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1.
Sulfogalactosylglycerolipid (SGG) is found in detergent-resistant lipid raft fractions isolated from sperm plasma membranes and has been shown to be important in sperm-egg adhesion. In order to provide more direct evidence for the association of sulfoglycolipids with lipid raft domains, we have examined the distribution of two sulfoglycolipids in supported membranes prepared from artificial lipid mixtures and cellular lipid extracts. Atomic force microscopy has been used to visualize the localization of SGG and sulfogalactosylceramide (SGC) in liquid-ordered domains in supported bilayers of ternary lipid mixtures comprised of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine, cholesterol and palmitoyldocosahexaenoylphosphatidylcholine. The localization of SGC/SGG in the liquid-ordered raft domains is demonstrated by changes in bilayer morphology in the presence of sulfoglycolipid, by selective antibody labeling of the domains with anti-SGC/SGG and by the effects of the cholesterol-sequestering agent, methyl-β-cyclodextrin, on the supported membranes. In addition, we use a combination of atomic force microscopy and immunofluorescence to show that supported bilayers made from lipids extracted from sperm anterior head plasma membranes (APM) and isolated APM vesicles exhibit small SGG-rich domains that are similar to those observed in bilayers of artificial lipid mixtures. The possible implications of these results for the involvement of SGG-rich lipid rafts in modulating sperm-egg interactions in vivo and the utility of model membranes for studying the behavior of lipid rafts are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Evidence is growing that biological membranes contain lipid microdomains or "rafts" that may be involved in processes such as cellular signaling and protein trafficking. In this study, we have used atomic force microscopy to examine the behavior of rafts in supported lipid bilayers. We show that bilayers composed of equimolar dioleoylphosphatidylcholine and sphingomyelin spontaneously form rafts, which are detectable as raised features. A comparison of the extents of protrusion of the rafts in monolayers and bilayers indicates that the rafts in the two leaflets of the bilayer coincide. The rafts were observed both in the absence and presence of cholesterol (33 mol %). Cholesterol reduced raft protrusion presumably by increasing the thickness of the non-raft bilayer. PLAP (glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored protein placental alkaline phosphatase) was purified and shown to exist as a dimer. Following its incorporation into supported lipid bilayers, PLAP was found to be targeted efficiently to rafts, both in the absence and presence of cholesterol. We suggest that atomic force microscopy provides a powerful tool for the study of raft structure and properties.  相似文献   

3.
Abstract

2-Hydroxyoleic acid (2OHOA) is a synthetic fatty acid with antihypertensive properties that is able to alter structural membranes properties. The main purpose of this study was to analyze the effect of 2OHOA on the membrane architecture in cholesterol (Cho)-rich domains. For this purpose, model membranes mimicking the composition of lipid rafts and PC- or PE-Cho-rich domains were examined in the absence and presence of 2OHOA by synchrotron X-ray diffraction, atomic force microscopy (AFM) and microcalorimetry (DSC) techniques. Our results demonstrate that 2OHOA phase separates from lipid raft domains and affects the lateral organization of lipids in the membrane. In model raft membranes, 2OHOA interacted with the sphingomyelin (SM) gel phase increasing the thickness of the water layer, which should lead to increased bilayer fluidity. The hydrogen binding competition between 2OHOA and Cho could favour the enrichment of 2OHOA in SM domains separated from the SM-Cho domains, resulting in an enhanced phase separation into SM-2OHOA-rich liquid-disordered (non-raft) and SM-Cho-rich liquid-ordered (raft) domains. The segregation into 2OHOA-rich/Cho-poor and 2OHOA-poor/Cho-rich domains was also observed in PC bilayers.  相似文献   

4.
Use of cyclodextrin for AFM monitoring of model raft formation   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
The lipid rafts membrane microdomains, enriched in sphingolipids and cholesterol, are implicated in numerous functions of biological membranes. Using atomic force microscopy, we have examined the effects of cholesterol-loaded methyl-beta-cyclodextrin (MbetaCD-Chl) addition to liquid disordered (l(d))-gel phase separated dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC)/sphingomyelin (SM) and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl phosphatidylcholine (POPC)/SM supported bilayers. We observed that incubation with MbetaCD-Chl led to the disappearance of domains with the formation of a homogeneously flat bilayer, most likely in the liquid-ordered (l(o)) state. However, intermediate stages differed with the passage through the coexistence of l(o)-l(d) phases for DOPC/SM samples and of l(o)-gel phases for POPC/SM bilayers. Thus, gel phase SM domains surrounded by a l(o) matrix rich in cholesterol and POPC could be observed just before reaching the uniform l(o) state. This suggests that raft formation in biological membranes could occur not only via liquid-liquid but also via gel-liquid immiscibility. The data also demonstrate that MbetaCD-Chl as well as the unloaded cyclodextrin MbetaCD make holes and preferentially extract SM in supported bilayers. This strongly suggests that interpretation of MbetaCD and MbetaCD-Chl effects on cell membranes only in terms of cholesterol movements have to be treated with caution.  相似文献   

