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1.
A number of carbobenzoxy-dipeptide-amides raise the bilayer to hexagonal phase transition temperature of dielaidoylphosphatidylethanolamine (stabilizes the bilayer). The potency of the peptides in stabilizing the bilayer phase is Z-Tyr-Leu-NH2= Z-Gly-Phe-NH2>Z-Ser-Leu-NH2>Z-Gly-Leu-NH2>Z-Gly-Gly-NH2. A linear correlation was found between the respective HPLC retention time parameterk for the peptide and the slope of the bilayer stabilization curve determined with model membranes by differential scanning calorimetry. One dipeptide, Z-Ser-Leu-NH2, reduces measles virus cytopathic effect (CPE) in Vero cells. The mechanism by which this peptide reduces the CPE is not known, although some peptides which raise the bilayer to hexagonal phase transition temperature of phospholipids inhibit membrane fusion.Abbreviations Z carbobenzoxy - DEPE dielaidoylphosphatidylethanolamine - DSC differential scanning calorimetry - HPLC high pressure liquid chromatography - CPE cytopathic effect To whom correspondence should be addressed.  相似文献   

2.
Cyclosporin A, benzyloxycarbonyl-D-Phe-L-Phe-Gly, and amantadine inhibit the dilution of fluorescently labeled lipids, as measured with the resonance energy exchange assay for membrane fusion. The fusion was studied using sonicated vesicles containing 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero(3)phosphoethanolamine, egg (3-sn-phosphatidyl)choline, and cholesterol in a 1:1:1.3 molar ratio. All three antiviral agents inhibited myelin basic protein-induced membrane fusion when present at low concentrations in the membrane. The mechanism by which these agents affect membrane properties was investigated. The effect of these agents on the bilayer to hexagonal phase transition of 1,2-dielaidoyl-sn-glycero(3)phosphoethanolamine was determined using both differential scanning calorimetry and 31P NMR. Benzyloxycarbonyl-D-Phe-L-Phe-Gly is particularly effective in raising the bilayer to hexagonal phase transition temperature while cyclosporin promotes the greatest amount of broadening of the 31P NMR signal. Both effects are suggested to be related to the inhibitory activity of these substances on membrane fusion and possibly also to their antiviral activity.  相似文献   

3.
Virus replication inhibitory peptide (carbobenzoxy-D-Phe-L-PheGly) was shown to be a potent specific inhibitor of the replication of paramyxovirus and myxovirus (Richardson, Scheid and Choppin (1980), Virology105, 205–222). This peptide inhibits the membrane fusing activity of a viral glycoprotein.Many agents which promote the formation of the hexagonal phase in membranes also accelerate membrane fusion. At a mole fraction of 0.1, viral replication inhibitory peptide can raise the bilayer to hexagonal phase transition temperature of dielaidoylphosphatidylethanolamine by almost 10°. Two related peptides, carbobenzoxy-L-PheGly and carbobenzoxy-L-GlyPhe, are less potent in raising the bilayer to hexagonal phase transition temperature, with the latter peptide being the least effective of the three. This order of potency is the same as the order of potency in inhibiting viral replication. Substances which inhibit hexagonal phase formation of pure lipids may also inhibit membrane fusion.Abbreviations DEPE dielaidoylphosphatidyethanolamine - Z carbobenzoxy - DSC differential scanning calorimetry - VRIP virus replication inhibitory peptide (Z-D-Phe-L-PheGly)  相似文献   

4.
Pressure is found to destabilize the non-bilayer phase with respect to the bilayer in a model lipid system. The lamellar to inverted hexagonal (H11) phase transition of aqueous egg phosphatidylethanolamine is shifted to higher temperatures by hydrostatic pressure. The slope of the increase in transition temperature is constant to beyond 300 bar, and is greater than that seen for other lipid phase transitions. This behavior is consistent with the hypothesis that increasing chain disorder drives the conversion from the bilayer into the hexagonal phase. If this non-bilayer lipid phase is an intermediate in membrane fusion, then pressure should inhibit the process. This may explain the inhibition of chemical transmission at neural synapses by pressure.  相似文献   

