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1.
The plasma membrane outer leaflet plays a key role in determining the existence of rafts and detergent-resistant membrane domains. Monolayers with lipid composition mimicking that of the outer leaflet of renal brush border membranes (BBM) have been deposited on mica and studied by atomic force microscopy. Sphingomyelin (SM) and palmitoyloleoyl phosphatidylcholine (POPC) mixtures, at molar ratios varying from 2:1 to 4:1, were phase-separated into liquid condensed (LC) SM-enriched phase and liquid expanded (LE) POPC-enriched phase. The LC phase accounted for 33 and 58% of the monolayers surface for 2:1 and 4:1 mixtures, respectively. Addition of 20-50 mol % cholesterol (Chl) to the SM/POPC (3:1) mixtures induced marked changes in the topology of monolayers. Whereas Chl promoted the connection between SM domains at 20 mol %, increasing Chl concentration progressively reduced the size of domains and the height differences between the phases. Lateral heterogeneity was, however, still present at 33 mol % Chl. The results indicate that the lipid composition of the outer leaflet is most likely responsible for the BBM thermotropic transition properties. They also strongly suggest that the common maneuver that consists of depleting membrane cholesterol to suppress rafts does not abolish the lateral heterogeneity of BBM membranes.  相似文献   

2.
Some lipid mixtures form membranes containing submicroscopic (nanodomain) ordered lipid domains (rafts). Some of these nanodomains are so small (radius <5 nm) that they cannot be readily detected with Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET)-labeled lipid pairs with large Ro. We define such domains as ultrananodomains. We studied the effect of lipid structure/composition on the formation of ultrananodomains in lipid vesicles using a dual-FRET-pair approach in which only one FRET pair had Ro values that were sufficiently small to detect the ultrananodomains. Using this approach, we measured the temperature dependence of domain and ultrananodomain formation for vesicles composed of various mixtures containing a high-Tm lipid (brain sphingomyelin (SM)) or dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC)), low-Tm lipid (dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC) or 1-palmitoyl 2-oleoyl phosphatidylcholine (POPC)), and a lower (28 mol %) or higher (38 mol %) cholesterol concentration. For every lipid combination tested, the thermal stabilities of the ordered domains were similar, in agreement with our prior studies. However, the range of temperatures over which ultrananodomains formed was highly lipid-type dependent. Overall, vesicles that were closest to mammalian plasma membrane in lipid composition (i.e., with brain SM, POPC, and/or higher cholesterol) formed ultrananodomains in preference to larger domains over the widest temperature range. Relative to DPPC, the favorable effect of SM on ultrananodomain formation versus larger domains was especially large. In addition, the favorable effect of a high cholesterol concentration, and of POPC versus DOPC, on the formation of ultrananodomains versus larger domains was greater in vesicles containing SM than in those containing DPPC. We speculate that it is likely that natural mammalian lipids are tuned to maximize the tendency to form ultrananodomains relative to larger domains. The observation that domain size is more sensitive than domain formation to membrane composition has implications for how membrane domain properties may be regulated in vivo.  相似文献   

3.
Several cell surface eukaryotic proteins have a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) modification at the C-terminal end that serves as an anchor to the plasma membrane and could be responsible for the presence of GPI proteins in rafts, a type of functionally important membrane microdomain enriched in sphingolipids and cholesterol. In order to understand better how GPI proteins partition into rafts, the insertion of the GPI-anchored alkaline phosphatase (AP) was studied in real-time using atomic force microscopy. Supported phospholipid bilayers made of a mixture of sphingomyelin–dioleoylphosphatidylcholine containing cholesterol (Chl+) or not (Chl–) were used to mimic the fluid-ordered lipid phase separation in biological membranes. Spontaneous insertion of AP through its GPI anchor was observed inside both Chl+ and Chl– lipid ordered domains, but AP insertion was markedly increased by the presence of cholesterol.  相似文献   