5.
Biochemical and cell-biological experiments have identified cholesterol as an important component of lipid 'rafts' and related structures (e.g., caveolae) in mammalian cell membranes, and membrane cholesterol levels as a key factor in determining raft stability and organization. Studies using cholesterol-containing bilayers as model systems have provided important insights into the roles that cholesterol plays in determining lipid raft behavior. This review will discuss recent progress in understanding two aspects of lipid-cholesterol interactions that are particularly relevant to understanding the formation and properties of lipid rafts. First, we will consider evidence that cholesterol interacts differentially with different membrane lipids, associating particularly strongly with saturated, high-melting phospho- and sphingolipids and particularly weakly with highly unsaturated lipid species. Second, we will review recent progress in reconstituting and directly observing segregated raft-like (liquid-ordered) domains in model membranes that mimic the lipid compositions of natural membranes incorporating raft domains.  相似文献   

6.
Quinn PJ  Wolf C 《The FEBS journal》2010,277(22):4685-4698
Protein sorting and assembly in membrane biogenesis and function involves the creation of ordered domains of lipids known as membrane rafts. The rafts are comprised of all the major classes of lipids, including glycerophospholipids, sphingolipids and sterol. Cholesterol is known to interact with sphingomyelin to form a liquid-ordered bilayer phase. Domains formed by sphingomyelin and cholesterol, however, represent relatively small proportions of the lipids found in membrane rafts and the properties of other raft lipids are not well characterized. We examined the structure of lipid bilayers comprised of aqueous dispersions of ternary mixtures of phosphatidylcholines and sphingomyelins from tissue extracts and cholesterol using synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction methods. Analysis of the Bragg reflections using peak-fitting methods enables the distinction of three coexisting bilayer structures: (a) a quasicrystalline structure comprised of equimolar proportions of phosphatidylcholine and sphingomyelin, (b) a liquid-ordered bilayer of phospholipid and cholesterol, and (c) fluid phospholipid bilayers. The structures have been assigned on the basis of lamellar repeat spacings, relative scattering intensities and bilayer thickness of binary and ternary lipid mixtures of varying composition subjected to thermal scans between 20 and 50 °C. The results suggest that the order created by the quasicrystalline phase may provide an appropriate scaffold for the organization and assembly of raft proteins on both sides of the membrane. Co-existing liquid-ordered structures comprised of phospholipid and cholesterol provides an additional membrane environment for assembly of different raft proteins.  相似文献   

7.
Glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored proteins are enriched in cholesterol- and sphingolipid-rich lipid rafts within the membrane. Rafts are known to have roles in cellular organization and function, but little is understood about the factors controlling the distribution of proteins in rafts. We have used atomic force microscopy to directly visualize proteins in supported lipid bilayers composed of equimolar sphingomyelin, dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine and cholesterol. The transmembrane anchored angiotensin converting enzyme (TM-ACE) was excluded from the liquid ordered raft domains. Replacement of the transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains of TM-ACE with a GPI anchor (GPI-ACE) promoted the association of the protein with rafts in the bilayers formed with brain sphingomyelin (mainly C18:0). Association with the rafts did not occur if the shorter chain egg sphingomyelin (mainly C16:0) was used. The distribution of GPI-anchored proteins in supported lipid bilayers was investigated further using membrane dipeptidase (MDP) whose GPI anchor contains distearoyl phosphatidylinositol. MDP was also excluded from rafts when egg sphingomyelin was used but associated with raft domains formed using brain sphingomyelin. The effect of sphingomyelin chain length on the distribution of GPI-anchored proteins in rafts was verified using synthetic palmitoyl or stearoyl sphingomyelin. Both GPI-ACE and MDP only associated with the longer chain stearoyl sphingomyelin rafts. These data obtained using supported lipid bilayers provide the first direct evidence that the nature of the membrane-anchoring domain influences the association of a protein with lipid rafts and that acyl chain length hydrophobic mismatch influences the distribution of GPI-anchored proteins in rafts.  相似文献   