5.
Polycationic amino acids induce the leakage and fusion of liposomes containing anionic lipids. We have investigated the nature and extent of the changes in membrane physical properties caused by these polypeptides which could result in the observed membrane destabilization. We found that in the range of pH 5 to pH 7 both poly-l-histidine and poly-l-lysine were ineffective in shifting the bilayer to hexagonal phase transition temperature of dielaidoylphosphatidylethanolamine, either in the presence of absence of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylserine. We also studied the gel to liquid crystalline phase transition properties of 11 mixtures of phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylethanolamine, both in dimyristoyl forms as well as the 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl forms, as a function of pH and in the presence and absence of polycationic amino acids. We observed that these two lipids were largely miscible at all pH values and in the presence and absence of the polypeptides. However, there was some increased tendency for phase separation at higher pH and in the absence of polypeptide. Thus neither changes in curvature strain nor lateral phase separation induced by the polycationic amino acids could account for their marked ability to induce leakage and fusion.Phosphatidylethanolamine labelled with pyrene on one of the acyl chains gives rise to fluorescent emission from both monomer and excimer forms. The ratio of emission intensity from these two forms is indicative of lateral phase separation and the degree of lateral mobility of this probe. In equimolar mixtures of the 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl forms of phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylethanolamine in the liquid crystalline phase at 30 °C we find little effect of pH on the ratio of excimer to monomer emission intensity. However poly-l-lysine markedly lowers the fraction of excimer emission from these liposomes through the pH range from 5 to 7. Poly-l-histidine lowers the excimer to monomer emission ratio at pH 5 but not at pH 7. This is opposite to what one would expect for lateral phase separation and is interpreted at being the consequence of the polypeptide lowering the rate of lateral diffusion of the lipids. This effect of poly-l-histidine is observed over a range of temperatures from 0 to 40°C in both gel and liquid crystalline phases. There is no evidence from the behaviour of the pyrene fluorescent probe for lipid interdigitation. We conclude that the promotion of leakage and fusion in anionic liposomes by polycationic amino acids is not a result of large changes in the physical properties or arrangements of the lipids but rather to a surface binding of the polyamino acids.Abbreviations DSC differential scanning calorimetry - DEPE dielaidoylphosphatidylethanolamine - POPS 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylethanolamine - DMPS dimyristoylphosphatidylserine - DMPE dimyristoylphosphatidylethanolamine - POPE 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylethanolamine - TH bilayer to hexagonal phase transition temperature - pyr-PE 1-hexadecanoyl-2-(1-pyrenedecanoyl)-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolaline - E/M ratio of intensities of excimer to monomer emission  相似文献   

6.
Changes in steady-state fluorescence anisotropy of 1 -(4-trimethylaminophenyl)-6-phenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene TMA-DPH) are applied to the detection of lamellar-hexagonal transitions in egg phosphatidylethanolamine. Even low (2 mole%) proportions of diacylglycerol decrease the hexagonal transition temperature considerably, as confirmed by differential scanning calorimetry. Diacylglycerol is also found to promote a lamellar to "isotropic" (Q(224) cubic) transition in mixtures of phosphatidylcholine: phosphatidylethanolamine:cholesterol. This nonreversible transition is also observed by (31)P nuclear magnetic resonance and detected as a large increase in TMA-DPH steady-state anisotropy. The same technique reveals as well that lysophosphatidylcholine counteracts the effect of diacylglycerol and stabilizes the lamellar phase in both transitions. Diacylglycerol and lysophosphatidylcholine are known to respectively promote and inhibit membrane fusion in a variety of systems. These data are interpreted in support of the hypothesis of a highly bent structural fusion intermediate ("stalk"). They also show the interest of lipid-phase studies in predicting and rationalizing membrane fusion mechanisms.  相似文献   

