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1.
We performed detailed biophysical studies of transfer of long-chain fatty acids (FAs) from methyl-β-CD (MBCD) to model membranes (egg-PC vesicles) and cells and the extraction of FA from membranes by MBCD. We used i) fluorescein phosphatidylethanolamine to detect transfer of FA anions arriving in the outer membrane leaflet; ii) entrapped pH dyes to measure pH changes after FA diffusion (flip-flop) across the lipid bilayer; and iii) soluble fluorescent-labeled FA binding protein to measure the concentration of unbound FA in water. FA dissociated from MBCD, bound to the membrane, and underwent flip-flop within milliseconds. In the presence of vesicles, MBCD maintained the aqueous concentration of unbound FA at low levels comparable to those measured with albumin. In studies with cells, addition of oleic acid (OA) complexed with MBCD yielded rapid (seconds) dose-dependent OA transport into 3T3-L1 preadipocytes and HepG2 cells. MBCD extracted OA from cells and model membranes rapidly at concentrations exceeding those required for OA delivery but much lower than concentrations commonly used for extracting cholesterol. Compared with albumin, MBCD can transfer its entire FA load and is less likely to extract cell nutrients and to introduce impurities.  相似文献   

2.
The larval fatty acid composition of neutral lipids and membrane lipids was determined in three ethanol-tolerant strains ofDrosophila melanogaster. Dietary ethanol promoted a decrease in long-chain fatty acids in neutral lipids along with enhanced alcohol dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.1) activity in all of the strains. Dietary ethanol also increased the incorporation of14C-ethanol into fatty acid ethyl esters (FAEE) by two- to threefold and decreased the incorporation of14C-ethanol into free fatty acids (FFA). When cultured on sterile, defined media with stearic acid at 0 to 5 mM, stearic acid decreased ADH activity up to 33%. In strains not selected for superior tolerance to ethanol, dietary ethanol promoted a loss of long-chain fatty acids in membrane lipids. The loss of long-chain fatty acids in membranes was strongly correlated with increased fluidity in hydrophobic domains of mitochondrial membranes as determined by electron spin resonance and correlated with a loss of ethanol tolerance. In the ethanol-tolerant E2 strain, which had been exposed to ethanol for many generations, dietary ethanol failed to promote a loss of long-chain fatty acids in membrane lipids. We are grateful for the support of National Institutes of Health Grant AA06702 (B.W.G.) and National Science Foundation Grant CHE-891987 (R.G.K.).  相似文献   

3.
Transport of long-chain fatty acids into rat adipocytes was previously shown to be inhibited by the reactive derivative sulfosuccinimidyl oleate consequent to its binding to a membrane protein FAT, which is homologous to CD36. In this report, the ability of the purified protein to bind native fatty acids was investigated. CD36 was isolated from rat adipocytes by phase partitioning into Triton X-114 followed by chromatography on DEAE and then on wheat germ agglutinin. Fatty acid binding was determined by incubating CD36, solubilized in buffer containing 0.1 Triton X-100, with fatty acids at 37°C, and then by adsorbing the unbound ligand with Lipidex 1,000 at 0°C. Bovine serum albumin was used as a positive control and gelatin, a protein that does not bind fatty acids, as a negative control. Measurements with albumin yielded reproducible binding values which were not altered by the presence of 0.1% Triton X-100. Under the same conditions, gelatin yielded reproducibly negative measurements that did not differ significantly from zero. CD36 bound various long-chain fatty acids at low ligand to protein ratios. Warming the protein-FA-Lipidex mixture to 37°C removed the FA off the protein. Thus, binding was reversible and distinct from the palmitoylation of the protein known to occur on an extracellular domain. Comparison of the predicted secondary sequence of CD36 with that of human muscle fatty acid binding protein suggested that a potential binding site for the fatty acid on CD36 may exist in its extracellular segment between residues 127 and 279. Received: 17 January 1996/Revised: 8 May 1996  相似文献   

