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1.
T Maeda  A Asano  K Oki  Y Okada  S Onishi 《Biochemistry》1975,14(17):3736-3741
Fusion of red blood cells (RBC) induced by hemagglutinating virus of Japan (HVJ) has been studied using a phosphatidylcholine spin label. The spin label was readily incorporated and diffused into the lipid bilayer portion of the viral envelope. The exchange broadening in the electron spin resonance (ESR) spectrum of densely labeled virus disappeared rapidly when the virus was mixed with RBC at 37 degrees. The spectrum gradually approached that of the host cell spin labeled with the phosphatidylcholine label. The results directly indicate transfer and intermixing of phospholipid molecules between the viral envelope and RBC membrane. The transfer reaction was strongly dependent on temperature. No transfer was observed at lower temperatures where the virus adsorbed to the cell and caused aggregation but no hemolysis and fusion. The transfer rate remained negligibly small until 19 degrees and increased rapidly between 25 and 30 degrees. The virus-induced hemolysis showed similar temperature dependence. The transfer rate was greatly reduced under inhibitory conditions of fusion: glutaraldehyde treatment of RBC, trypsin treatment of HVJ, or the presence of concanavalin A. Only slight transfer was observed from fusion-inactive influenza virus to RBC. The transfer was greatly enhanced by the help of HVJ. The close parallelism suggests that the transfer and intermixing are necessary steps to the cell fusion. The transfer rate was dependent on fluidity of the host cell membrane and independent of the viral dose. The virus-induced transfer of phospholipid molecules between RBC's was also detected by the spin label. Its temperature dependence was quite similar to that for the virus-to-cell transfer. The intercellular transfer was nearly proportional to the viral dose.  相似文献   

2.
K Kuroda  K Kawasaki  S Ohnishi 《Biochemistry》1985,24(17):4624-4629
HVJ* (hemagglutinating virus of Japan containing spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine in its envelope around 10 mol %) was adsorbed onto erythrocytes or erythrocyte ghosts at various doses, and the ESR spectrum of the virus-cell system was measured at 37 degrees C. The peak-height increase for the HVJ*-ghost system was satisfactorily analyzed on the basis of envelope fusion by a first-order kinetic equation with two different rate constants. The rate constant was obtained as k1 = 0.84 min-1 and k2 = 0.011 min-1, independent of the virus dose. The fraction of virus fused at the rate constant k1 decreased with the dose. However, the average number of fast-fusing viruses per cell was nearly independent of the dose, and the value was one to two. The peak-height increase in the HVJ*-erythrocyte system was caused by both envelope fusion and phospholipid exchange catalyzed by the virus-induced hemolyzate. At lower doses, where the virus-induced hemolysis was small and, therefore, the rate of phospholipid exchange was small, the peak-height increase could be analyzed by the same kinetic equation with nearly the same rate constant value for k1 as that for HVJ*-ghosts. However, the k2 was larger than that for HVJ*-ghost, owing to the additional transfer by phospholipid exchange.  相似文献   

3.
The nature of the interaction between Sendai virus and Sil mutant cells was examined by measuring a change in ESR spectrum of spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine molecules on the viral envelope. When spin-labeled virus was incubated with the Sil cells that had a reduced ability to respond to virus-induced cell fusion, interchange of the phospholipid molecules between viral envelope and cell surface membrane occurred to a smaller extent than that observed with parental cells. Moreover, the degree of the interchanging correlated with the degree of the fusion capacity of the mutant lines. The results show that the mutant cells carry such a lesion(s) on their surface membranes that the viral envelopes can hardly fuse into them.  相似文献   

4.
The nature of the interaction between Sendai virus and Sil mutant cells was examined by measuring a change in ESR spectrum of spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine molecules on the viral envelope. When spin-labeled virus was incubated with the Sil cells that had a reduced ability to respond to virus-induced cell fusion, interchange of the phospholipid molecules between viral envelope and cell surface membrane occurred to a smaller extent than that observed with parental cells. Moreover, the degree of the interchanging correlated with the degree of the fusion capacity of the mutant lines. The results show that the mutant cells carry such a lesion(s) on their surface membranes that the viral envelopes can hardly fuse into them.  相似文献   