7.
Toward elucidating molecular details of virus-induced membrane fusion, we have studied the low pH-triggered interaction of the bromelain-solubilized ectodomain of influenza hemagglutinin with liposomes. Polypeptide segments which insert into the apolar phase of the lipid bilayer were first labeled specifically using either of the two membrane-restricted carbene-generating reagents, 3-(trifluoromethyl)-3-([125I]iodophenyl)diazirine and 1-palmitoyl-2-[11-[4-[3-(trifluoromethyl)diazirinyl]phenyl] undecanoyl]-sn-glycero-3-phosphorylcholine, and were then identified on the basis of cyanogen bromide and 2-(2-nitrophenylsulfenyl)-3-methyl-3'-bromoindolenine-skatole fragment analysis and Edman degradations. Here, we demonstrate that the hydrophobic interaction is mediated solely by the so-called "fusion peptide" which corresponds to the NH2-terminal segment of the BHA2 subunit of nature influenza hemagglutinin. Predominant sites of labeling within that segment were Phe-3, Ile-6, Phe-9, Trp-14, Met-17, and Trp-21. The average 3-4 residue spacing between consecutive labeled amino acid side chains suggests a helical structure of that segment with an amphiphilic character.  相似文献   

8.
The phase behaviour of mixed molecular species of phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylserine and sphingomyelin of biological origin were examined in aqueous co-dispersions using synchrotron X-ray diffraction. The co-dispersions of phospholipids studied were aimed to model the mixing of lipids populating the cytoplasmic and outer leaflets in the resting or scrambled activated cell membrane. Mixtures enriched with phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylserine were characterized by a phase separation of non-lamellar phases (cubic and inverted hexagonal) with a lamellar gel phase comprising the most saturated molecular species. Inclusion of sphingomyelin in the mixture resulted in a suppression of the hexagonal-II phase in favour of lamellar phases at temperatures where a proportion of the phospholipid was fluid. The effect was also dependent on the total amount of sphingomyelin in ternary mixtures, and the lamellar phase dominated in mixtures containing more than 30 mol%, irrespective of the relative proportions of phosphatidylserine/sphingomyelin. A transition from gel to liquid-crystal phase was detected by wide-angle scattering during heating scans of ternary mixtures enriched in sphingomyelin and was shown by thermal cycling experiments to be coupled with a hexagonal-II phase to lamellar transition. In such samples there was evidence of a coexistence of non-lamellar phases with a lamellar gel phase. A transition of the gel phase to the fluid state on heating from 35 to 41 °C was evidenced by a progressive increase in the lamellar d-spacing. The presence of calcium enhanced the phase separation of a lamellar gel phase from a hexagonal-II phase in mixtures enriched in phosphatidylserine. This effect was counteracted by charge screening with 150 mM NaCl. The effect of sphingomyelin on stabilizing the lamellar phase is discussed in the context of an altered composition in the cytoplasmic/outer leaflets of the plasma membrane resulting from scrambling of the phospholipid distribution. The results suggest that a lamellar structure can be retained by the inward translocation of sphingomyelin in biological membranes. The presence of monovalent cations serves also to stabilize the bilayer in activated cells where a translocation of aminoglycerophospholipids and an influx of calcium occur simultaneously.Abbreviations PC phosphatidylcholine - PE phosphatidylethanolamine - PS phosphatidylserine - SAXS small-angle X-ray scattering - SM sphingomyelin - WAXS wide-angle X-ray scattering - XRD X-ray diffraction  相似文献   