4.
13C NMR chemical shift and intensity results for a series of carboxyl 13C-enriched saturated fatty acids (8-18 carbons) bound to bovine serum albumin (BSA) are presented as a function of increasing fatty acid (FA)/BSA mole ratio. Spectra for long-chain (greater than or equal to 12 carbons) FA X BSA complexes exhibited up to five FA carboxyl resonances, designated a, b, b', c, and d. Only three resonances (peaks b, b', and d) were observed below 3:1 FA X BSA mole ratio, and at greater than or equal to 3:1 mole ratio, two additional resonances were observed (peaks c and a). In a spectrum of 5:1 stearic acid X BSA complexes, peaks b, b', and d each represented approximately one-fifth, and peak c approximately two-fifths, of the total FA carboxyl intensity. Plots of total carboxyl/carbonyl intensity ratio as a function of FA X BSA mole ratio were linear up to 7-9 mole ratio. Deviation from linearity at mole ratios greater than or equal to 7 was accompanied by the detection of crystalline unbound FA (as 1:1 acid/soap) by X-ray diffraction. In contrast to long-chain FA X BSA complexes, 13C NMR spectra of octanoic acid X BSA complexes yielded only one FA carboxyl resonance (peak c) at FA X BSA mole ratios between 1 and 20. We conclude: peaks b, b', and d represent FA bound to three individual high affinity (primary) long-chain FA binding sites on BSA; peak c represents FA bound to several secondary long-chain (or primary short-chain) FA binding sites on BSA; peak a represents long-chain FA bound to an additional lower affinity binding site. We present a model that correlates the observed 13C NMR resonances with individual binding site locations predicted by a recent three-dimensional model of BSA.  相似文献   

5.
The use of conjugated polyene fatty acids as probes of membrane structure is examined. α- and β-parinaric acid (cis, trans, trans, cis- and all trans-9,11,13,15-octadecatetraenoic acid) and synthetic lecithins containing an α-parinaric acid chai in position 2 have been prepared, and their absorption and fluorescence properties have been determined. Their absorption spectra are at sufficiently long wavelength to be unobscured by cellular chromophores such as nucleotides and aromatic amin acids. Parinaric acid absorption does, however, overlap tryptophan emission which allows fluorescence energy transfer. Potential uses of these fluorescent probes are presented with studies on mode systems with known physical properties. Dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine exhibits a sharp phase transition 1° wide at 42° C, as monitored by the fluorescence intensit, of parinaric acid. The magnitude of the transition is independent of probe concentration, but the width of the transition and hysteresis are dependent upon such factors as the probe concentration and whether or not sonication is used in sample preparation. Using both fluorescence and absorption properties of the probe, we show that the addition of cholesterol to the dispersion broadens and decreases the magnitude of the transition. These results are interpreted in terms of a change in the polarizability of the acyl chains of a lipid bilayer as the bilayer undergoes a thermal transition. Lipid-protein interactions are studied by the binding of α-parinaric acid to bovine serum albumin. Fluorescence enhancement, absorption spectral shifts, and quenching of tryptophan fluorescence are observed when α-parinaric acid binds to bovine serum albumin. Calculations based on these measurements are consistent with two binding sites of KB ~ 108 (M?1) and three to four binding sites of KB ~ 106 – 107 (M?1), similar to known values for the binding of other long-chain fatty acids. Biosynthetic incorporation of β-parinaric acid into the E. coli fatty acid auxotroph 30E βox? has been accomplished and phase transitions in cells and isolated phospholipids are shown.  相似文献   