5.
Fusion of phosphatidylcholine (PC) vesicles and of PC-phosphatidylserine (PS) vesicles has been studied using spin-labeled PC and PS. Analysis of ESR spectra indicated transfer of phospholipid molecules between phospholipid vesicles at the instant of membrane contact by vesicular collision. The transfer rate of PC was not greatly affected by the presence of the anionic lipid in the membranes. The rate of PC transfer between PS-PC vesicles was nearly the same as that of PS transfer. Calcium ion greatly enhanced the transfer of phospholipid molecules between PS-PC vesicles. The enhancement of PS transfer occurred instantaneously. The phospholipid transfer is related to the fusion of vesicles.  相似文献   

6.
K W Wirtz  P F Devaux  A Bienvenue 《Biochemistry》1980,19(14):3395-3399
2-Stearoyl spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine (PC*) has been introduced into the phosphatidylcholine exchange protein from bovine liver and its electron spin resonance (ESR) spectrum determined. The spin-labeled group in the PC*- exchange protein complex was strongly immobilized. Addition of sodium deoxycholate micelles released PC* from its binding site, producing a mobile signal. This was also observed when micelles of lysophosphatidylcholine and vesicles of phosphatidic acid were added, indicating that the exchange protein can insert its endogenous PC* into interfaces devoid of phosphatidylcholine. ESR spectroscopy was used to measure transfer of PC* from spin-labeled "donor" vesicles to unlabeled "acceptor" vesicles as described by Machida & Ohnishi [Machida, K., & Ohnishi, S. (1978) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 507, 156-164]. The donor vesicles consisted of PC* and phosphatidic acid (75:25 mol%) and the acceptor vesicles of phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidic acid (81:19 mol%). Addition of exchange protein catalyzed a net transfer of PC* from donor to acceptor vesicles. This transfer proceeded until the acceptor vesicles contained approximately 2 mol% of PC*. A spontaneous transfer of PC* was not observed. As for the mode of action, it appears that the exchange protein, after insertion of its endogenous PC* into the acceptor, leaves the interface without a bound phospholipid molecule yet continues to shuttle PC* from donor to acceptor.  相似文献   

7.
Expression of S protein, an envelope protein of hepatitis B virus, in the absence of other viral proteins, leads to the secretion of hepatitis B virus surface antigen (HBsAg) particles that are formed by budding from the endoplasmic reticulum membranes. The HBsAg particles produced by mouse fibroblast cells show a unique lipid composition, with 1,2-diacyl glycerophosphocholine being the dominant component. The lipid organization of the HBsAg particles was studied by measuring electron spin resonance (ESR) using various spin-labeled fatty acids, and the results were compared with a parallel study on HVJ (Sendai virus) and vesicles reconstituted with total lipids of the HBsAg particles (HBs-lipid vesicles). HVJ and the HBs-lipid vesicles showed typical ESR spectra of lipids arranged in a lipid bilayer structure. In contrast, the ESR spectra obtained with the HBsAg particles showed that the movement of lipids in the particle is severely restricted and a typical immobilized signal characteristic of tight lipid-protein interactions was also evident. Phosphatidylcholine (PC) in the HBsAg particles was not exchangeable by a PC-specific exchange protein purified from bovine liver, while phospholipase A(2) from Naja naja vemon was able to hydrolyze all the PC in the particles. These analyses suggest that the lipids in the HBsAg particles are not organized in a typical lipid bilayer structure, but are located at the surface of the particles and are in a highly immobilized state. Based on these observations we propose a unique lipid assembly and membrane structure model for HBsAg particles.  相似文献   