8.
Glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored proteins are enriched in cholesterol- and sphingolipid-rich lipid rafts within the membrane. Rafts are known to have roles in cellular organization and function, but little is understood about the factors controlling the distribution of proteins in rafts. We have used atomic force microscopy to directly visualize proteins in supported lipid bilayers composed of equimolar sphingomyelin, dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine and cholesterol. The transmembrane anchored angiotensin converting enzyme (TM-ACE) was excluded from the liquid ordered raft domains. Replacement of the transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains of TM-ACE with a GPI anchor (GPI-ACE) promoted the association of the protein with rafts in the bilayers formed with brain sphingomyelin (mainly C18:0). Association with the rafts did not occur if the shorter chain egg sphingomyelin (mainly C16:0) was used. The distribution of GPI-anchored proteins in supported lipid bilayers was investigated further using membrane dipeptidase (MDP) whose GPI anchor contains distearoyl phosphatidylinositol. MDP was also excluded from rafts when egg sphingomyelin was used but associated with raft domains formed using brain sphingomyelin. The effect of sphingomyelin chain length on the distribution of GPI-anchored proteins in rafts was verified using synthetic palmitoyl or stearoyl sphingomyelin. Both GPI-ACE and MDP only associated with the longer chain stearoyl sphingomyelin rafts. These data obtained using supported lipid bilayers provide the first direct evidence that the nature of the membrane-anchoring domain influences the association of a protein with lipid rafts and that acyl chain length hydrophobic mismatch influences the distribution of GPI-anchored proteins in rafts.  相似文献   

9.
Crane JM  Tamm LK 《Biophysical journal》2004,86(5):2965-2979
Sterols play a crucial regulatory and structural role in the lateral organization of eukaryotic cell membranes. Cholesterol has been connected to the possible formation of ordered lipid domains (rafts) in mammalian cell membranes. Lipid rafts are composed of lipids in the liquid-ordered (l(o)) phase and are surrounded with lipids in the liquid-disordered (l(d)) phase. Cholesterol and sphingomyelin are thought to be the principal components of lipid rafts in cell and model membranes. We have used fluorescence microscopy and fluorescence recovery after photobleaching in planar supported lipid bilayers composed of porcine brain phosphatidylcholine (bPC), porcine brain sphingomyelin (bSM), and cholesterol to map the composition-dependence of l(d)/l(o) phase coexistence. Cholesterol decreases the fluidity of bPC bilayers, but disrupts the highly ordered gel phase of bSM, leading to a more fluid membrane. When mixed with bPC/bSM (1:1) or bPC/bSM (2:1), cholesterol induces the formation of l(o) phase domains. The fraction of the membrane in the l(o) phase was found to be directly proportional to the cholesterol concentration in both phospholipid mixtures, which implies that a significant fraction of bPC cosegregates into l(o) phase domains. Images reveal a percolation threshold, i.e., the point where rafts become connected and fluid domains disconnected, when 45-50% of the total membrane is converted to the l(o) phase. This happens between 20 and 25 mol % cholesterol in 1:1 bPC/bSM bilayers and between 25 and 30 mol % cholesterol in 2:1 bPC/bSM bilayers at room temperature, and at approximately 35 mol % cholesterol in 1:1 bPC/bSM bilayers at 37 degrees C. Area fractions of l(o) phase lipids obtained in multilamellar liposomes by a fluorescence resonance energy transfer method confirm and support the results obtained in planar lipid bilayers.  相似文献   

10.
Biochemical and cell-biological experiments have identified cholesterol as an important component of lipid ‘rafts’ and related structures (e.g., caveolae) in mammalian cell membranes, and membrane cholesterol levels as a key factor in determining raft stability and organization. Studies using cholesterol-containing bilayers as model systems have provided important insights into the roles that cholesterol plays in determining lipid raft behavior. This review will discuss recent progress in understanding two aspects of lipid-cholesterol interactions that are particularly relevant to understanding the formation and properties of lipid rafts. First, we will consider evidence that cholesterol interacts differentially with different membrane lipids, associating particularly strongly with saturated, high-melting phospho- and sphingolipids and particularly weakly with highly unsaturated lipid species. Second, we will review recent progress in reconstituting and directly observing segregated raft-like (liquid-ordered) domains in model membranes that mimic the lipid compositions of natural membranes incorporating raft domains.  相似文献   

