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1.
李宗军 《微生物学报》2005,45(3):426-430
通过对大肠杆菌生长温度、膜脂肪酸组成和压力抗性之间关系研究发现,10℃培养,对数期细胞有最大的压力抗性,随着培养温度的升高直到4 5℃,压力抗性呈下降的趋势;相反,10℃培养,稳定期的细胞对压力最敏感,随着培养温度的升高,压力抗性呈增加趋势,30~37℃时达到最大,之后到4 5℃有下降。对数期和稳定期细胞膜脂中不饱和脂肪酸的组成随温度的上升而下降,这与从全细胞中抽提的磷脂的熔点密切相关。因此,对数期细胞压力抗性随着膜流动性的增大而升高;但稳定期细胞,膜流动性与压力抗性之间不存在简单的对应变化关系  相似文献   

2.
We have examined the production of the outer membrane proteins of the primary and secondary forms of Xenorhabdus nematophilus during exponential- and stationary-phase growth at different temperatures. The most highly expressed outer membrane protein of X. nematophilus was OpnP. The amino acid composition of OpnP was very similar to those of the porin proteins OmpF and OmpC of Escherichia coli. N-terminal amino acid sequence analysis revealed that residues 1 to 27 of the mature OpnP shared 70 and 60% sequence identities with OmpC and OmpF, respectively. These results suggest that OpnP is a major porin protein in X. nematophilus. Three additional proteins, OpnA, OpnB, and OpnS, were induced during stationary-phase growth. OpnB was present at a high level in stationary-phase cells grown at 19 to 30 degrees C and was repressed in cells grown at 34 degrees C. OpnA was optimally produced at 30 degrees C and was not present in cells grown at lower and higher temperatures. The production of OpnS was not dependent on growth temperature. In contrast, another outer membrane protein, OpnT, was strongly induced as the growth temperature was elevated from 19 to 34 degrees C. In addition, we show that the stationary-phase proteins OpnA and OpnB were not produced in secondary-form cells.  相似文献   

3.
The fatty acid composition of the lipid A moiety of the lipopolysaccharide and phospholipid fractions of Proteus mirabilis changed significantly on varying the growth temperature. A decrease in the growth temperature from 43 degrees C to 15 degrees C resulted in a decrease in the palmitic acid content of the lipopolysaccharide from 19.4% of total fatty acids at 43 degrees C to 1.4% at 15 degrees C, and by the appearance of an unsaturated fatty acid residue, hexadecenoic acid. Changes in the 3-hydroxy-myristic acid content of the lipid A were minimal. The decrease in the growth temperature also resulted in a decrease in the saturated fatty acid content of the phospholipid fraction, which was accompanied by an increase in their fluidity, as measured by the freedom of motion of spin-labeled fatty acids incorporated into dispersions made of the phospholipids. Nevertheless, the fluidity obtained with membrane phospholipids extracted from the cells grown at various temperatures were essentially the same when fluidity was determined at the growth temperature, supporting the hypothesis that variations in the fatty acid composition of membrane phospholipids serve to produce membranes having a constant fluidity at different temperatures of growth.  相似文献   

4.
Nisin interacts with target membranes in four sequential steps: binding, insertion, aggregation, and pore formation. Alterations in membrane composition might influence any of these steps. We hypothesized that cold temperatures (10 degrees C) and surfactant (0.1% Tween 20) in the growth medium would influence Listeria monocytogenes membrane lipid composition, membrane fluidity, and, as a result, sensitivity to nisin. Compared to the membranes of cells grown at 30 degrees C, those of L. monocytogenes grown at 10 degrees C had increased amounts of shorter, branched-chain fatty acids, increased fluidity (as measured by fluorescence anisotropy), and increased nisin sensitivity. When 0.1% Tween 20 was included in the medium and the cells were cultured at 30 degrees C, there were complex changes in lipid composition. They did not influence membrane fluidity but nonetheless increased nisin sensitivity. Further investigation found that these cells had an increased ability to bind radioactively labeled nisin. This suggests that the modification of the surfactant-adapted cell membrane increased nisin sensitivity at the binding step and demonstrates that each of the four steps can contribute to nisin sensitivity.  相似文献   