8.
Phospholipid liposomes composed of phosphatidylcholine (PC) and cholesterol (chol), bearing the sialoglycoprotein glycophorin (GP), are able to effectively bind Sendai virus particles, but not to be lysed by them. Incorporation of gangliosides (gangl) into the above phospholipid vesicles (yielding liposomes composed of PC/chol/gangl/GP), although not increasing their ability to interact with Sendai virions, rendered them susceptible to the viral lytic activity. This was inferred from the ability of the virus to induce release of carboxyfluorescein (CF) upon interaction at 37 degrees C with liposomes composed of PC/chol/gangl/GP. Lysis of liposomes required the presence of the two viral envelope glycoproteins, namely the hemagglutinin/neuraminidase (HN) and the fusion (F) polypeptides, and was inhibited by phenylmethyl sulfonylfluoride (PMSF), dithiothreitol (DTT) and trypsin, showing that virus-induced lysis of PC/chol/gangl/GP liposomes reflects the fusogenic activity of the virus. Incubation of Sendai virus particles with liposomes containing the acidic phospholipid dicetylphosphate (DCP) but lacking sialic acid containing receptors, also resulted in release of the liposome content. Lysis of these liposomes was due to the activity of the viral HN glycoprotein, therefore not reflecting the natural viral fusogenic activity. Fluorescence dequenching studies, using fluorescently labeled reconstituted Sendai virus envelopes (RSVE), have shown that the viral envelopes are able to fuse with neutral, almost to the same extent, as with negatively charged liposomes. However, fusion with negatively charged liposomes, as opposed to fusion with neutral liposomes, was mediated by the viral HN glycoprotein and not by the viral fusion polypeptide.  相似文献   

9.
S Yamada  S Ohnishi 《Biochemistry》1986,25(12):3703-3708
Fusion of vesicular stomatitis virus with some cells (HELR 66, KB, and human erythrocytes, both intact and trypsinized) and liposomes made of various natural and synthetic lipids was studied with spin-labeled phospholipid. Binding of virus was assayed separately with radiolabeled and spin-labeled virus. Binding to cells and liposomes was small at neutral pH but enhanced at acidic pHs. Fusion with cells and liposomes was negligibly small at neutral pH but greatly activated at acidic pHs lower than 6.5. Activation of fusion occurred at lower pH values than enhancement of binding. Fusion occurred rapidly and efficiently, reaching a plateau at 50-80% after 3 min at 37 degrees C. Binding and fusion with cells were enhanced by pretreatment of cells with trypsin. Binding to liposomes was dependent on the head group of the phospholipid, stronger to phosphatidylserine than to phosphatidylcholine, but not much dependent on the acyl chain composition. On the other hand, cis-unsaturated acyl chains were required for the efficient fusion, but there was only a small, if any, requirement for the head group. Cholesterol enhanced the fusion further. High fusion efficiency with cis-unsaturated phospholipids cannot be ascribed to the membrane fluidity but may be related to higher tail-to-head volume ratios. Possible mode of interaction of viral G glycoprotein with phospholipid is discussed. The virus cell entry mechanism is suggested as binding to the phospholipid domain in the cell surface membranes, endocytosis, and followed by fusion with the phospholipid domain in endosomes upon acidification.  相似文献   

10.
Viral glycoproteins, such as influenza hemagglutinin (HA) and human immunodeficiency virus gp41, are anchored by a single helical segment transmembrane domain (TMD) on the viral envelope membrane. The fusion peptides (FP) of the glycoproteins insert into the host membrane and initiate membrane fusion. Our previous study showed that the FP or TMD alone perturbs membrane structure. Interaction between the influenza HA FP and TMD has previously been shown, but its role is unclear. We used PC spin labels dipalmitoylphospatidyl-tempo-choline (on the headgroup), 5PC and 14PC (5-C and 14-C positions on the acyl chain) to detect the combined effect of FP-TMD interaction by titrating HA FP to TMD-reconstituted 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine/1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phospho-(1’-rac-glycerol)/cholesterol lipid bilayers using electron spin resonance. We found that the FP-TMD increases the lipid order at all positions, which has a greater lipid ordering effect than the sum of the FP or TMD alone, and this effect reaches deeper into the membranes. Although HA-mediated membrane fusion is pH dependent, this combined effect is observed at both pH 5 and pH 7. In addition to increasing lipid order, multiple components are found for 5PC at increased concentration of FP-TMD, indicating that distinct domains are induced. However, the mutation of Gly1 in the FP and L187 in the TMD eliminates the perturbations, consistent with their fusogenic phenotypes. Electron spin resonance on spin-labeled peptides confirms these observations. We suggest that this interaction may provide a driving force in different stages of membrane fusion: initialization, transition from hemifusion stalk to transmembrane contact, and fusion pore formation.  相似文献   