11.
Atomic force microscopy has been used to study the distribution of ganglioside GM1 in model membranes composed of ternary lipid mixtures that mimic the composition of lipid rafts. The results demonstrate that addition of 1% GM1 to 1:1:1 sphingomyelin/dioleoylphosphatidylcholine/cholesterol monolayers leads to the formation of small ganglioside-rich microdomains (40-100 nm in size) that are localized preferentially in the more ordered sphingomyelin/cholesterol-rich phase. With 5% GM1 some GM1 microdomains are also detected in the dioleoylphosphatidylcholine-rich phase. A similar preferential localization of GM1 in the ordered phase is observed for bilayers with the same ternary lipid mixture in the upper leaflet. The small GM1-rich domains observed in these experiments are similar to the sizes for lipid rafts in natural membranes but considerably smaller than the ordered bilayer domains that have been shown to be enriched in GM1 in recent fluorescence microscopy studies of lipid bilayers. The combined data from a number of studies of model membranes indicate that lateral organization occurs on a variety of length scales and mimics many of the properties of natural membranes.  相似文献   

12.
One of the main questions in the membrane biology is the functional roles of membrane heterogeneity and molecular localization. Although segregation and local enrichment of protein/lipid components (rafts) have been extensively studied, the presence and functions of such membrane domains still remain elusive. Along with biochemical, cell observation, and simulation studies, model membranes are emerging as an important tool for understanding the biological membrane, providing quantitative information on the physicochemical properties of membrane proteins and lipids. Segregation of fluid lipid bilayer into liquid-ordered (Lo) and liquid-disordered (Ld) phases has been studied as a simplified model of raft in model membranes, including giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs), giant plasma membrane vesicles (GPMVs), and supported lipid bilayers (SLB). Partition coefficients of membrane proteins between Lo and Ld phases were measured to gauze their affinities to lipid rafts (raftophilicity). One important development in model membrane is patterned SLB based on the microfabrication technology. Patterned Lo/Ld phases have been applied to study the partition and function of membrane-bound molecules. Quantitative information of individual molecular species attained by model membranes is critical for elucidating the molecular functions in the complex web of molecular interactions. The present review gives a short account of the model membranes developed for studying the lateral heterogeneity, especially focusing on patterned model membranes on solid substrates.  相似文献   

13.
One key tenet of the raft hypothesis is that the formation of glycosphingolipid- and cholesterol-rich lipid domains can be driven solely by characteristic lipid-lipid interactions, suggesting that rafts ought to form in model membranes composed of appropriate lipids. In fact, domains with raft-like properties were found to coexist with fluid lipid regions in both planar supported lipid layers and in giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs) formed from 1) equimolar mixtures of phospholipid-cholesterol-sphingomyelin or 2) natural lipids extracted from brush border membranes that are rich in sphingomyelin and cholesterol. Employing headgroup-labeled fluorescent phospholipid analogs in planar supported lipid layers, domains typically several microns in diameter were observed by fluorescence microscopy at room temperature (24 degrees C) whereas non-raft mixtures (PC-cholesterol) appeared homogeneous. Both raft and non-raft domains were fluid-like, although diffusion was slower in raft domains, and the probe could exchange between the two phases. Consistent with the raft hypothesis, GM1, a glycosphingolipid (GSL), was highly enriched in the more ordered domains and resistant to detergent extraction, which disrupted the GSL-depleted phase. To exclude the possibility that the domain structure was an artifact caused by the lipid layer support, GUVs were formed from the synthetic and natural lipid mixtures, in which the probe, LAURDAN, was incorporated. The emission spectrum of LAURDAN was examined by two-photon fluorescence microscopy, which allowed identification of regions with high or low order of lipid acyl chain alignment. In GUVs formed from the raft lipid mixture or from brush border membrane lipids an array of more ordered and less ordered domains that were in register in both monolayers could reversibly be formed and disrupted upon cooling and heating. Overall, the notion that in biomembranes selected lipids could laterally aggregate to form more ordered, detergent-resistant lipid rafts into which glycosphingolipids partition is strongly supported by this study.  相似文献   