4.
"Lipid rafts" enriched in glycosphingolipids (GSL), GPI-anchored proteins, and cholesterol have been proposed as functional microdomains in cell membranes. However, evidence supporting their existence has been indirect and controversial. In the past year, two studies used fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) microscopy to probe for the presence of lipid rafts; rafts here would be defined as membrane domains containing clustered GPI-anchored proteins at the cell surface. The results of these studies, each based on a single protein, gave conflicting views of rafts. To address the source of this discrepancy, we have now used FRET to study three different GPI-anchored proteins and a GSL endogenous to several different cell types. FRET was detected between molecules of the GSL GM1 labeled with cholera toxin B-subunit and between antibody-labeled GPI-anchored proteins, showing these raft markers are in submicrometer proximity in the plasma membrane. However, in most cases FRET correlated with the surface density of the lipid raft marker, a result inconsistent with significant clustering in microdomains. We conclude that in the plasma membrane, lipid rafts either exist only as transiently stabilized structures or, if stable, comprise at most a minor fraction of the cell surface.  相似文献   

5.
Tissue-nonspecific alkaline phosphatase (TNAP) is associated to the plasma membrane via a GPI-anchor and plays a key role in the biomineralization process. In plasma membranes, most GPI-anchored proteins are associated with "lipid rafts", ordered microdomains enriched in sphingolipids, glycosphingolipids and cholesterol. In order to better understand the role of lipids present in rafts and their interactions with GPI-anchored proteins, the insertion of TNAP into different lipid raft models was studied using dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC), cholesterol (Chol), sphingomyelin (SM) and ganglioside (GM1). Thus, the membrane models studied were binary systems (9:1 molar ratio) containing DPPC:Chol, DPPC:SM and DPPC:GM1, ternary systems (8:1:1 molar ratio) containing DPPC:Chol:SM, DPPC:Chol:GM1 and DPPC:SM:GM1 and finally, a quaternary system (7:1:1:1 molar ratio) containing DPPC:Chol:SM:GM1. Calorimetry analysis of the liposomes and proteoliposomes indicate that lateral phase segregation could be noted only in the presence of cholesterol, with the formation of cholesterol-rich microdomains centered above Tc=41.5°C. The presence of GM1 and SM into DPPC-liposomes influenced mainly ΔH and Δt(1/2) values. The gradual increase in the complexity of the systems decreased the activity of the enzyme incorporated. The presence of the enzyme also fluidifies the systems, as seen by the intense reduction in ?H values, but do not alter Tc values significantly. Therefore, the study of different microdomains and its biophysical characterization may contribute to the knowledge of the interactions between the lipids present in MVs and its interactions with TNAP.  相似文献   

6.
Phase separation of glycolipids in lipid mono- and bilayers is of great interest for the understanding of membrane function. The distribution of the ganglioside GM1 in sphingomyelin (SM)/1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl- sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC), SM/1,2-dipalmitoyl- sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DOPC) and SM/cholesterol/POPC Langmuir-Blodgett (LB) monolayers transferred at 36 mN/m has been studied by scanning force microscopy. Besides lateral organization of the glycolipid in LB monolayers as deduced from topography, material properties have been investigated by phase imaging, pulsed force mode and force modulation microscopy. It was shown that GM1 preferentially clusters in an ordered lipid matrix, i.e. the SM phase in the case of the SM/POPC and SM/DOPC mixture or in the ordered phase of POPC/SM/cholesterol monolayers. At higher local concentrations, three-dimensional protrusions enriched in GM1 occur, which may represent a precursor for the formation of micelles budding into the aqueous subphase. Electronic supplementary material to this paper can be obtained by using the Springer Link server located at http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00249-002-0232-4.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Recently, an increasing evidence accumulated for the existence of lipid microdomains, called lipid rafts, in cell membranes, which may play an important role in many important membrane-associated biological processes. Suitable model systems for studying biophysical properties of lipid rafts are lipid vesicles composed of three-component lipid mixtures, such as POPC/SM/cholesterol, which exhibit a rich phase diagram, including raft-like liquid-ordered/liquid-disordered phase coexistence regions. We explored the temperature, pressure and concentration-dependent phase behavior of such canonical model raft mixtures using the Laurdan fluorescence spectroscopic technique. Hydrostatic pressure has not only been used as a physical parameter for studying the stability and energetics of these systems, but also because high pressure is an important feature of certain natural membrane environments. We show that the liquid-disordered/liquid-ordered phase coexistence regions of POPC/SM/cholesterol model raft mixtures extends over a very wide temperature range of about 50 degrees C. Upon pressurization, an overall ordered membrane state is reached at pressures of approximately 1,000 bar at 20 degrees C, and of approximately 2,000 bar at 40 degrees C. Incorporation of 5 mol% gramicidin as a model ion channel slightly increases the overall order parameter profile in the l(o)+l(d) two-phase coexistence region, probably by selectively partitioning into l(d) domains, does not change the overall phase behavior, however. This behavior is in contrast to the effect of the peptide incorporation into simple, one-component phospholipid bilayer systems.  相似文献   