11.
An assay is presented that allows continuous and sensitive monitoring of membrane fusion in both artificial and biological membrane systems. The method relies upon the relief of fluorescence self-quenching of octadecyl Rhodamine B chloride. When the probe is incorporated into a lipid bilayer at concentrations up to 9 mol% with respect to total lipid, the efficiency of self-quenching is proportional to its surface density. Upon fusion between membranes labeled with the probe and nonlabeled membranes, the decrease in surface density of the fluorophore results in a concomitant, proportional increase in fluorescence intensity, allowing kinetic and quantitative measurements of the fusion process. The kinetics of fusion between phospholipid vesicles monitored with this assay were found to be the same as those determined with a fusion assay based on resonance energy transfer [Struck, D. K., Hoekstra, D., & Pagano, R. E. (1981) Biochemistry 20, 4093-4099]. Octadecyl Rhodamine B chloride can be readily inserted into native biological membranes by addition of an ethanolic solution of the probe. Evidence is presented showing that the dilution of the fluorophore, occurring when octadecyl Rhodamine containing influenza virus is mixed with phospholipid vesicles at pH 5.0, but not pH 7.4, resulted from virus-vesicle fusion and was not related to processes other than fusion. Furthermore, by use of this method, the kinetics of fusion between Sendai virus and erythrocyte ghosts and virus-induced fusion of ghosts were readily revealed. Dilution of the probe was not observed upon prior treatment of fluorescently labeled Sendai virus with trypsin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Transfer of phosphatidylcholine molecules between different membrane fractions of Tetrahymena pyriformis cells grown at 15, 27 and 39.5°C was studied by electron spin resonance (ESR). Microsomes were labeled densely with a phosphatidylcholine spin label and the spin-labeled microsomes were incubated with non-labeled cilia, pellicles or microsomes. The transfer of the phosphatidylcholine spin labels was measured by decrease in the exchange broadening of the electron spin resonance spectrum. In one experiment, the lipid transfer was measured between 32P-labeled microsomes and non-labeled pellicles by use of their radioactivity. The result was in good agreement with that by ESR. The fluidity of the membrane was estimated using a fatty-acid spin label incorporated into the membranes. Transfer between lipid vesicles was also studied. The results obtained were as follows: (1) The transfer between sonicated vesicles of egg- or dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine occurred rapidly in the liquid crystalline phase, with an activation energy of 20 kcal/mol, whereas it hardly occurred in the solid crystalline phase. (2) The transfer rate between microsomal membranes increased with temperature, and an activation energy of the reaction was 17.8 kcal/mol. (3) The transfer from the spin-labeled microsomes to subcellular membranes of the cells grown at 15°C was larger than that to the membranes of the cells grown at 39.5°C. The membrane fluidity was larger for the cells grown at lower temperature. (4) Similar tendency was observed for the transfer between microsomal lipid vesicles prepared from the cells grown at 15°C and at 39.5°C. (5) The transfer from microsomes to various membrane fractions increased in the order, cilia < pellicles < microsomes. The order of increase in the membrane fluidity was cilia < microsomes < pellicles, although the difference between microsomes and pellicles was slight. These results indicate a crucial role of the membrane fluidity in the transfer reaction. (6) Some evidence supported the idea that the lipid transfer between these organelles occurred through the lipid exchange rather than through the fusion.  相似文献   

13.
Spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine was incorporated into the membrane of isolated "inner membrane+matrix" particles of rat liver mitochondria by incubation with sonicated spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine vesicles at 22 degrees C. When the spin label was on the acyl chain the incorporation of phosphatidylcholine into the membrane was stimulated by the presence of the phosphatidylcholine exchange protein extracted from rat or beef liver. On the other hand no stimulation was observed when the nitroxide was on the polar head-group. When spin-labeled phosphatidycholine was incorporated into the mitochondrial membrane in the absence of phosphatidylcholine exchange protein, ascorbate treatment at 0 degrees C reduced the EPR signal of the spin-labeled membranes by approximately 50%, indicating that fusion incorporates molecules equally on both sides of the membrane. On the other hand when spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine was incorporated in the presence of the exchange protein most of the EPR signal could be destroyed by the ascorbate treatment at 0 degrees C, indicating that the spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine had been selectively incorporated in the outer layer of the membrane. Finally when the label is on the polar head-group the inner content of mitochondria reduces the label facing the matrix, thus creating again an anisotropy of the labeling. The anisotropic distribution of spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine in the mitochondrial membrane was found to be stable at 25 degrees C for more than 2 h. It is therefore concluded that the rate of outside-inside and inside-outside transitions are extremely slow (half-life greater than 24 h).  相似文献   