14.
The paradigm of biological membranes has recently gone through a major update. Instead of being fluid and homogeneous, recent studies suggest that membranes are characterized by transient domains with varying fluidity. In particular, a number of experimental studies have revealed the existence of highly ordered lateral domains rich in sphingomyelin and cholesterol (CHOL). These domains, called functional lipid rafts, have been suggested to take part in a variety of dynamic cellular processes such as membrane trafficking, signal transduction, and regulation of the activity of membrane proteins. However, despite the proposed importance of these domains, their properties, and even the precise nature of the lipid phases, have remained open issues mainly because the associated short time and length scales have posed a major challenge to experiments. In this work, we employ extensive atom-scale simulations to elucidate the properties of ternary raft mixtures with CHOL, palmitoylsphingomyelin (PSM), and palmitoyloleoylphosphatidylcholine. We simulate two bilayers of 1,024 lipids for 100 ns in the liquid-ordered phase and one system of the same size in the liquid-disordered phase. The studies provide evidence that the presence of PSM and CHOL in raft-like membranes leads to strongly packed and rigid bilayers. We also find that the simulated raft bilayers are characterized by nanoscale lateral heterogeneity, though the slow lateral diffusion renders the interpretation of the observed lateral heterogeneity more difficult. The findings reveal aspects of the role of favored (specific) lipid-lipid interactions within rafts and clarify the prominent role of CHOL in altering the properties of the membrane locally in its neighborhood. Also, we show that the presence of PSM and CHOL in rafts leads to intriguing lateral pressure profiles that are distinctly different from corresponding profiles in nonraft-like membranes. The results propose that the functioning of certain classes of membrane proteins is regulated by changes in the lateral pressure profile, which can be altered by a change in lipid content.  相似文献   

15.
Cholesterol plays a crucial role in cell membranes, and has been implicated in the assembly and maintenance of sphingolipid-rich rafts. We have examined the cholesterol-dependence of model rafts (sphingomyelin-rich domains) in supported lipid monolayers and bilayers using atomic force microscopy. Sphingomyelin-rich domains were observed in lipid monolayers in the absence and presence of cholesterol, except at high cholesterol concentrations, when separate domains were suppressed. The effect of manipulating cholesterol levels on the behavior of these sphingomyelin-rich domains in bilayers was observed in real time. Depletion of cholesterol resulted in dissolution of the model lipid rafts, whereas cholesterol addition resulted in an increased size of the sphingomyelin-rich domains and eventually the formation of a single raftlike lipid phase. Cholesterol colocalization with sphingomyelin-rich domains was confirmed using the sterol binding agent filipin.  相似文献   

16.
The effect of physiologically relevant ceramide concentrations (< or = 4 mol %) in raft model membranes with a lipid composition resembling that of cell membranes, i.e., composed of different molar ratios of an unsaturated glycerophospholipid, sphingomyelin, and cholesterol (Chol) along a liquid-disordered-liquid-ordered tie line was explored. The application of a fluorescence multiprobe and multiparameter approach, together with multiple fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) pairs, in the well-characterized palmitoyl-oleoyl-phosphocholine (POPC)/palmitoyl-sphingomyelin (PSM)/Chol ternary mixture, revealed that low palmitoyl-ceramide (PCer) concentrations strongly changed both the biophysical properties and lipid lateral organization of the ternary mixtures in the low-to-intermediate Chol/PSM-, small raft size range (<25 mol % Chol). For these mixtures, PCer recruited up to three PSM molecules for the formation of very small ( approximately 4 nm) and highly ordered gel domains, which became surrounded by rafts (liquid-ordered phase) when Chol/PSM content increased. However, the size of these rafts did not change, showing that PCer did not induce the formation of large platforms or the coalescence of small rafts. In the high Chol/PSM-, large raft domains range (>33 mol % Chol), Chol completely abolished the effect of PCer by competing for PSM association. Lipid rafts govern the biophysical properties and lateral organization in these last mixtures.  相似文献   

