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1.
The fluorescent sterol delta 5,7,9,(11)-cholestatrien-3 beta-ol (cholestatrienol) was incoporated into 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine (POPC) small unilamellar vesicles (SUV) with and without cholesterol in order to monitor sterol-sterol interactions in model membranes. Previously another fluorescent sterol, dehydroergosterol (F. Schroeder, Y. Barenholz, E. Gratton and T.E. Thompson. Biochemistry 26 (1987) 2441), was used for this purpose. However, there is some concern that dehydroergosterol may not be the best analogue for cholesterol. Fluorescence properties of cholestatrienol in POPC SUV were highly sensitive to cholestatrienol purity. The fluorescence decay of cholestatrienol in the POPC SUV was analyzed by assuming either that the decay is comprised of a discrete sum of exponential components or that the decay is made up of one or more component's distribution of lifetimes. The decay for cholestatrienol in POPC SUV analyzed using distributions had a lower chi 2 value and was described by a two-component Lorentzian function with centers near 0.86 and 3.24 ns, and fractional intensities of 0.96 and 0.04, respectively. Both distributions were quite narrow, i.e., 0.05 ns full-width at half-maximum peak height. It is proposed that the two lifetime distributions are generated by separate continua of environments for the cholestatrienol molecule described by different dielectric constants. In the range 0-6 mol% cholestatrienol, the cholestatrienol underwent a concentration-dependent relaxation. This process was characterized by red-shifted absorption and maxima and altered ratios of absorption and fluorescence excitation maxima. Fluorescence quantum yield, lifetime, steady-state anisotropy, limiting anisotropy and rotational rate remained constant. In contrast, in POPC vesicles containing between 6 and 33 mol% cholestatrienol, the fluorescent cholestatrienol partially segregated, resulting in quenching. Thus, below 6 mol% cholestatrienol, the cholestatrienol appeared to behave in part as monomers exposed to some degree to the aqueous solvent in a sterol-poor domain within POPC bilayers. Since the lifetime did not decrease above 6 mol% cholestatrienol, the fluorescence at high mol% values of cholestatrienol was due to cholestatrienol in the sterol-poor domain. The fluorescence intensity, quantum yield, steady-state anisotropy, and limiting anisotropy of cholestatrienol in the sterol-poor domain decreased to limiting, nonzero values while the rotational rate increased to a limiting value. Thus, the sterol-poor domain became more disordered when it coexisted with the sterol-rich domain.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
The behavior of dehydroergosterol in -α-dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) unsonicated multilamellar liposomes was characterized by absorption spectroscopy and fluorescence measurements. Dehydroergosterol exhibited a lowered absorption coefficient in multilamellar liposomes whiel the steady-state fluorescence anisotropy of dehydroergosterol in these membranes decreased significantly with increasing dehydroergosterol concentration, suggesting membrane sterol-sterol interactions. The comparative steady-state anisotropy of 0.9 mole percent dehydroergosterol in multilamellar liposomes was lower than in small unilamellar vesicles suggesting different sterol environments for dehydroergosterol. Dehydroergosterol fluorescence lifetime was relatively independent of membrane sterol content and yielded similar values in sonicated and unsonicated model membranes. In multilamellar liposomes containing 5 mole percent cholesterol, the gel-to-liqui crystalline phase transition of DMPC detected by 0.9 mole percent dehydroergosterol was significantly broadened when compared to the phase transition detected by dehydroergosterol in the absence of membrane cholesterol (Smutzer, G. et al. (1986) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 862, 361–371). In multilamellar liposomes containing 10 mole percent cholesterol, the major fluorescence lifetime of dehydroergosterol did not detect the gel-to-liquid crystalline phase transition of DMPC. Time-correlated fluorescence anisotropy decays of dehydroergosterol in DMPC multilamellar liposomes in the absence and presence of 5 mole percent cholesterol exhibited a single rotational correlation time near one nanosecond that was relatively independent of temperature and low concentrations of membrane cholesterol. The limiting anisotropy of 0.9 mole percent dehydroergosterol decreased above the gel-to-liquid crystalline phase transition in membranes without cholesterol and was not significantly affected by the phase transition in membranes containing 5 mole percent cholesterol. These results suggested hindered rotational diffusion of dehydroergosterol in multilamellar liposomes. Lifetime and time-correlated fluorescence measurements of 0.9 mole percent dehydroergosterol in multilamellar liposomes further suggested this fluorophore was detecting physical properties of the bulk membrane phospholipids in membranes devoid of cholesterol and was detecting sterol-rich regions in membranes of low sterol concentration.  相似文献   