9.
Sulfatides (galactosylceramidesulfates) are negatively charged glycosphingolipids that are important constituents of brain myelin membranes. These membranes are also highly enriched in galactosylceramide and cholesterol. It has been implicated that sulfatides, together with other sphingolipids, take part in lateral domain formation in biological membranes. This study was conducted to characterize the lateral phase behavior of N-palmitoyl-sulfatide in mixed bilayer membranes. Going from simple lipid mixtures with sulfatide as the only sphingolipid in a fluid matrix of POPC, to more complex membranes including other sphingolipids, we have examined 1) ordered domain formation with sulfatide, 2) sterol enrichment in such domains and 3) stabilization of the domains against temperature by the addition of calcium. Using two distinct phase selective fluorescent probes, trans-parinaric acid and cholestatrienol, together with a quencher in the fluid phase, we were able to distinguish between ordered domains in general and ordered domains enriched in sterol. We found that N-palmitoyl-sulfatide formed ordered domains when present as the only sphingolipid in a fluid phospholipid bilayer, but these domains did not contain sterol and their stability was unaffected by calcium. However, at low, physiologically relevant concentrations, sulfatide partitioned favorably into domains enriched in other sphingolipids and cholesterol. These domains were stabilized against temperature in the presence of divalent cations. We conclude that sulfatides are likely to affect the lateral organization of biomembranes.  相似文献   

10.
The external membrane leaflet plays a key role in the organization of the cell plasma membrane as a mosaic of ordered microdomains enriched in sphingolipids and cholesterol and of fluid domains. In this study, the thermotropic behavior and the topology of bilayers made of a phosphatidylcholine/sphingomyelin mixture, which mimicks the lipid composition of the external leaflet of renal brush-border membranes, were examined by differential scanning calorimetry and atomic force microscopy. In the absence of cholesterol, a broad phase separation process occurred where ordered gel phase domains of size varying from the mesoscopic to the microscopic scale, enriched in sphingomyelin, occupied half of the bilayer surface at room temperature. Increasing amounts of cholesterol progressively decreased the enthalpy of the transition and modified the topology of membranes domains up to a concentration of 33 mol % for which no membrane domains were detected. These results strongly suggest that, in membranes highly enriched in sphingolipids like renal and intestinal brush borders, there is a threshold close to the physiological concentration above which cholesterol acts as a suppressor rather than as a promoter of membrane domains. They also suggest that cholesterol depletion does not abolish the lateral heterogenity in brush-border membranes.  相似文献   