6.
We have created by transfection a series of HEK 293 cell lines that express varying amounts of caveolin-1 to test the possible effect of this protein on the transport and metabolism of long chain fatty acids (FA) in cells with this gain of function. We used an extracellular fluorescent probe (ADIFAB) to monitor binding of exogenous FA to the plasma membrane and an intracellular pH probe to monitor FA equilibration across the plasma membrane. Real-time fluorescence measurements showed rapid binding of oleic acid to the extracellular side of the plasma membrane and a rapid translocation across the lipid bilayer by the flip-flop mechanism (<5 s). Two cell lines expressing levels of caveolin-1 roughly comparable to that of adipocytes, which have a very high level of endogenous expression of caveolin-1, showed a relatively slow change in intracellular pH (t(1/2) < 100 s) in addition to the fast changes in fluorescence. We interpret this additional second phase to represent translocation of additional FA from the outer to inner leaflet of the plasma membrane. The slower kinetics could represent either slower flip-flop of FA across highly organized, rigid regions of the plasma membrane or binding of FA to caveolin-1 in the intracellular leaflet of the plasma membrane. The kinetics of palmitate and elaidate (a trans FA) transmembrane movement were identical to that for oleate. These results were observed in the absence of the putative FA transport protein, CD36, and in the absence of any changes in expression of fatty acid transport proteins (FATP) 2 and 4, and are in direct correlation with increased cellular free cholesterol content. FA metabolism was slow in all cell lines and was not enhanced by caveolin-1 expression. We conclude that transport of FA across the plasma membrane is modulated by caveolin-1 and cholesterol and is not dependent on the putative FA transport proteins CD36 and FATP.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Sulfo-N-succinimidyl derivatives of the long-chain fatty acids, oleic and myristic, were synthesized and covalently reacted with isolated rat adipocytes. The plasma membrane proteins labeled by these compounds and the effect of labeling on the transport of long-chain fatty acids were investigated. Sulfo-N-succinimidyl oleate (SSO) and myristate (SSM) inhibited the transport of fatty acids (by about 70%). Inhibition of fatty acid transport was not a result of alterations in cell integrity, as intracellular water volume was not changed. It did not reflect effects on fatty acid metabolism, since it was observed under conditions where greater than 90% of the fatty acid taken up was recovered in the free form. The inhibitory effect was specific to the fatty acid transport system, as the transport of glucose and the permeation of retinoic acid, a substance with structural similarities to long-chain fatty acids, were unaffected. Sulfosuccinimidyl oleate reacted exclusively with a plasma membrane protein with an apparent size of 85 kDa while sulfosuccinimidyl myristate also labeled a 75-kDa while sulfosuccinimidyl myristate also labeled a 75-kDa protein. These proteins were among the ones labeled by diisothiocyanodisulfonic acid (DIDS) which also inhibits fatty acid transport irreversibly. The data suggest that the 85-kDa protein, which is the only one labeled by all three inhibitors is involved in facilitating membrane permeation of long-chain fatty acids.  相似文献   

8.
Phenytoin (PHT) modified the fluorescent characteristics of anthroyloxy-fatty acids in synaptosomal membranes. Association of PHT with synaptosomal membranes caused the greatest change when the fluorescent probe was located at the 6-carbon position of N-(anthroyloxy)stearic acid and was incorporated into the membranes. Phenytoin and 6-(anthroyloxy)stearic acid compete for high affinity binding regions which are probably lipid domains within the membrane. Phenytoin has a weaker association with the sites than the fluorescent fatty acids. Divalent cations, e.g. Mg2+ or Ca2+, are required to observe maximal change in polarization of fluorescence of fatty acid probes in the presence of PHT. It is proposed that the membrane lipid bilayer reorganizes to accommodate exogenous compounds, such as phenytoin or the fatty acid probe in order to permit the most efficient packing of lipids. This reorganization of the lipid bilayer may influence membrane enzyme activities and ion channels.  相似文献   

9.
The cnidarian-dinoflagellate symbiosis is arguably one of the most important within the marine environment in that it is integral to the formation of coral reefs. However, the regulatory processes that perpetuate this symbiosis remain unresolved. It is essential to understand these processes, if we are to elucidate the mechanisms that support growth and resource accumulation by coral host, and conversely, recently observed reduction and/or mortality of corals in response to rapid environmental change. This study specifically focused on one area of metabolic activity within the symbiosis, that of free fatty acid synthesis within both the dinoflagellate symbionts and cnidarian host. The main model system used was Aiptasia pulchella and Symbiodinium sp. in combination with aposymbiotic A. pulchella, the symbiotic coral Acropora millepora system and dinoflagellate culture. Fatty acids (FAs) were selected because of their multiple essential roles inclusive of energy storage (resource accumulation), membrane structure fluidity and cell signaling. The study addressed free FA lipogenesis by using a new method of enriched stable isotopic (13C) incorporation from dissolved inorganic carbon (DI13C) combined with HPLC-MS. FAs derived from DI13C aligned with a mixture of known lipogenesis pathways with the addition of some unusual FAs. After 120 hr, 13C-enriched FA synthesis rates were attributed to only a complex integration of both n–3 and n–6 lipogenesis pathways within the dinoflagellate symbionts. Furthermore, there was no detectible evidence of symbiont derived enriched isotope fatty acids, catabolized 13C derivatives or DI13C being directly utilized, in host late n–6 pathway long-chain FA lipogenesis. These findings do not align with a popular mutualistic translocation model with respect to the use of translocated symbiont photoassimilates in host long-chain FA lipogenesis, which has important connotations for linking nutrient sources with metabolite production and the dynamic regulation of this symbiosis.  相似文献   