3.
F Schroeder  G Nemecz 《Biochemistry》1989,28(14):5992-6000
The fluorescent sterol dehydroergosterol was used as a cholesterol analogue in conjunction with multifrequency phase and modulation (1-250 MHz) fluorometry to examine whether sterols (1) interact preferentially with fluid- or solid-phase phospholipids and (2) interact preferentially with sphingomyelin in phase-separated or phase-miscible cosonicated phospholipid membranes. Cosonicated small unilamellar vesicles (SUV) were produced by mixing lipids in organic solvents, drying the mixture, adding buffer, sonicating, and separating SUV. Phospholipids of synthetic as well as biological origin were utilized. In phase-separated, cosonicated SUV of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine/distearoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC/DSPC, 1:1 molar ratio), the fluorescent sterol (0.5 mol %) interacted preferentially with the fluid-phase lipid (partition coefficient, Kf/s = 2.6-3.4) according to four criteria. First, dehydroergosterol detected only the phase transition of DMPC, the phospholipid with the lower phase transition temperature. Second, the dehydroergosterol fluorescence polarization, limiting anisotropy, order parameter, and rotational relaxation time in the cosonicated vesicle were similar to those of dehydroergosterol in SUV composed only of DMPC. Third, the number of dehydroergosterol fluorescence lifetime components as well as the distribution in the cosonicated SUV was similar to that of dehydroergosterol in SUV composed of DMPC. Fourth, dehydroergosterol concentration-dependent self-quenching was detected in DSPC SUV at much lower dehydroergosterol concentration than in DMPC SUV. Preference of dehydroergosterol for fluid-phase lipids was also observed by monitoring dehydroergosterol exchange between individually sonicated DMPC SUV and DSPC SUV after the two types of vesicles were mixed in equal proportions. In these SUV mixtures, the dehydroergosterol also partitioned into the more fluid SUV, 99:1.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
G Nemecz  F Schroeder 《Biochemistry》1988,27(20):7740-7749
The fluorescent sterol delta 5,7,9(11),22-ergostatetraen-3 beta-ol (dehydroergosterol) was investigated as a cholesterol analogue to examine sterol domains in and spontaneous exchange of sterol between 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine (POPC) small unilamellar vesicles (SUV). Fluorescence lifetime, acrylamide quenching analyses, and intermembrane exchange kinetics were consistent with the presence of at least two sterol domains in POPC. Fluorescence lifetime was determined by phase and modulation fluorescence spectroscopy and analyzed by nonlinear least-squares as well as continuous distributional analyses. Both methods demonstrated that pure dehydroergosterol in POPC SUV had two lifetime components (C) and fractional intensities (F) near C1 = 0.851 ns (F1 0.96) and C2 = 2.668 ns (F2 0.004). In contrast to component C1, the center of lifetime distribution, fractional intensity, and peak width of dehydroergosterol lifetime component C2 was dependent on the polarity of the medium and vesicle curvature. The sterol domain corresponding to dehydroergosterol component C2 was preferentially quenched by acrylamide. Acrylamide quenching of dehydroergosterol fluorescence demonstrated that the two lifetime components of dehydroergosterol were not due to transbilayer sterol domains with different lifetimes. In a spontaneous exchange assay not requiring separation of donor and acceptor SUV, the lifetime component C2, but not C1, shifted to a shorter lifetime with altered distributional width. The kinetics of these lifetime and distributional width changes best fitted a two-exponential function, with a fast exchange rate constant K1 = 0.0325 min-1, t1/2 = 21.3 min, and a slow rate constant k2 = 0.00275 min-1, t1/2 = 261 min. The fast exchanging pool correlates with the longer lifetime component C2. These kinetics were confirmed both by dehydroergosterol exchange measured with fluorescence intensity and by [3H]cholesterol exchange. In summary, lifetime, distributional width, acrylamide quenching, and classical exchange assay data are consistent with the presence of at least two pools of sterol in POPC SUV.  相似文献   