5.
A specific effect of cardiolipin on fluidity of mitochondrial membranes was demonstrated in Tetrahymena cells acclimated to a lower temperature in the previous report (Yamauchi, T., Ohki, K., Maruyama, H. and Nozawa, Y. (1981) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 649, 385-392). This study was further confirmed by the experiment using fluorescence polarization of 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene (DPH). Anisotropy of DPH for microsomal and pellicular total lipids from Tetrahymena cells showed that membrane fluidity of these lipids increased gradually as the cells were incubated at 15 degrees C after the shift down of growth temperature from 39 degrees C. However, membrane fluidity of mitochondrial total lipids was kept constant up to 10 h. This finding is compatible with the result obtained using spin probe in the previous report. Additionally, the break-point temperature of DPH anisotropy was not changed in mitochondrial lipids whereas those temperatures in pellicular and microsomal lipids lowered during the incubation at 15 degrees C. Interaction between cardiolipins and various phospholipids, which were isolated from Tetrahymena cells grown at 39 degrees C or 15 degrees C and synthesized chemically, was investigated extensively using a spin labeling technique. The addition of cardiolipins from Tetrahymena cells grown at either 39 degrees C or 15 degrees C did not change the membrane fluidity (measured at 15 degrees C) of phosphatidylcholine from whole cells grown at 39 degrees C. On the other hand, both cardiolipins of 39 degrees C-grown and 15 degrees C-grown cells decreased the membrane fluidity of phosphatidylcholine from Tetrahymena cells grown at 15 degrees C. The same results were obtained for phosphatidylcholines of mitochondria and microsomes. Membrane fluidity of phosphatidylethanolamine, isolated from cells grown at 15 degrees C, was reduced to a small extent by Tetrahymena cardiolipin whereas that of 39 degrees C-grown cells was not changed. Representative molecular species of phosphatidylcholines of cells grown at 39 degrees C and 15 degrees C were synthesized chemically; 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine for 39 degrees C-grown cells and dipalmitoleoylphosphatidylcholine for 15 degrees C-grown ones. By the addition of Tetrahymena cardiolipin, the membrane fluidity of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine was not changed but that of dipalmitoleoylphosphatidylcholine was decreased markedly. These phenomena were caused by Tetrahymena cardiolipin. However, bovine heart cardiolipin, which has a different composition of fatty acyl chains from the Tetrahymena one, exerted only a small effect.  相似文献   

6.
We investigated the fatty acid composition of the membrane of Bacillus amyloliquefaciens grown at different temperatures. A decrease in growth temperature was accompanied by an increase in the ratio of branched- to straight-chain fatty acids and a marked increase in the level of unsaturation of branched-chain fatty acids. When cells of this organism grown at 30 degrees C were cold shocked, viability and ability to secrete extracellular protease were lost. Growth of this organism at lower temperatures or addition of Tween 80 to cells caused the critical temperature zone for cold shocking to be lowered significantly. These results suggest a direct correlation between membrane fluidity and the susceptibility to cold shock.  相似文献   

7.
Membrane fluidity adaptation to the low growth temperature in Bacillus subtilis involves two distinct mechanisms: (1) long-term adaptation accomplished by increasing the ratio of anteiso- to iso-branched fatty acids and (2) rapid desaturation of fatty acid chains in existing phospholipids by induction of fatty acid desaturase after cold shock. In this work we studied the effect of medium composition on cold adaptation of membrane fluidity. Bacillus subtilis was cultivated at optimum (40 degrees C) and low (20 degrees C) temperatures in complex medium with glucose or in mineral medium with either glucose or glycerol. Cold adaptation was characterized by fatty acid analysis and by measuring the midpoint of phospholipid phase transition T(m) (differential scanning calorimetry) and membrane fluidity (DPH fluorescence polarization). Cells cultured and measured at 40 degrees C displayed the same membrane fluidity in all three media despite a markedly different fatty acid composition. The T(m) was surprisingly the highest in the case of a culture grown in complex medium. On the contrary, cultivation at 20 degrees C in the complex medium gave rise to the highest membrane fluidity with concomitant decrease of T(m) by 10.5 degrees C. In mineral media at 20 degrees C the corresponding changes of T(m) were almost negligible. After a temperature shift from 40 to 20 degrees C, the cultures from all three media displayed the same adaptive induction of fatty acid desaturase despite their different membrane fluidity values immediately after cold shock.  相似文献   