10.
Transport and utilization of fatty acids (FA) in cells is a multistep process that includes adsorption to and movement across the plasma membrane and binding to intracellular fatty acid binding proteins (FABP) in the cytosol. We monitored the transbilayer movement of several polyunsaturated FA and oxidation products (13-hydroxy octadecadienoic acid (HODE) and 15-hydroxytetraenoic acid (HETE)) in unilamellar protein-free phospholipid vesicles containing a fluorescent pH probe. All FA diffused rapidly by the flip-flop mechanism across the model membrane, as revealed by pH changes inside the vesicle. This result suggests that FA oxidation products generated in the cell could cross the plasma or nuclear membrane spontaneously without a membrane transporter. To illuminate features of extra- and intracellular transport, the partitioning of unsaturated FA and oxidized FA between phospholipid vesicles and albumin or FABP was studied by the pyranin assay. These experiments showed that all polyunsaturated FA and oxidized FA (13-HODE and 15-HETE) desorbed rapidly from the phospholipid bilayer to bind to bovine serum albumin, which showed a slight preference for the unsaturated FA over the oxidized FA. FABP rapidly bound FA in the presence of phospholipid bilayers, with a preference of 13-HODE over the unsaturated FA and with a specificity depending on the type of FABP. Liver FABP was significantly more effective than intestinal FABP in binding 13-HODE in the presence of vesicles. The more effective binding of the FA metabolite, 13-HODE, than its precursor 18:2 by FABP may help protect cellular membranes from potential damage by monohydroxy fatty acids and may contribute a pathway for entry of 13-HODE into the nucleus.  相似文献   

11.

Background

The molecular details of fatty acid (FA) interactions with albumin are fundamental to understanding transport in the plasma and cellular utilization of these key nutrients and building blocks of membranes.

Scope of review

This review focuses on the development and application of NMR methods to study FA binding to albumin [bovine (BSA) and human (HSA)]. The key strategy was to use 13C enrichment of a specific carbon in the FA as a non-perturbing probe to permit visualization of the small ligand complexed to the very large protein. NMR contributions to illuminating molecular interactions and FA dynamics are summarized from three decades of studies.

Major conclusions

Our early studies detected multiple binding sites that we hypothesized were distinguished because of the unique tertiary structure of the protein in close proximity to the FA labeled carbon in each site. Later crystallographic structures revealed the presence of polar and charged amino acid side chains near the carboxyl carbon of the FA and unique tertiary structures lining all of the FA binding pockets. In collaboration with the crystallography group, several FA sites in the crystalline state were matched with NMR resonances in the solution state. With the newest application of NMR, 2D NMR spectroscopy detected nine binding sites, and three were located in the crystal structure through displacement of drugs with identified sites.

General significance

NMR spectroscopy utilizing the FA as a probe allows characterization of site-specific interactions, molecular motions within binding sites, the order of filling and removal of FA from sites. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled Serum Albumin.  相似文献   

12.
Very long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids (VLC-PUFAs) are important dietary requirements for maintaining human health. Many marine microalgae are naturally high in ω − 3 VLC-PUFAs, however, the molecular mechanisms underpinning fatty acid (FA) desaturation and elongation in algae are poorly understood. An advanced molecular understanding would facilitate improvements of this nascent industry. We aimed to investigate expression responses of four front-end fatty acid desaturase genes and downstream effects on FA profiles to nitrogen limitation and cultivation growth stage in Isochrysis aff. galbana (TISO). Cultures were grown in nitrogen-replete and -deplete medium; samples were harvested during logarithmic, late logarithmic and stationary growth phases to analyse FA content/composition and gene expression of ?6-, ?8-, ?5- and ?4-desaturases (d6FAD (putative), d8FAD, d5FAD and d4FAD, respectively). d6FAD (putative) exhibited no differential expression, while d8FAD, d5FAD and d4FAD were significantly upregulated during logarithmic growth of nutrient-replete cultures, coinciding with rapid cell division. In conclusion, it is demonstrated that expression of some FADs in I. aff. galbana varies with culture age and nitrogen status which has downstream consequences on FA desaturation levels. This has implications for the commercial production of VLC-PUFAs where a trade-off between total lipid yield and VLC-PUFAs has to be made.  相似文献   