5.
The fluorescent sterol delta 5,7,9(11)-dehydroergostatetraen-3 beta-ol (dehydroergosterol) was used as an analogue of cholesterol to examine the molecular interaction of purified rat liver sterol carrier protein-2 (SCP-2) with sterol. The binding of dehydroergosterol to SCP-2 was evidenced by light scatter and by fluorescence polarization, lifetime, limiting anisotropy, and rotational relaxation time of dehydroergosterol. In addition, energy transfer efficiency from SCP-2 tryptophan to dehydroergosterol was 96%, indicating that the apparent distance, R, between the SCP-2 tryptophan (energy donor) and the dehydroergosterol (energy acceptor) was 13.7 A. Scatchard binding analysis of light scatter, lifetime, and energy transfer data all indicated a 1:1 molar stoichiometry with Kd = 1.2, 1.6, and 1.3 microM, respectively. SCP-2 enhanced the activity of microsomal acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase through transfer of [3H]cholesterol from donor palmitoyloleoyl phosphatidylcholine/cholesterol small unilamellar vesicles to rat liver microsomes containing the enzyme. A recently developed fluorescence assay utilizing dehydroergosterol fluorescence polarization (Nemecz, G., Fontaine, R. N., and Schroeder, F. (1988) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 948, 511-521; Nemecz, G., and Schroeder, F. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 7740-7749) was applied to examine the effect of SCP-2 on sterol exchange. In the absence of SCP-2, two spontaneously exchangeable sterol domains were observed in palmitoyloleoyl phosphatidylcholine/sterol (65:35 molar ratio) small unilamellar vesicles. SCP-2 enhanced the rate of exchange of the faster exchanging domain 2-fold. The transfer rate of the more slowly exchangeable sterol domain and the fraction of cholesterol represented by each domain were not affected. These results demonstrate the utility of dehydroergosterol to probe SCP-2 interactions with sterols and are indicative of a physiological role for SCP-2 as a soluble sterol carrier.  相似文献   

6.
Olsher M  Yoon SI  Chong PL 《Biochemistry》2005,44(6):2080-2087
We developed a new fluorescence assay for sterol oxidation and used it to study the relationship between free radical-induced sterol oxidation and membrane sterol lateral organization. This assay used dehydroergosterol (DHE) as both a membrane probe and a membrane component. Sterol oxidation was induced by a free radical generator, AAPH (2,2'-azobis(2-amidinopropane)dihydrochloride). Using this new assay, we found that, in unilamellar vesicles composed of DHE and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-l-alpha-phosphatidylcholine (POPC), the initial rate of DHE oxidation induced by AAPH changed with membrane sterol content in an alternating manner, exhibiting a local maximum at 20.3, 22.2, 25.0, 32.3, and 40.0 mol % DHE. These mole fractions correspond to the critical sterol mole fractions C(r) predicted for maximal sterol superlattice formation. In three-component bilayers composed of POPC, cholesterol, and DHE (fixed at 1 and 5 mol %), the initial rate of AAPH-induced DHE oxidation exhibited a biphasic change whenever the total sterol mole fraction, irrespective of the DHE content, was near C(r), indicating that the correlation between sterol oxidation and sterol superlattice formation revealed in this study is not an artifact due to the use of the fluorescent cholesterol analogue DHE. The alternating variation of AAPH-induced sterol oxidation with sterol content also appeared in multicomponent unilamellar vesicles containing bovine brain sphingomyelins (bbSPM), POPC, and DHE. The present work and our previous study on cholesterol oxidase-induced sterol oxidation [Wang et al. (2004) Biochemistry 43, 2159-2166] suggest that sterol oxidation in general, either by reactive oxygen species or by enzymes, may be regulated by the extent of sterol superlattice in the membrane and thus regulated by the membrane sterol content in a fine-tuning manner.  相似文献   

7.
A fluorescent sterol probe study of human serum low-density lipoproteins   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The fluorescent sterol probe, ergosta-5,7,9,(11),22-tetraen-3 beta-ol (dehydroergosterol), was utilized as a cholesterol analog to label human serum low-density lipoproteins (LDL). Quenching of dehydroergosterol fluorescence by KI indicated that most of the fluorophore was either buried within the outer phospholipid monolayer of LDL or within the neutral lipid core of LDL. The steady-state anisotropy of dehydroergosterol in LDL detected the cholesteric core phase transition near 30 degrees C. Fluorescence lifetime decays for dehydroergosterol contained two components, both below and above the cholesteric phase transition, with the major lifetime component near 1 ns. Neither lifetime component underwent a detectable change in duration at the core phase transition temperature. Time-correlated fluorescence anisotropy decays of dehydroergosterol indicated a single rotational correlation time near 1.7 ns, which was unaffected by the core phase transition. Time-correlated anisotropy decays also suggested hindered rotation of dehydroergosterol in LDL. These results indicate that unesterified cholesterol is primarily located in the outer phospholipid monolayer of LDL, with the majority of cholesterol not in direct contact with the aqueous phase.  相似文献   