11.
Sphingomyelin (SM) is a major phospholipid in most cell membranes. SMs are composed of a long-chain base (often sphingosine, 18:1(Δ4t)), and N-linked acyl chains (often 16:0, 18:0 or 24:1(Δ15c)). Cholesterol interacts with SM in cell membranes, but the acyl chain preference of this interaction is not fully elucidated. In this study we have examined the effects of hydrophobic mismatch and interdigitation on cholesterol/sphingomyelin interaction in complex bilayer membranes. We measured the capacity of cholestatrienol (CTL) and cholesterol to form sterol-enriched ordered domains with saturated SM species having different chain lengths (14 to 24 carbons) in ternary bilayer membranes. We also determined the equilibrium bilayer partitioning coefficient of CTL with 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC) membranes containing 20mol% of saturated SM analogs. Ours results show that while CTL and cholesterol formed sterol-enriched domains with both short and long-chain SM species, the sterols preferred interaction with 16:0-SM over any other saturated chain length SM analog. When CTL membrane partitioning was determined with fluid POPC bilayers containing 20mol% of a saturated chain length SM analog, the highest affinity was seen with 16:0-SM (both at 23 and 37°C). These results indicate that hydrophobic mismatch and/or interdigitation attenuate sterol/SM association and thus affect lateral distribution of sterols in the bilayer membrane.  相似文献   

12.
Mixtures of unsaturated lipids, sphingolipids, and cholesterol form coexisting liquid-disordered and sphingolipid and cholesterol-rich liquid-ordered (Lo) phases in water. The detergent Triton X-100 does not readily solubilize Lo domains, but does solubilize liquid-disordered domains, and is commonly used to prepare detergent-resistant membranes from cells and model membranes. However, it has been proposed that in membranes with mixtures of sphingomyelin (SM), 1-palmitoyl 2-oleoyl phosphatidylcholine (POPC), and cholesterol Triton X-100 may induce Lo domain formation, and therefore detergent-resistant membranes may not reflect the presence of preexisting domains. To examine this hypothesis, the effect of Triton on Lo domain formation was measured in SM/POPC/cholesterol vesicles. Nitroxide quenching methods that can detect ordered nanodomains with radii >12 Å showed that in the absence of Triton X-100 this mixture formed ordered state domains that melt with a midpoint (= Tmid) at ∼45°C. However, Tmid was lower when detected using various fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) pairs. Furthermore, the Tmid value was Ro dependent, and decreased as Ro increased. Because FRET can only readily detect domains with radii >Ro, this result can be explained by domain radii that are close to Ro and decrease as temperature increases. An analysis of FRET and quenching data suggests that nanodomain radius gradually decreases from ≥150 Å to <40 Å as temperature increases from 10 to 45°C. Interestingly, the presence of Triton X-100 or a transmembrane-type peptide did not stabilize ordered state formation when detected by nitroxide quenching, i.e., did not increase Tmid. However, FRET-detected Tmid did increase in the presence of Triton X-100 or a transmembrane peptide, indicating that both increased domain size. Controls showed that the results could not be accounted for by probe-induced perturbations. Thus, SM/POPC/cholesterol, a mixture similar to that in the outer leaflet of plasma membranes, forms nanodomains at physiological temperatures, and TX-100 does not induce domain formation or increase the fraction of the bilayer in the ordered state, although it does increase domain size by coalescing preexisting domains.  相似文献   

13.
Sulfatides (galactosylceramidesulfates) are negatively charged glycosphingolipids that are important constituents of brain myelin membranes. These membranes are also highly enriched in galactosylceramide and cholesterol. It has been implicated that sulfatides, together with other sphingolipids, take part in lateral domain formation in biological membranes. This study was conducted to characterize the lateral phase behavior of N-palmitoyl-sulfatide in mixed bilayer membranes. Going from simple lipid mixtures with sulfatide as the only sphingolipid in a fluid matrix of POPC, to more complex membranes including other sphingolipids, we have examined 1) ordered domain formation with sulfatide, 2) sterol enrichment in such domains and 3) stabilization of the domains against temperature by the addition of calcium. Using two distinct phase selective fluorescent probes, trans-parinaric acid and cholestatrienol, together with a quencher in the fluid phase, we were able to distinguish between ordered domains in general and ordered domains enriched in sterol. We found that N-palmitoyl-sulfatide formed ordered domains when present as the only sphingolipid in a fluid phospholipid bilayer, but these domains did not contain sterol and their stability was unaffected by calcium. However, at low, physiologically relevant concentrations, sulfatide partitioned favorably into domains enriched in other sphingolipids and cholesterol. These domains were stabilized against temperature in the presence of divalent cations. We conclude that sulfatides are likely to affect the lateral organization of biomembranes.  相似文献   