17.
We have used fluorescence-quenching measurements to characterize the partitioning of a variety of indolyl-labeled phospho- and sphingolipids between gel or liquid-ordered and liquid-disordered lipid domains in several types of lipid bilayers where such domains coexist. In both cholesterol-free and cholesterol-containing lipid mixtures, sphingolipids with diverse polar headgroups (ranging from sphingomyelin and monoglycosylceramides to ganglioside GM1) show a net preference for partitioning into ordered domains, which varies modestly in magnitude with varying headgroup structure. The affinities of different sphingolipids for ordered lipid domains do not vary in a consistent manner with the size or other simple structural properties of the polar headgroup, such that for example ganglioside GM1 partitions between ordered and disordered lipid domains in a manner very similar to sphingomyelin. Ceramide exhibits a dramatically higher affinity for ordered lipid domains in both cholesterol-free and cholesterol-containing bilayers than do other sphingolipids. Our findings suggest that sphingolipids with a variety of headgroup structures will be enriched by substantial factors in liquid-ordered versus liquid-disordered regions of membranes, in a manner that is only modestly dependent on the nature of the polar headgroup. Ceramide is predicted to show a very strong enrichment in such domains, supporting previous suggestions that ceramide-mediated signaling may be compartmentalized to liquid-ordered (raft and raft-related) domains in the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

18.
Liquid domains in model lipid bilayers are frequently studied as models of raft domains in cell plasma membranes. Micron-scale liquid domains are easily produced in vesicles composed of ternary mixtures of a high melting temperature lipid, a low melting temperature lipid, and cholesterol. Here, we describe the rich phase behavior observed in binary and ternary systems. We then discuss experimental challenges inherent in mapping phase diagrams of even simple lipid systems. For example, miscibility behavior varies with lipid type, lipid ratio, lipid oxidation, and level of impurity. Liquid domains are often circular, but can become noncircular when membranes are near critical points. Finally, we reflect on applications of phase diagrams in model systems to rafts in cell membranes.  相似文献   

19.
Sulfogalactosylglycerolipid (SGG) is the major sulfoglycolipid of mammalian male germ cells. Like other sulfoglycolipids, SGG is believed to be involved in cell-cell/extracellular matrix adhesion. Specifically, we investigated whether sperm SGG played a role in sperm-egg interaction. Initially, we produced an affinity-purified, rabbit polyclonal immunoglobulin (Ig) G antibody that specifically recognized SGG (anti-SGG). Indirect immunofluorescence using anti-SGG IgG localized SGG to the convex and concave ridges and the postacrosome of the mouse sperm head. Pretreatment of sperm with anti-SGG IgG/Fab inhibited sperm-zona pellucida (ZP) binding in vitro in a concentration-dependent manner (to a maximum of 62%). This inhibition was observed at the level of primary binding. Sperm treated with anti-SGG IgG underwent the spontaneous and ZP-induced acrosome reaction at the same rate as control sperm treated with preimmune rabbit serum IgG. Fluorescently labeled SGG liposomes were shown to associate specifically with the egg ZP, whereas fluorescently labeled liposomes of galactosylglycerolipid (SGG's parental lipid) and phosphatidylserine (negatively charged like SGG) did not. Furthermore, coincubation of SGG liposomes with sperm and isolated ZP inhibited sperm-ZP binding in a concentration-dependent manner. These results strongly suggest an involvement of sperm SGG in direct binding to the ZP.  相似文献   

20.
Peptide-membrane interactions have been implicated in both the toxicity and aggregation of beta-amyloid (Abeta) peptides. Recent studies have provided evidence for the involvement of liquid-ordered membrane domains known as lipid rafts in the formation and aggregation of Abeta. As a model, we have examined the interaction of Abeta(1-42) with phase separated DOPC/DPPC lipid bilayers using a combination of atomic force microscopy (AFM) and total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy (TIRF). AFM images show that addition of Abeta to preformed supported bilayers leads to accumulation of small peptide aggregates exclusively on the gel phase DPPC domains. Initial aggregates are observed approximately 90 min after peptide addition and increase in diameter to 45-150 nm within 24 h. TIRF studies with a mixture of Abeta and Abeta-Fl demonstrate that accumulation of the peptide on the gel phase domains occurs as early as 15 min after Abeta addition and is maintained for over 24 h. By contrast, Abeta is randomly distributed throughout both fluid and gel phases when the peptide is reconstituted into DOPC/DPPC vesicles prior to formation of a supported bilayer. The preferential accumulation of Abeta on DPPC domains suggests that rigid domains may act as platforms to concentrate peptide and enhance its aggregation and may be relevant to the postulated involvement of lipid rafts in modulating Abeta activity in vivo.  相似文献   

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