8.
Dehydroergosterol has been widely used as a fluorescent analog of cholesterol for the investigation of lipoprotein, model membrane, and biological membrane structure. Although its synthesis was reported over fifty years ago, the complete structure and assignment of the three double bonds in the rings has not heretofore been firmly established. Therefore, dehydroergosterol was synthesized and purified by reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography. The proposed structure (8, 7, 9(11), 22-ergostatetraen-3-o1), including the location of the double bond at 9(11), was confirmed by mass spectroscopy,1H-NMR, and13C-NMR. In addition, a convenient assay for determination of impurities in dehydroergosterol preparations utilizing absorbance peak ratios is described. The spectroscopic properties of dehydroergosterol are highly dependent on solvent dielectric constant. Dehydroergosterol was incorporated into sonicated unilamellar vesicles composed of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine or distearoylphosphatidylcholine. Arrhenius plots of dehydroergosterol fluorescence polarization indicated that the sterol was sensitive to the phase transitions of these phospholipids near 23° and 54°C, respectively. Differential polarized phase fluorescence and lifetime analysis were used to determine the dynamic properties of dehydroergosterol in the vesicles. At 37°C the limiting anisotropy, order parameter, and rotational rate of dehydroergosterol in dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine were 0.162, 0.65, and 0.71 nsec, respectively. The limiting anisotropy and order parameter, but not the rotational rate, of dehydroergosterol were sensitive to the temperature and/or the physical state of the phospholipid.  相似文献   

9.
Physical properties of the fluorescent sterol probe dehydroergosterol   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Spectroscopic studies were performed on the fluorescent sterol probes ergosta-5,7,9(11),22-tetraen-3 beta-ol (dehydroergosterol) and cholesta-5,7,9(11)-trien-3 beta-ol (cholestatrienol). In most isotropic solvents, these molecules exhibited a single lifetime near 300 ps. Fluorescence lifetimes in 2-propanol were independent of emission wavelength and independent of excitation wavelength. Excited state behavior of these probes appears relatively simple. In isotropic solvents, dehydroergosterol fluorescence emission underwent at most a small Stokes shift as solvent polarity was modified. Time-resolved anisotropy decays indicated that dehydroergosterol decay was monoexponential, with rotational correlation times dependent on solvent viscosity. When incorporated into L-alpha-dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine liposomes at a concentration of 0.9 mol%, dehydroergosterol fluorescence lifetime decreased at the phase transition of this phospholipid indicating that the sterol probe was detecting physical changes of the bulk phospholipids. Furthermore, total fluorescence decays and anisotropy decays were sensitive to the environment of the sterol. Dehydroergosterol and cholestatrienol are thus useful probes for monitoring sterol behavior in biological systems.  相似文献   

10.
Phospholipid-sterol interactions were investigated using parinaric acid fluorescence spectroscopy. Cholesterol and cholesterol analogues which were modified in the sterol nucleus or side chain were added at 50 mol % to multilamellar vesicles of model phospholipids selected to be representative of major components in an LM cell plasma membrane. These included sphingomyelins and saturated and monounsaturated phosphatidylcholines and phosphatidylethanolamines. Based on the changes in cis-parinaric acid steady-state fluorescence polarization observed with addition of sterol, 50 mol % cholesterol abolished the phase transition of all the model phospholipids. Dihydrocholesterol and trans-22-dehydrocholesterol behaved like cholesterol in the two systems studied. 24-Methylcholesterols interacted well with all phospholipids except phosphatidylethanolamine which contained an unsaturated fatty acid. 24-Alkyl,trans-22-dehydrocholesterols abolished the phase transition in only two systems: sphingomyelins and phosphatidylcholines possessing relatively short saturated acyl chains. Since steady-state anisotropy is a function of fluorescence lifetime, rotational diffusion rates, and limiting anisotropy, we determined these parameters for two of the phospholipid systems. The results show that steady-state anisotropy values for phospholipid-sterol interactions correlate closely with limiting anisotropy and to a lesser extent with rotational relaxation time. The behavior of the sterols in the model phospholipids are used to interpret 1) fluorescence polarization measurements made with phospholipids extracted from LM cell plasma membranes, and 2) changes in membrane lipid composition which accompany growth of LM cells on various sterols.  相似文献   