8.
Fatty acids newly synthesized by Brevibacterium ammoniagenes grown at different temperatures were analyzed. The assay temperature, not the growth temperature, was found to be the major factor affecting the unsaturated/saturated ratio of newly synthesized fatty acids in logarithmic-phase cells. However, in the stationary-phase cells the growth temperature also affected the product profile significantly; cells grown at 7 degrees C produced relatively more oleate and stearate and less palmitate and hexadecenoate when shifted up to 37 degrees C than did cells grown and assayed at 37 degrees C. The unsaturated/saturated ratio as well as average chain length of fatty acids also varied along with the progress of isothermal growth phase. These changes in fatty acid product profiles observed in vivo could be mimicked in vitro assays of the fatty acid synthetase by changing malonyl-CoA concentrations. Our results suggest that the malonyl-CoA concentration is a factor which, in addition to temperature, determines growth-phase-dependent and growth-temperature-dependent changes in the unsaturated/saturated ratios of fatty acids.  相似文献   

9.
Listeria monocytogenes is a foodborne psychrotrophic pathogen that grows at refrigeration temperatures. Previous studies of fatty acid profiles of wild-type and cold-sensitive, branched-chain fatty acid deficient mutants of L. monocytogenes suggest that the fatty acid 12-methyltetradecanoic (anteiso-C(15:0)) plays a critical role in low-temperature growth of L. monocytogenes, presumably by maintaining membrane fluidity. The fluidity of isolated cytoplasmic membranes of wild-type (SLCC53 and 10403S), and a cold-sensitive mutant (cld-1) of L. monocytogenes, grown with and without the supplementation of 2-methylbutyric acid, has been studied using a panel of hydrocarbon-based nitroxides (2N10, 3N10, 4N10, and 5N10) and spectral deconvolution and simulation methods to obtain directly the Lorentzian line widths and hence rotational correlation times (tau(c)) and motional anisotropies of the nitroxides in the fast motional region. tau(c) values over the temperature range of -7 degrees C to 50 degrees C were similar for the membranes of strains SLCC53 and 10403S grown at 10 degrees C and 30 degrees C, and for strain cld-1 grown with 2-methylbutyric acid supplementation (which restores branched-chain fatty acids) at 30 degrees C. However, strain cld-1 exhibited a threefold higher tau(c) when grown without 2-methylbutyric acid supplementation (deficient in branched-chain fatty acids) compared to strains SLCC53, 10403S, and supplemented cld-1. No evidence was seen for a clear lipid phase transition in any sample. We conclude that the fatty acid anteiso-C(15:0) imparts an essential fluidity to the L. monocytogenes membrane that permits growth at refrigeration temperatures.  相似文献   

10.
An isolate of L. monocytogenes Scott A that is tolerant to high hydrostatic pressure (HHP), named AK01, was isolated upon a single pressurization treatment of 400 MPa for 20 min and was further characterized. The survival of exponential- and stationary-phase cells of AK01 in ACES [N-(2-acetamido)-2-aminoethanesulfonic acid] buffer was at least 2 log units higher than that of the wild type over a broad range of pressures (150 to 500 MPa), while both strains showed higher HHP tolerance (piezotolerance) in the stationary than in the exponential phase of growth. In semiskim milk, exponential-phase cells of both strains showed lower reductions upon pressurization than in buffer, but again, AK01 was more piezotolerant than the wild type. The piezotolerance of AK01 was retained for at least 40 generations in rich medium, suggesting a stable phenotype. Interestingly, cells of AK01 lacked flagella, were elongated, and showed slightly lower maximum specific growth rates than the wild type at 8, 22, and 30 degrees C. Moreover, the piezotolerant strain AK01 showed increased resistance to heat, acid, and H(2)O(2) compared with the wild type. The difference in HHP tolerance between the piezotolerant strain and the wild-type strain could not be attributed to differences in membrane fluidity, since strain AK01 and the wild type had identical in situ lipid melting curves as determined by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. The demonstrated occurrence of a piezotolerant isolate of L. monocytogenes underscores the need to further investigate the mechanisms underlying HHP resistance of food-borne microorganisms, which in turn will contribute to the appropriate design of safe, accurate, and feasible HHP treatments.  相似文献   