14.
C S Lai  J S Schutzbach 《FEBS letters》1986,203(2):153-156
We have used ESR methods employing spin-labeled stearates to investigate the effects of dolichol on the motion of lipid molecules in phospholipid membranes of phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylcholine. The ESR spectra show that the presence of dolichol affects the motion of the spin probes at carbon-16, but not at carbon-5. Similar results are obtained with phospholipid membranes comprising only phosphatidylcholine. It is suggested that dolichol molecules are present mainly in the lipid core region of phospholipid membranes.  相似文献   

15.
Spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine was incorporated into the membrane of isolated “inner membrane+matrix” particles of rat liver mitochondria by incubation with sonicated spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine vesicles at 22°C. When the spin label was on the acyl chain the incorporation of phosphatidylcholine into the membrane was stimulated by the presence of the phosphatidylcholine exchange protein extracted from rat or beef liver. On the other hand no stimulation was observed when the nitroxide was on the polar head-group.When spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine was incorporated into the mitochondrial membrane in the absence of phosphatidylcholine exchange protein, ascorbate treatment at O°C reduced the EPR signal of the spin-labeled membranes by approximately 50%, indicating that fusion incorporates molecules equally on both sides of the membrane. On the other hand when spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine was incoporated in the presence of the exchange protein most of the EPR signal could be destroyed by the ascorbate treatment at 0°C, indicating that the spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine had been selectively incorporated in the outer layer of the membrane. Finally when the label is on the polar head-group the inner content of mitochondria reduces the label facing the matrix, thus creating again an anisotropy of the labeling.The anisotropic distribution of spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine in the mitochondrial membrane was found to be stable at 25°C for more than 2 h. It is therefore concluded that the rate of outside-inside and inside-outside transitions are extremely slow (half-life greater than 24 h).  相似文献   

16.
Liposomes could bind and fuse efficiently to human erythrocytes in the presence of HVJ when they contained glycophorin isolated from human erythrocytes (Umeda, M., et al. (1983) J. Biochem. 94, 1955). In the present work we demonstrated that HVJ-induced fusion between liposomes containing glycophorin and erythrocytes was suppressed when GM1 coexisted with glycophorin in the same liposomal membranes. Asialo-GM1 and other gangliosides such as GM3 and sialosylparagloboside did not affect the fusion between the liposomes and erythrocytes. An intermolecular interaction between glycophorin and GM1 was suggested by the ESR spectrum obtained from liposomes containing glycophorin and a ganglioside GM1 analog carrying a nitroxyl spin label in the fatty acyl chains (5SL-gangliosidoide). The overall splitting value (2A parallel) observed in the ESR spectrum of liposomes containing 5SL-gangliosidoide increased with increase of the amount of glycophorin, whereas 2A parallel of spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine was not changed. The increase of 2A parallel of 5SL-gangliosidoide suggests that the mobility of the fatty acyl chain of the gangliosidoide was restricted by the interaction with glycophorin. It can be concluded that GM1 located near glycophorin, a receptor of the virus, interferes with the activity of viral F protein, inhibiting the fusion of liposome to erythrocyte.  相似文献   

17.
The role of methionine residues in the interaction of the phosphatidylcholine transfer protein from bovine liver with phospholipid vesicles was investigated by specific modification of these residues with iodoacetamide. The modified protein was digested with cyanogen bromide in order to determine which methionine residues had become resistant to this cleavage. Automated Edman degradation on the digest indicated that after 72 h of reaction, Met-1 was modified for 80%, Met-73 for 50%, Met-109 for 20%, whilst Met-173 and Met-203 were found to be unmodified. This distinct modification did not result in any loss of phosphatidylcholine transfer activity. The interaction of the phosphatidylcholine transfer protein with phospholipid vesicles was investigated by making use of electron spin resonance spectroscopy. The interaction of unmodified protein with vesicles composed of phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidic acid/spin-labeled phosphatidylethanolamine (79:16:5, mol%) or composed of phosphatidylserine/spin-labeled phosphatidylethanolamine (95:5, mol%), gave an increase of about 50% in the rotation correlation time. A similar increase was observed with the modified protein. This interaction was further investigated by labeling Met-1 and Met-73 in the transfer protein with iodoacetamidoproxyl spin-label. Spin-labeling did not inactivate the transfer protein. In addition, the electron spin resonance spectra of the spin-labeled protein were not affected upon addition of vesicles composed of phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidic acid (80:20, mol%). These experiments strongly suggest that Met-1 and Met-73 are not part of the site that interacts with the membrane.  相似文献   