11.
A fluorescence and radiolabel study of sterol exchange between membranes   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The fluorescent sterols delta 5,7,9(11),22-ergostatetraen-3 beta-ol (dehydroergosterol) and delta 5,7,9,(11)-cholestatrien-3 beta-ol (cholestatrienol) as well as [1,2-3H]cholesterol were utilized as cholesterol analogues to examine spontaneous exchange of sterol between 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine (POPC) small unilamellar vesicles (SUV). Exchange of fluorescent sterols was monitored at 24 degrees C by release from self-quenching of polarization from the time of mixing without separation of donor and acceptor vesicles. The polarization curve for 35 mol% sterol in POPC best fitted a two-exponential function, with a fast-exchange rate constant k1 = 0.0217 min-1, 1t1/2 = 32 min, size pool 1 = 12%, and a slow rate constant k2 = 2.91.10(-3) min-1, 2t1/2 = 238 min, size pool 2 = 88%. In addition to the above two exchangeable pools of sterol, the data were consistent with the presence of a slowly or nonexchangeable pool, 42% of total sterol, that was highly dependent on sterol content. These results were confirmed by simultaneous monitoring of [1,2-3H]cholesterol radioactivity and dehydroergosterol fluorescence intensity after separation of donor and acceptor vesicles by ion-exchange column chromatography. Thus, dehydroergosterol or cholestatrienol exchange as measured by fluorescence parameters (polarization and/or intensity) provides two new methods to follow cholesterol spontaneous exchange. These methods allow resolution and quantitation of a shorter exchange t1/2 near 30 min previously not reported. Thus, the cholesterol desorption rate from membranes may be faster than previously believed. In addition, the presence of a slowly non-exchangeable pool was confirmed.  相似文献   

12.
F Liu  I P Sugar    P L Chong 《Biophysical journal》1997,72(5):2243-2254
We have examined the fractional sterol concentration dependence of dehydroergosterol (DHE) fluorescence in DHE/cholesterol/dimyristoyl-L-alpha-phosphatidylcholine (DMPC), DHE/ergosterol/DMPC and DHE/cholesterol/dipalmitoyl-L-alpha-phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) liquid-crystalline bilayers. Fluorescence intensity and lifetime exhibit local minima (dips) whenever the total sterol mole fraction, irrespective of the DHE content, is near the critical mole fractions predicted for sterols being regularly distributed in hexagonal superlattices. This result provides evidence that all three of these naturally occurring sterols (e.g., cholesterol, ergosterol, and DHE) can be regularly distributed in the membrane and that the bulky tetracyclic ring of the sterols is the cause of regular distribution. Moreover, at the critical sterol mole fractions, the steady-state anisotropy of DHE fluorescence and the calculated rotational relaxation times exhibit distinct peaks, suggesting that membrane free volume reaches a local minimum at critical sterol mole fractions. This, combined with the well-known sterol condensing effect on lipid acyl chains, provides a new understanding of how variations in membrane sterol content change membrane free volume. In addition to the fluorescence dips/peaks corresponding to hexagonal superlattices, we have observed intermediate fluorescence dips/peaks at concentrations predicted by the centered rectangular superlattice model. However, the 22.2 mol% dip for centered rectangular superlattices in DHE/ergosterol/DMPC mixtures becomes diminished after long incubation (4 weeks), whereas on the same time frame the 22.2 mol% dip in DHE/cholesterol/DMPC mixtures remains discernible, suggesting that although all three of these sterols can be regularly distributed, subtle differences in sterol structure cause changes in lateral sterol organization in the membrane.  相似文献   