13.
In the studies described here rat liver microsomes containing labeled palmitic, stearic, oleic or linoleic acids were incubated with fatty acid binding protein (FABP) and the rate of removal of14C-labeled fatty acids from the membrane by the soluble protein was measured using a model system. More unsaturated than saturated fatty acids were removed from native liver microsomes incubated with similar amounts of FABP. Thein vitro peroxidation of microsomal membranes mediated by ascorbate-Fe++, modified its fatty acid composition with a considerable decrease of the peroxidizability index. These changes in the microsomes facilitated the removal of oleic and linoeic acids by FABP, but the removal of palmitic and stearic acids was not modified. This effect is proposed to result from a perturbation of membrane structure following peroxidation with release of free fatty acids from susceptible domains.Abbreviations BSA bovine serum albumin - FABP fatty acid binding protein  相似文献   

14.
A covalent complex between bovine serum albumin and 7-hydroxycoumarin-4-acetic acid (BSA-HCA) shows a strong fluorescence band at lambdamax = 450 nm upon excitation at 375 nm. Quenching of the fluorescence emission accompanies the association of fatty acids (FA) to BSA-HCA and the application of the complex as a spectrofluorometric probe for measurement of fatty acid concentrations in aqueous solution is examined. Binding constants for various long-chain fatty acids (Kd = 14-460 nM) and calibration curves characterizing the probe have been determined. Standardized assay conditions allow for accurate measurements in the concentration range of 10 nM to 5 microM. BSA-HCA provides a stable and sensitive fluorescence-based FA probe with potential biochemical applications.  相似文献   

15.
Summary We recently reported (Harmon et al., J. Membrane Biol. 124:261–268, 1991) that sulfo-N-succinimidyl derivatives of long-chain fatty acids (SS-FA) specifically inhibited transport of oleate by rat adipocytes. These compounds bound to an 85–90 kD membrane protein which was also labeled by another inhibitor of FA transport [3H]DIDS (4,4-diisothiocyanostilbene-2-2-sulfonate). These results indicated that the protein was a strong candidate as the transporter for long-chain fatty acids. In this report we determined that the apparent size of the protein is 88 kD and its isoelectric point is 6.9. We used [3H]SS-oleate (SSO), which specifically labels the 88-kD protein, to isolate it from rat adipocyte plasma membranes. Identification of 15 amino acids at the N-terminus region revealed strong sequence homology with two previously described membrane glycoproteins: CD36, a ubiquitous protein originally identified in platelets and PAS IV, a protein that is enriched in the apical membranes of lipidsecreting mammary cells during lactation. Antibody against PAS IV cross-reacted with the adipocyte protein. This, together with the N-terminal sequence homology, suggested that the adipocyte protein belongs to a family of related intrinsic membrane proteins which include CD36 and PAS IV.  相似文献   

16.
Very long-chain fatty acids (VLCFAs, chain length >C20) exist in tissues throughout the body and are synthesized by repetition of the fatty acid (FA) elongation cycle composed of four successive enzymatic reactions. In mammals, the TER gene is the only gene encoding trans-2-enoyl-CoA reductase, which catalyzes the fourth reaction in the FA elongation cycle. The TER P182L mutation is the pathogenic mutation for nonsyndromic mental retardation. This mutation substitutes a leucine for a proline residue at amino acid 182 in the TER enzyme. Currently, the mechanism by which the TER P182L mutation causes nonsyndromic mental retardation is unknown. To understand the effect of this mutation on the TER enzyme and VLCFA synthesis, we have biochemically characterized the TER P182L mutant enzyme using yeast and mammalian cells transfected with the TER P182L mutant gene and analyzed the FA elongation cycle in the B-lymphoblastoid cell line with the homozygous TER P182L mutation (TERP182L/P182L B-lymphoblastoid cell line). We have found that TER P182L mutant enzyme exhibits reduced trans-2-enoyl-CoA reductase activity and protein stability, thereby impairing VLCFA synthesis and, in turn, altering the sphingolipid profile (i.e. decreased level of C24 sphingomyelin and C24 ceramide) in the TERP182L/P182L B-lymphoblastoid cell line. We have also found that in addition to the TER enzyme-catalyzed fourth reaction, the third reaction in the FA elongation cycle is affected by the TER P182L mutation. These findings provide new insight into the biochemical defects associated with this genetic mutation.  相似文献   