18.
New inhibitors of influenza viruses are needed to combat the potential emergence of novel human influenza viruses. We have identified a class of small molecules that inhibit replication of influenza virus at picomolar concentrations in plaque reduction assays. The compound also inhibits replication of vesicular stomatitis virus. Time of addition and dilution experiments with influenza virus indicated that an early time point of infection was blocked and that inhibitor 136 tightly bound to virions. Using fluorescently labeled influenza virus, inhibition of viral fusion to cellular membranes by blocked lipid mixing was established as the mechanism of action for this class of inhibitors. Stabilization of the neutral pH form of hemagglutinin (HA) was ruled out by trypsin digestion studies in vitro and with conformation specific HA antibodies within cells. Direct visualization of 136 treated influenza virions at pH 7.5 or acidified to pH 5.0 showed that virions remain intact and that glycoproteins become disorganized as expected when HA undergoes a conformational change. This suggests that exposure of the fusion peptide at low pH is not inhibited but lipid mixing is inhibited, a different mechanism than previously reported fusion inhibitors. We hypothesize that this new class of inhibitors intercalate into the virus envelope altering the structure of the viral envelope required for fusion to cellular membranes.  相似文献   

19.
ESR spectrometry has been used to study fatty acid spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine exchange from single bilayer donor vesicles to various acceptor systems, such as intact or differently treated mitochondria, phospholipid multilamellar vesicles or single bilayer vesicles. This exchange is catalyzed by soluble non-specific rat liver protein, first investigated by Bloj and Zilversmit in 1977 (J. Biol. Chem. 252, 1613--1619). Non-catalyzed phosphatidylcholine exchange has also been studied. Full inhibition of both mechanisms occurs with lipid-depleted acceptor mitochondria, while N-ethylmaleimide-treated mitochondria behave as good acceptors during catalyzed exchange but are in no way effective during spontaneous exchange. Non-catalyzed exchange does not take place with phospholipase D-treated mitochondria as acceptors, while the pure catalyzed mechanism is inhibited by 28%. Neither multilamellar nor single bilayer phospholipid vesicles exchange spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine in the absence of protein, the former being a poorer acceptor system than the latter during catalyzed exchange, when this activity is 31 and 80%, respectively, of that of intact mitochondria. The hypothesis is made that the spontaneous mechanism is active among intact natural membranes and could be of some importance in vivo. Furthermore, the biomembrane protein moiety is assumed to be involved in the catalyzed exchange more as a phospholipid spacer than as a binder between the exchange protein and the membrane involved. Phospholipids, on the contrary, appear to be important for both functions.  相似文献   

20.
The association of water (D2O) with phospholipid membranes was studied by using pulsed-electron spin resonance techniques. We measured the deuterium electron spin echo modulation of spin-labeled phospholipids by D2O in membranes of dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine with and without 50 mol% of cholesterol. The Fourier transform of the relaxation-corrected two-pulse echo decay curve reveals peaks, at one and two times the deuterium NMR frequency, that arise from the dipolar hyperfine interaction of the deuterium nucleus with the unpaired electron spin of the nitroxide-labeled lipid. For phosphatidylcholine spin-labeled at different positions down the sn-2 chain, the amplitude of the deuterium signal decreases toward the center of the membrane, and is reduced to zero from the C-12 atom position onward. At chain positions C-5 and C-7 closer to the phospholipid headgroups, the amplitude of the deuterium signal is greater in the presence of cholesterol than in its absence. These results are in good agreement with more indirect measurements of the transmembrane polarity profile that are based on the 14N-hyperfine splittings in the conventional continuous-wave electron spin resonance spectrum.  相似文献   

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