13.
The phase behavior of L-alpha-dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine/cholesterol mixtures was studied in multilamellar vesicles by fluorescence polarization of the sterol molecule dehydroergosterol and of the polyene molecule alpha-parinaric acid. In the absence of cholesterol, dehydroergosterol exhibited an increase in polarization as DMPC vesicles were heated through the phase transition. This rise in polarization anisotropy was observed over a 0.6-1.0 degrees C increase in temperature with the midpoint of the phase transition occurring at 23.6 degrees C. Addition of 5 mol% cholesterol completely obliterated this change in polarization anisotropy through the phase transition of DMPC. alpha-Parinaric acid underwent a characteristic decrease in polarization anisotropy through the phase transition of DMPC. The change in anisotropy through the phase transition was over 4-fold greater than the values observed with dehydroergosterol. Vesicles containing 5 mol% cholesterol in the presence of alpha-parinaric acid underwent a decrease in polarization anisotropy that was over 75% of the original decrease in amplitude observed in the absence of any membrane cholesterol. The difference in sensitivity of the two fluorescent probes to the phase transition of DMPC as a function of membrane cholesterol content may be explained by a preferential partitioning of dehydroergosterol (and cholesterol) into a sterol-rich phase at low sterol concentrations. This partitioning allows dehydroergosterol to detect sterol-rich regions in the membrane bilayer.  相似文献   

14.
Selective binding of cholesterol by recombinant fatty acid binding proteins   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The sterol binding specificity of rat recombinant liver fatty acid binding protein (L-FABP) and intestinal fatty acid binding protein (I-FABP) was characterized with [3H]cholesterol and a fluorescent sterol analog dehydroergosterol. Ligand binding analysis, fluorescence spectroscopy, and activation of microsomal acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase activity showed that L-FABP-bound sterols. 1) Lipidex-1000 assay showed a dissociation constant Kd = 0.78 +/- 0.18 microM and stoichiometry of 0.47 +/- 0.16 mol/mol for [3H]cholesterol binding to L-PABP. 2) With [3H]cholesterol/phosphatidylcholine liposomes, the cholesterol binding parameters for L-FABP were Kd = 1.53 +/- 0.28 microM and stoichiometry 0.83 +/- 0.07 mol/mol. 3) L-FABP interaction with dehydroergosterol altered the fluorescence intensity and polarization of dehydroergosterol. Dehydroergosterol bound to L-FABP with Kd = 0.37 microM and a stoichiometry of 0.83 mol/mol. 4) Cholesterol and dehydroergosterol decreased L-FABP tyrosine lifetime. Dehydroergosterol binding produced sensitized emission of bound dehydroergosterol with longer lifetime.5) L-FABP bound two cis-parinaric acid molecules/molecule of protein. Cholesterol displaced one of these bound cis-parinaric acids. 6) L-FABP enhanced acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase in a concentration-dependent manner. In contrast, these assays indicated that I-FABP did not bind sterols. Thus, L-FABP appears able to bind 1 mol of cholesterol/mol of L-FABP, the L-FABP sterol binding site is equivalent to one of the two fatty acid binding sites, and L-FABP stimulates acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase by transfer of cholesterol.  相似文献   