17.
The effects on membrane structure of including various fatty acids and cholesterol in the growth medium of Acholeplasma laidlawii were investigated by the use of spin-labeled fatty acids. Although the order-mobility parameters varied significantly at some temperatures with the nature of the fatty acid incorporated, the value measured at the growth temperature was only slightly affected by changes in the fatty acid composition of the membranes. The data confirm previous assertions that despite a high level of incorporation of fatty acids of various chain lengths or degree of unsaturation, A. laidlawii regulates its overall membrane fluidity within close limits at the growth temperature. Incorporation of cholesterol increased the degree of order at all temperatures. The coexistence of two lipid phases, one protein-dependent, could be observed in membranes. The order-mobility parameter of spin probes proved less satisfactory for the observation of a gel to liquid crystal transition of the membrane lipid than the partition parameter of a fatty acid spin probe. Order parameters measured by fatty acid spin probes were somewhat higher than those measured by the analogous 2H nmr probes.  相似文献   

18.
STK_08120 is a member of the thermoacidophile-specific DUF3211 protein family from Sulfolobus tokodaii strain 7. Its molecular function remains obscure, and sequence similarities for obtaining functional remarks are not available. In this study, the crystal structure of STK_08120 was determined at 1.79-Å resolution to predict its probable function using structure similarity searches. The structure adopts an α/β structure of a helix-grip fold, which is found in the START domain proteins with cavities for hydrophobic substrates or ligands. The detailed structural features implied that fatty acids are the primary ligand candidates for STK_08120, and binding assays revealed that the protein bound long-chain saturated fatty acids (>C14) and their trans-unsaturated types with an affinity equal to that for major fatty acid binding proteins in mammals and plants. Moreover, the structure of an STK_08120-myristic acid complex revealed a unique binding mode among fatty acid binding proteins. These results suggest that the thermoacidophile-specific protein family DUF3211 functions as a fatty acid carrier with a novel binding mode.  相似文献   

19.
Fatty acid translocase (FAT/CD36) is a membrane receptor that facilitates long-chain fatty acid uptake. To investigate its role in the regulation of long-chain fatty acid composition in muscle tissue, we studied and compared FAT/CD36 gene expression in muscle tissues of commercial broiler chickens and Chinese local Silky fowls. The results from gas chromatography–mass spectrometry analysis of muscle samples demonstrated that Chinese local Silky fowls had significantly higher (P < 0.05) proportions of linoleic acid (LA) and palmitic acid, lower proportions (P < 0.05) of arachidonic acid (AA) and oleic acid than the commercial broiler chickens. The mRNA expression levels of fatty acid (FA) transporters (FA transport protein-1, membrane FA-binding protein, FAT/CD36 and caveolin-1) in the m. ipsilateral pectoralis and biceps femoris were analyzed by Q-PCR, and FAT/CD36 expression levels showed significant differences between these types of chickens (P < 0.01). Interestingly, the levels of FAT/CD36 expression are positively correlated with LA content (r = 0.567, P < 0.01) but negatively correlated with palmitic acid content (r = −0.568, P < 0.01). Further experiments in the stably transfected Chinese hamster oocytes cells with chicken FAT/CD36 cDNA demonstrated that overexpression of FAT/CD36 improves total FA uptake with a significant increase in the proportion of LA and AA, and a decreased proportion of palmitic acid. These results suggest that chicken FAT/CD36 may selectively transport LA and AA, which may lead to the higher LA deposition in muscle tissue.  相似文献   

20.
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