11.
The relationship between membrane damage and loss of viability following pressure treatment was examined in Escherichia coli strains C9490, H1071, and NCTC 8003. These strains showed high, medium, and low resistance to pressure, respectively, in stationary phase but similar resistance to pressure in exponential phase. Loss of membrane integrity was measured as loss of osmotic responsiveness or as increased uptake of the fluorescent dye propidium iodide. In exponential-phase cells, loss of viability was correlated with a permanent loss of membrane integrity in all strains, whereas in stationary-phase cells, a more complicated picture emerged in which cell membranes became leaky during pressure treatment but resealed to a greater or lesser extent following decompression. Strain H1071 displayed a very unusual pressure response in stationary phase in which survival decreased to a minimum at 300 MPa but then increased at 400 to 500 MPa before decreasing again. Membranes were unable to reseal after treatment at 300 MPa but could do so after treatment at higher pressures. Membrane damage in this strain was thus typical of exponential-phase cells under low-pressure conditions but of stationary-phase cells under higher-pressure conditions. Heat shock treatment of strain H1071 cells increased pressure resistance under low-pressure conditions and also allowed membrane damage to reseal. Growth in the presence of IPTG (isopropyl-beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside) increased resistance under high-pressure conditions. The mechanisms of inactivation may thus differ at high and low pressures. These studies support the view that membrane damage is an important event in the inactivation of bacteria by high pressure, but the nature of membrane damage and its relation to cell death may differ between species and phases of growth.  相似文献   

12.
The thermal stability of excitation transfer from pigment proteins to the Photosystem II reaction center of Nerium oleander adjusts by 10 Celsius degrees when cloned plants grown at 20°C/15°C, day/night growth temperatures are shifted to 45°C/32°C growth temperature or vice versa. Concomitant with this adjustment is a decrease in the fluidity of thylakoid membrane polar lipids as determined by spin labeling. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that there is a limiting maximum fluidity compatible with maintenance of native membrane structure and function. This limiting fluidity was about the same as for a number of other species which exhibit a range of thermal stabilities. Inversely correlated shifts in lipid fluidity and thermal stability occurred during the time course of acclimation of N. oleander to new growth temperatures. Thus, the temperature at which the limiting fluidity was reached changed during acclimation while the limiting fluidity remained constant. Although the relative proportion of the major classes of membrane polar lipids remained constant during adjustments in fluidity, large changes occured in the abundance of specific fatty acids. These changes were different for the phospho- and galacto-lipids suggesting that the fatty acid composition of these two lipid classes is regulated by different mechanisms. Comparisons between membrane lipid fluidity and fatty acid composition indicate that fluidity is not a simple linear function of fatty acid composition.  相似文献   

13.
Experiments were conducted on the effect of growth temperature on phospholipids of Neurospora. Strains grown at high (37 degrees C) and low (15 degrees C) temperatures show large differences in the proportions of phospholipid fatty acid alpha-linolenate (18 : 3) which can vary by 10-fold over this temperature range. Changes in the phospholipid base composition are less dramatic; the most significant is an increase in phosphatidylethanolamines at low temperatures accompanied by a concomitant decrease in phosphatidylcholine. It appears that phospholipid fatty acid desaturation is closely regulated with respect to growth temperature. Over the 37 to 15 degrees C growth temperature range there appear to be at least two desaturase systems in Neurospora which are under different controls. Production of 18 : 1 and 18 : 2 species appears to occur at high levels over the entire temperature range, whereas the production of 18 : 3 seems to be inversely related to growth temperature. Shifting 37 degrees C-acclimated cultures to 15 degrees C produces a growth lag period of approximately 3 h, during which the level of 18 : 3 increases markedly. Differential scanning calorimetry of phospholipids from 37 degrees C cells shows a phase transition at -22 degrees C while lipids from 15 degrees C cultures exhibit a phase transition with reduced enthalpy at about -41 degrees C. The data are consistent with the idea that phospholipid composition in Neurospora is under strict control and suggest that membrane fluidity is regulated with respect to growth temperature through changes in membrane lipid composition.  相似文献   