15.
The fluorescent sterol analogue delta 5,7,9(11),22-ergostatetraen-3 beta-ol (dehydroergosterol) was synthesized and purified by reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. Dehydroergosterol in aqueous solution had a critical micelle concentration of 25 nM and a maximum solubility of 1.3 microM as ascertained from fluorescence polarization and light scattering properties, respectively. Several lines of evidence indicated a close molecular interaction of dehydroergosterol with purified rat liver squalene and sterol carrier protein (SCP). SCP increased the maximal solubility of dehydroergosterol in aqueous buffer. The fluorescence emission spectrum of dehydroergosterol was blue shifted upon addition of SCP. The fluorescence lifetime of dehydroergosterol in aqueous buffer was 2.3 ns; addition of SCP resulted in the appearance of a second lifetime component near 12.4 ns. The SCP increased the fluorescence polarization of monomeric dehydroergosterol in aqueous buffer from 0.033 to 0.086. Scatchard analysis of the binding data indicated that dehydroergosterol interacted with purified rat liver SCP with an apparent KD = 0.88 microM and Bmax = 4.8 microM. At maximal binding, 1.0 mol of dehydroergosterol was specifically bound per mole of SCP. The close molecular interaction of dehydroergosterol with SCP was also demonstrated by energy-transfer experiments. The intermolecular distance between SCP and bound dehydroergosterol was evaluated by fluorescence energy transfer from tyrosine residues of SCP to the conjugated triene series of double bonds in dehydroergosterol. The transfer efficiency was 36%, and R, the apparent distance between the tyrosine energy donor and the dehydroergosterol energy acceptor, was 19 A. The significance of these data obtained in vitro for dehydroergosterol interaction with SCP was also tested in vivo.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Filipin, a macrolide polyene antibiotic, is known to interact selectively with ergosterol, a constituent of fungi membranes. In this work, the fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) between a fluorescent analog of ergosterol, dehydroergosterol (DHE), and filipin was measured in small unilamellar vesicles of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine at 25°C. The time-resolved FRET results were rationalized in the framework of the mean concentration model, and were complemented with steady-state fluorescence intensity, anisotropy and absorption measurements. The results point to the formation of both DHE–filipin aggregates (evidence from static quenching of DHE fluorescence by filipin) and filipin–filipin aggregates (evidence from: (i) the FRET acceptor concentration distributions; (ii) spectral changes of filipin absorption in the vesicles, the excitonic interaction suggesting a stack arrangement; (iii) filipin fluorescence self-quenching), even in presence of DHE and low antibiotic mole fractions (<1 mol%). These results point out that apparently contradictory biochemical models for the action of filipin (some based on the presence of sterols, others not) can be equally valid. Moreover, since results (ii) and (iii) are also observed when a sterol is present, both models of action can actually coexist in membranes with a low sterol content.  相似文献   

17.
Filipin, a macrolide polyene antibiotic, is known to interact selectively with ergosterol, a constituent of fungi membranes. In this work, the fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) between a fluorescent analog of ergosterol, dehydroergosterol (DHE), and filipin was measured in small unilamellar vesicles of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine at 25 degrees C. The time-resolved FRET results were rationalized in the framework of the mean concentration model, and were complemented with steady-state fluorescence intensity, anisotropy and absorption measurements. The results point to the formation of both DHE--filipin aggregates (evidence from static quenching of DHE fluorescence by filipin) and filipin--filipin aggregates (evidence from: (i) the FRET acceptor concentration distributions; (ii) spectral changes of filipin absorption in the vesicles, the excitonic interaction suggesting a stack arrangement; (iii) filipin fluorescence self-quenching), even in presence of DHE and low antibiotic mole fractions (<1 mol%). These results point out that apparently contradictory biochemical models for the action of filipin (some based on the presence of sterols, others not) can be equally valid. Moreover, since results (ii) and (iii) are also observed when a sterol is present, both models of action can actually coexist in membranes with a low sterol content.  相似文献   

18.
Wang MM  Olsher M  Sugár IP  Chong PL 《Biochemistry》2004,43(8):2159-2166
Here, the interplay between membrane cholesterol lateral organization and the activity of membrane surface-acting enzymes was addressed using soil bacteria cholesterol oxidase (COD) as a model. Specifically, the effect of the membrane cholesterol mole fraction on the initial rate of cholesterol oxidation catalyzed by COD was investigated at 37 degrees C using cholesterol/1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-l-alpha-phosphatidylcholine (POPC) large unilamellar vesicles (LUVs, approximately 800 nm in diameter). In the three concentration ranges examined (18.8-21.2, 23.6-26.3, and 32.2-34.5 mol % cholesterol), the initial activity of COD changed with cholesterol mole fraction in a biphasic manner, exhibiting a local maximum at 19.7, 25.0, and 33.4 mol %. Within the experimental errors, these mole fractions agree with the critical cholesterol mole fractions (C(r)) (20.0, 25.0, and 33.3) theoretically predicted for maximal superlattice formation. The activity variation with cholesterol content was correlated well with the area of regular distribution (A(reg)) in the plane of the membrane as determined by nystatin fluorescence. A similar biphasic change in COD activity was detected at the critical sterol mole fraction 20 mol % in dehydroergosterol (DHE)/POPC LUVs (approximately 168 nm in diameter). These results indicate that the activity of COD is regulated by the extent of sterol superlattice for both sterols (DHE and cholesterol) and for a wide range of vesicle sizes (approximately 168-800 nm). The present work on COD and the previous study on phospholipase A(2) (sPLA(2)) [Liu and Chong (1999) Biochemistry 38, 3867-3873] suggest that the activities of some surface-acting enzymes may be regulated by the extent of sterol superlattice in the membrane in a substrate-dependent manner. When the substrate is a sterol, as it is with COD, the enzyme activity reaches a local maximum at C(r). When phospholipid is the substrate, the minimum activity is at C(r), as is the case with sPLA(2). Both phenomena are in accordance with the sterol superlattice model and manifest the functional importance of membrane cholesterol content.  相似文献   