9.
10.
The simian immunodeficiency virus fusion peptide constitutes a 12-residue N-terminal segment of the gp32 protein that is involved in the fusion between the viral and cellular membranes, facilitating the penetration of the virus in the host cell. Simian immunodeficiency virus fusion peptide is a hydrophobic peptide that in Me(2)SO forms aggregates that contain beta-sheet pleated structures. When added to aqueous media the peptide forms large colloidal aggregates. In the presence of lipidic membranes, however, the peptide interacts with the membranes and causes small changes of the membrane electrostatic potential as shown by fluorescein phosphatidylethanolamine fluorescence. Thioflavin T fluorescence and Fourier transformed infrared spectroscopy measurements reveal that the interaction of the peptide with the membrane bilayer results in complete disassembly of the aggregates originating from an Me(2)SO stock solution. Above a lipid/peptide ratio of about 5, the membrane disaggregation and water precipitation processes become dependent on the absolute peptide concentration rather than on the lipid/peptide ratio. A schematic mechanism is proposed, which sheds light on how peptide-peptide interactions can be favored with respect to peptide-lipid interactions at various lipid/peptide ratios. These studies are augmented by the use of the fluorescent dye 1-(3-sulfonatopropyl)-4-[beta[2-(di-n-octylamino)-6-naphthyl]vinyl ] pyridinium betaine that shows the interaction of the peptide with the membranes has a clear effect on the magnitude of the so-called dipole potential that arises from dipolar groups located on the lipid molecules and oriented water molecules at the membrane-water interface. It is shown that the variation of the membrane dipole potential affects the extent of the membrane fusion caused by the peptide and implicates the dipolar properties of membranes in their fusion.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Studies with phospholipase C have indicated that two-thirds of the phosphatidylethanolamine of rat liver endoplasmic reticulum is located in the inner leaflet of the membrane bilayer. Phosphatidyl[14C]ethanolamine is synthesised in microsomes incubated with CDP[14C]ethanolamine. Using phospholipase C as a probe we have observed that the labelled phospholipid is initially (1–2 min) concentrated in the ‘outer leaflet’ of the membrane bilayer. The specific activity of this pool of phosphatidylethanolamine was 3.5 times that of the inner leaflet. If, however, the microsomes were opened with 0.4% taurocholate or the French pressure cell to make both sides of the bilayer available to phospholipase C, the phosphatidylethanolamine behaves as a single pool for hydrolysis. On longer incubation, up to 30 min, with CDP[14C]ethanolamine the specific activity of the outer leaflet phosphatidylethanolamine becomes close to that of the inner leaflet. In chase experiments, in which microsomal phosphatidylethanolamine was labelled by incubation with CDP[14C]ethanolamine for 1 min, the reaction stopped by addition of calcium, and the microsomes isolated by centrifugation and reincubated, labelled phosphatidylethanolamine was transferred from the ‘outer leaflet’ to the ‘inner leaflet’, so that both were equally labelled. These observations suggest that phosphatidylethanolamine is synthesised at the cytoplasmic leaflet of the endoplasmic reticulum and subsequently transferred across the membrane to the cisternal leaflet of the bilayer. Transmembrane movement is apparently temperature-dependent and independent of continued synthesis of phosphatidylethanolamine.  相似文献   

13.
14.
R A Parente  B R Lentz 《Biochemistry》1986,25(5):1021-1026
The sensitivity of the fluorescence lifetime of 1-palmitoyl-2-[[2-[4- (6-phenyl-trans-1,3,5-hexatrienyl)phenyl]ethyl]carbonyl]- 3-sn-phosphatidylcholine (DPHpPC) to its local concentration in lipid bilayers was used to monitor both lipid mixing and phase separation occurring during membrane vesicle fusion. Vesicles containing 2 mol % DPHpPC were mixed with a 10-fold excess of vesicles devoid of probe. Upon addition of a fusogen, mixing of bilayer lipids associated with fusion was followed as an increase in the fluorescence lifetime of DPHpPC. Ca2+-induced fusion of phosphatidylserine vesicles served to test the method and was shown to have an exponential half-time of 7 s. Phase separation (between the phosphatidylserine head groups of bulk lipid and the phosphatidylcholine head groups of the probe) was monitored by DPHpPC under the same conditions used to follow lipid mixing due to fusion. Phase separation was not significant until 10 min after Ca2+ addition and was completely reversible by disodium ethylenediaminetetraacetate addition. Vesicle aggregation induced by Ca2+ addition to mixed phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine vesicles did not alter the DPHpPC lifetime, indicating that close association of vesicles did not promote intervesicular exchange of the probe. In addition, we have investigated the effects of CA2+ on the fluorescence properties of this probe and of the head-group-labeled fluorescent probes N-(4-nitro-2,1,3-benzoxadiazolyl)phosphatidylethanolamine and N-(lissamine Rhodamine B sulfonyl)dioleoyl-phosphatidylethanolamine, which are used in the fluorescence energy transfer assay of Struck et al.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
It was previously shown (Cohen, F. S., J. Zimmerberg, and A. Finkelstein, 1980, J. Gen. Physiol., 75:251-270) that multilamellar phospholipid vesicles can fuse with decane-containing phospholipid bilayer membranes. An essential requirement for fusion was an osmotic gradient across the planar membrane, with the vesicle-containing (cis) side hyperosmotic with respect to the opposite (trans) side. We now report that unilamellar vesicles will fuse with "hydrocarbon-free" membranes subject to these same osmotic conditions. Thus the same conditions that apply to fusion of multilamellar vesicles with planar bilayer membranes also apply to fusion of unilamellar vesicles with these membranes, and hydrocarbon is not required for the fusion process. If the vesicles and/or planar membrane contain negatively charged lipids, divalent cation (approximately 15 mM Ca++) is required in the cis compartment (in addition to the osmotic gradient across the membrane) to obtain substantial fusion rates. On the other hand, vesicles made from uncharged lipids readily fuse with planar phosphatidylethanolamine planar membranes in the near absence of divalent cation with just an osmotic gradient. Vesicles fuse much more readily with phosphatidylethanolamine-containing than with phosphatidylcholine-containing planar membranes. Although hydrocarbon (decane) is not required in the planar membrane for fusion, it does affect the rate of fusion and causes the fusion process to be dependent on stirring in the cis compartment.  相似文献   