14.
Membrane fluidity in whole cells of Saccharomyces cerevisiae W303-1A was estimated from fluorescence polarization measurements using the membrane probe, 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene, over a wide range of temperatures (6-35 degrees C) and at seven levels of osmotic pressure between 1.38 MPa and 133.1 MPa. An increase in phase transition temperatures was observed with increasing osmotic pressure. At 1.38 MPa, a phase transition temperature of 12 +/- 2 degrees C was observed, which increased to 17 +/- 4 degrees C at 43.7 MPa, 21+/- 7 degrees C at 61.8 MPa, and 24 +/- 9 degrees C at an osmotic pressure of 133.1 MPa. From these results we infer that, with increases in osmotic pressure, the change in phospholipid conformation occurs over a larger temperature range. These results allow the representation of membrane fluidity as a function of temperature and osmotic pressure. Osmotic shocks were applied at two levels of osmotic pressure and at nine temperatures, in order to relate membrane conformation to cell viability.  相似文献   

15.
A strain of Synechococcus sp. was grown at its optimal growth temperature (58 degrees C) and at 38 degrees C, in order to investigate possible adaptations of membrane-related properties to growth temperature. Light-induced electron transport in thylakoid membranes from both types of cells showed linear Arrhenius plots with the same activation energy (48 kJ/mol). Membranes from cells grown at 58 degrees C had a higher temperature optimum (53 degrees C) than those from cells grown at 38 degrees C (41 degrees C). Growth at 38 degrees C caused an increase in the proportion of unsaturated fatty acids compared to growth at 58 degrees C. The fluidity of the membranes was investigated by measuring the temperature dependence of the parameters derived from electron spin resonance spectra of the spin-labels 5-doxyldecane, 5-doxylstearate and 16-doxylstearate. Only small differences between the dynamic properties of the membranes from cells grown at different temperatures could be detected. This suggests that the observed change in fatty acid composition of the membranes following the change in growth temperature does not serve to maintain a constant viscosity at the growth temperature.  相似文献   

16.
The mechanisms by which Escherichia coli cells survive exposure to the toxic electrophile N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) have been investigated. Stationary-phase E. coli cells were more resistant to NEM than exponential-phase cells. The KefB and KefC systems were found to play an important role in protecting both exponential- and stationary-phase cells against NEM. Additionally, RpoS and the DNA-binding protein Dps aided the survival of both exponential- and stationary-phase cells against NEM. Double mutants lacking both RpoS and Dps and triple mutants deficient in KefB and KefC and either RpoS or Dps had an increased sensitivity to NEM in both exponential- and stationary-phase cells compared to mutants missing only one of these protective mechanisms. Stationary- and exponential-phase cells of a quadruple mutant lacking all four protective systems displayed even greater sensitivity to NEM. These results indicated that protection by the KefB and KefC systems, RpoS and Dps can each occur independently of the other systems. Alterations in the level of RpoS in exponentially growing cells correlated with the degree of NEM sensitivity. Decreasing the level of RpoS by enriching the growth medium enhanced sensitivity to NEM, whereas a mutant lacking the ClpP protease accumulated RpoS and gained high levels of resistance to NEM. A slower-growing E. coli strain was also found to accumulate RpoS and had enhanced resistance to NEM. These data emphasize the multiplicity of pathways involved in protecting E. coli cells against NEM.  相似文献   

17.
Mammalian cell metabolism is responding to changes in temperature. Body temperature is regulated around 37 degrees C, but temperatures of exposed skin areas may vary between 20 degrees C and 40 degrees C for extended periods of time without apparent disturbance of adequate cellular functions. Cellular membrane functions are depending from temperatures but also from their lipid environment, which is a major component of membrane fluidity. Temperature-induced changes of membrane fluidity may be counterbalanced by adaptive modification of membrane lipids. Temperature-dependent changes of whole cell- and of purified membrane lipids and possible homeoviscous adaptation of membrane fluidity have been studied in human skin fibroblasts cultured at 30 degrees C, 37 degrees C, and 40 degrees C for ten days. Membrane anisotropy was measured by polarized fluorescence spectroscopy using TMA-DPH for superficial and DPH for deeper membrane layers. Human fibroblasts were able to adapt themselves to hypothermic temperatures (30 degrees C) by modifying the fluidity of the deeper apolar regions of the plasma membranes as reported by changes of fluorescence anisotropy due to appropriate changes of their plasma membrane lipid composition. This could not be shown for the whole cells. At 40 degrees C growth temperature, adaptive changes of the membrane lipid composition, except for some changes in fatty acid compositions, were not seen. Independent from the changes of the membrane lipid composition, the fluorescence anisotropy of the more superficial membrane layers (TMA-DPH) increased in cells growing at 30 degrees C and decreased in cells growing at 40 degrees C.  相似文献   

