubstrates.-Macdonald, I. A., J. F. Jellett and D. E. Mahony. 12alpha-Hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase from Clostridium Group P strain C48-50 #29733: partial purification and characterization.  相似文献   

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