16.
We have used the fluorescence recovery after photobleaching technique to study the translational diffusion, in L phase multibilayers of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine (POPC), of fluorescent derivatives of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylethanolamine (NBD-POPE) and a membrane-spanning phosphatidylethanolamine (NBD-MSPE). The latter derivative was prepared from a membrane-spanning glycerol-dialkyl-glycerol tetraether lipid isolated from the thermophilic and acidophilic archaebacterium Sulfolobus solfataricus. The translational diffusion was examined between about 15° and 45°C. It is shown that over this temperature range the translational diffusion coefficient for NBD-MSPE is 2/3 that for NBD-POPE which spans only one monolayer of the bilayer. The result is interpreted in terms of existing models for translational diffusion in lipid membranes.Abbreviations D t translational diffusion coefficient - FRAP fluorescence recovery after photobleaching - MSPE a membrane-spanning phosphatidylethanolamine derived from a glycerol-dialkyl-glycerol tetraether lipid isolated from Sulfolobus solfataricus - NBD 4-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazolyl - PE phosphatidylethanolamine - POPC 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine - POPE 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylethanolamine  相似文献   

17.
18.
The polycationic dyes, Hoechst 33342 (Bisbenzimide,2-(4-ethoxyphenyl)-5-(4-methyl-1-piperazinyl) 2,5-bi 1H benzimidazole) and Hoechst 33258 (Bisbenzimide,2-(4-hydroxyphenyl) 5-(4-methyl-1-piperazinyl)-2,5-bi-1H-benzimidazole) alter the activity of the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ channel. Although they act competitively, Hoechst 33342 decreases, while Hoechst 33258 increases, the rate of channel-mediated Ca2+ efflux from junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles. Unlike other cationic sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ channel antagonists, Hoechst 33342 blocks the ryanodine-activated Ca2+ channel. Both Hoechst 33342 and Hoechst 33258 inhibit the channel incorporated into the planar lipid bilayer. Since the only structural difference between the two dyes is that the agonist Hoechst 33258 has a hydroxy group where the antagonist Hoechst 33342 has an ethoxy group, it is possible that the more hydrophobic, bulky ethoxy group blocks Ca2+ movement through the channel, whereas the hydroxy group only reduces the rate of Ca2+ movement.The opinions or assertions contained herein are private ones of the author ad are not to beconstrued as official or reflecting the views of the Department of Defense or the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences.This work was supported by grants GM 29300 and GM 4695 from the National Institutes of Health and Grant C071BK from the Uniformed University of the Health Sciences.  相似文献   

19.
Cholesterol sulphate is a potent stabilizer of membrane bilayer structure in both dielaidoylphosphatidylethanolamine and egg phosphatidylethanolamine model membranes, however, the addition of calcium abolishes this bilayer stabilization. Calcium also induces fusion and leakage of egg phosphatidylethanolamine large unilamellar vesicles containing cholesterol sulphate, but has no effect on fusion or leakage of egg phosphatidylcholine large unilamellar vesicles containing cholesterol sulphate. With egg phosphatidylethanoiamine liposomes, the initial rate, and extent of fusion, at constant calcium concentration, vary inversely with the mol percentage of cholesterol sulphate present in the vesicle membrane. The interaction of calcium and cholesterol sulphate, which causes membrane destabilization and fusion in phosphatidylethanolamine containing model systems, may play a role in the acrosome reaction in human sperm.  相似文献   

20.
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