19.
The effects of polyunsaturated fatty acids and lipid peroxidation on LM fibroblast plasma membrane individual leaflet sterol distribution and structural order were examined. The cytofacial (inner) leaflet was more rigid and contained more sterol than the exofacial (outer) leaflet. The static (limiting anisotropy) and dynamic (rotational relaxation time) structural components of diphenylhexatriene (DPH) motion in each leaflet were determined by phase and modulation fluorometry measurements combined with leaflet-specific quenching by trinitrophenyl groups. Polyunsaturated fatty acids, incorporated into the membrane phospholipids by culture medium supplementation, decreased the limiting anisotrophy of DPH in the cytofacial but not the exofacial leaflet thereby abolishing the transbilayer difference in fluidity. Peroxidation by Fe(II) + H2O2 resulted in a rigidification (increase in limiting anisotropy and rotational relaxation time) of the plasma membrane exofacial leaflet, regardless of whether the membranes contained saturated and monounsaturated fatty acids or were enriched in either linoleate or linolenate. The structure of the cytofacial leaflet reported by DPH was unaffected. Plasma membrane transbilayer sterol distribution, measured by leaflet-specific quenching of dehydroergosterol fluorescence, indicated that 20-28% of the sterol was localized in the exofacial leaflet. Polyunsaturated fatty acid supplementation of LM fibroblasts resulted in a complete reversal of plasma membrane transbilayer sterol distribution (72-76% exofacial leaflet). Sterol transbilayer distribution between the membrane leaflets was completely resistant to alteration by exposure to crosslinking agents and peroxidation in control plasma membranes and by peroxidation in linoleate- or linolenate-supplemented membranes.  相似文献   

20.
The molecular organization of sterols in liposomes of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC) at 37 degrees C is examined by utilizing the fluorescent analogue of cholesterol cholesta-5,7,9-trien-3 beta-ol (cholestatrienol). (1) Cholestatrienol is shown to be indistinguishable from native cholesterol in terms of its ability to condense POPC, as determined by (i) pressure/area studies of mixed-lipid monolayers and (ii) its ability to increase the order of POPC bilayers (determined by electron spin resonance studies) whether on its own or admixed with cholesterol at various ratios. (2) By analysis of the perturbation of the absorption spectra, cholestatrienol was found to be freely miscible in aggregates of cholesterol in buffer. In contrast, a lack of any detectable direct interaction of the sterol molecules in POPC bilayers was detected. (3) Fluorescence intensity and lifetime measurements of POPC/sterol (1:1 mol/mol) at various cholesterol/cholestratrienol molar ratios (0.5:1 up to 1:1 cholestatrienol/POPC) confirmed that sterol molecules in the membrane matrix were not associated to any great degree. (4) A quantitative estimate of how close sterol molecules approach each other in the membrane matrix was evaluated from the concentration dependence of the steady-state depolarization of fluorescence and was found to be 10.6 A. From geometrical considerations, the sterol/phospholipid phase at 1:1 mol/mol is depicted as each sterol having four POPC molecules as nearest neighbors. We term this arrangement of the lipid matrix an "ordered bimolecular mesomorphic lattice". (5) The concentration dependence of depolarization of fluorescence of cholestatrienol in POPC liposomes in the absence of cholesterol yielded results that were consistent with the cholestatrienol molecules being homogeneously dispersed throughout the phospholipid phase at sterol/POPC ratios of less than 1:1. (6) From qualitative calculations of the van der Walls' hydrophobic interactions of the lipid species, the phospholipid condensing effect of cholesterol is postulated to arise from increased interpenetration of the flexible methylene segments of the acyl chains, as a direct result of their greater mutual attraction compared to their attraction for neighboring sterol molecules. (7) The interdependence of the ordered bimolecular mesomorphic lattice and the acyl chain condensation is discussed in an effort to understand the ability of cholesterol to modulate the physical and mechanical properties of biological membranes.  相似文献   

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