18.
This study explored the capability of Pseudomonas putida NCTC 10936 to maintain homeoviscosity after changing the growth temperature, incubating resting cells at different temperatures or at a constant temperature in the presence of 4-chlorophenol (4-CP). After raising the growth temperature from 20 to either 30 or 35 degrees C, the degree of saturation of the organism's fatty acids increased and the ratio of trans to cis unsaturated fatty acids decreased somewhat. In contrast, after the incubation temperature of resting cells was raised (grown at 30 degrees C) from 20 to 30 or 35 degrees C the degree of saturation of the fatty acids remained nearly constant, while the ratio of trans to cis unsaturated fatty acids increased. Incubating resting cells (grown at 30 degrees C) at 20 degrees C in the presence of 4-CP again caused no major changes in the degree of saturation, but cis to trans conversion of unsaturated fatty acids was induced, with a corresponding increase in the trans/cis ratios. Increases in both the saturation degree of the fatty acids and the trans/cis ratio of the unsaturated fatty acids correlated with increases in the fluorescence anisotropy of 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene intercalated in the bilayers of liposomes prepared from the cells of P. putida NCTC 10936. Electron transport phosphorylation (ETP) could be stabilized by adaptive adjustments in the fluidity of the cytoplasmic membrane mediated by changes in fatty acid composition such as those observed. Whether changes in the degree of saturation or in the trans/cis ratio are more effective can be decided by studying P. putida NCTC 10936.  相似文献   

19.
Membrane fatty acid composition and thermal resistance (D value) of Pediococcus sp. were determined for mid-exponential-phase (ME) and stationary-phase (ST) cells grown in tryptic soy broth (TSB) and tryptone-glucose-yeast extract (TGY) at 28 and 37 degrees C. As the cells entered the stationary phase of growth, the unsaturated fatty acid, C18:1 n11c, produced during the exponential phase of growth was converted to its cyclic form, C19:0 Delta9c. This shift in membrane fatty acid composition was accompanied by an increase in the D values of this bacterium. Data from this study suggest that the membrane fatty acid composition of Pediococcus sp. is dependent on the growth conditions and that membrane fatty acid composition plays a critical role in thermal resistance. Thermal inactivation curves of Pediococcus sp. cells grown in TGY at 28 degrees C indicated the presence of a cell population that is heterogeneous in thermal resistance. The growth of this bacterium in TGY at 37 degrees C and in TSB at 28 and 37 degrees C resulted in cell populations that were uniform in thermal resistance with a lag time for thermal inactivation. Thermal inactivation curves of ME and ST cultures were similar. The data presented here suggest that the cell population's uniformity of thermal inactivation is independent of the growth phase of the culture.  相似文献   

20.
Thermoplasma acidophilum, a mycoplasma-like organism, grows optimally at 56 degrees C and pH2. The low temperature extreme of growth is 37 degrees C. The plasma membrane of cells grown at 37 degrees C was isolated and characterized physicobiochemically. Membrane lipids which comprise 25% of the membrane dry weight consist mainly of two repetitively methyl-branched C40 side chains that were ether-linked to two glycerol molecules. The lipid structures were elucidated by combined gas chromatography-mass spectroscopy, direct probe mass spectroscopy and 13C NMR. 37 degrees C-grown cells contained lipids with 42% more pentane cyclization than the 56 degrees C-grown cells. In 37 degrees C-grown cells, phospholipid and serine content decreased by about 10% each, carbohydrate content increased by 5%. EPR studies demonstrated an increase in membrane lipid fluidity of 37 degrees C-grown cells with an upper transition temperature at 35 degrees C which was shifted down by 10 degrees C compared with cells grown at 56 degrees C. Membrane-bound ATPase activities also indicated similar changes upon adaptation. There is a close correlation between membrane fluidity and physiological functioning of this membrane-bound enzyme.  相似文献   

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