14.
Jian Zhong 《Biophysical journal》2009,96(11):4610-4621
Lipid rafts are specialized liquid-ordered (Lo) phases of the cell membrane that are enriched in sphingolipids and cholesterol (Chl), and surrounded by a liquid-disordered (Ld) phase enriched in glycerophospholipids. Lipid rafts are involved in the generation of pathological forms of proteins that are associated with neurodegenerative diseases. To investigate the effects of lipid composition and phase on the generation of pathological forms of proteins, we constructed an Ld-gel phase-separated 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC)/sphingomyelin (from bovine brain (BSM))-supported lipid bilayer (SLB) and an Ld-Lo phase-separated POPC/BSM/Chl SLB. We used in situ time-lapse atomic force microscopy to study the interactions between these SLBs and the prion peptide K106TNMKHMAGAAAAGAVVGGLG126 (PrP106-126) amide, numbered according to the human prion-peptide sequence. Our results show that: 1), with the presence of BSM in the Ld phase, the PrP106-126 amide induces fully penetrated porations in the Ld phase of POPC/BSM SLB and POPC/BSM/Chl SLB; 2), with the presence of both BSM and Chl in the Ld phase, the PrP106-126 amide induces the disintegration of the Ld phase of POPC/BSM/Chl SLB; and 3), with the presence of both BSM and Chl in the Lo phase, PrP106-126 amide induces membrane thinning in the Lo phase of POPC/BSM/Chl SLB. These results provide comprehensive insight into the process by which the PrP106-126 amide interacts with lipid membranes.  相似文献   

15.
The disorders in cholesterol biosynthesis pathway and various diseases manifest in the accumulation of cholesterol precursors in the human tissues and cellular membranes. In this paper the effect of desmosterol – one of cholesterol precursors – on model lipid membranes was studied. The investigations were performed for binary SM/desmo and POPC/desmo and ternary SM/POPC/desmo monolayers. Moreover, the experiments based on the gradual substitution of cholesterol by desmosterol in SM/POPC/chol = 1:1:1 system were done. The obtained results allowed one to conclude that desmosterol is of lower domains promoting and stabilizing properties and packs less tightly with the lipids in monolayers. Moreover, desmosterol probably could replace cholesterol in model membranes, but only at its low proportion in the system (2%), however, at a higher degree of cholesterol substitution a significant decrease of the monolayer stability and packing and alterations in the film morphology were detected. The results collected in this work together with those from previous experiments allowed one to analyze the effect of a double bond in the sterol side chain as well as its position in the ring system on membrane activity of the molecule and to verify Bloch hypothesis.  相似文献   

16.
Cholesterol is believed to be an important component in compositionally distinct lipid domains in the cellular plasma membrane, which are referred to as lipid rafts. Insight into how cholesterol influences the interactions that contribute to plasma membrane organization can be acquired from model lipid membranes. Here we characterize the lipid mixing and phase behavior exhibited by (15)N-dilaurolyphosphatidycholine ((15)N-DLPC)/deuterated distearoylphosphatiylcholine (D(70)-DSPC) membranes with various amounts of cholesterol (0, 3, 7, 15 or 19mol%) at room temperature. The microstructures and compositions of individual membrane domains were determined by imaging the same membrane locations with both atomic force microscopy (AFM) and high-resolution secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) performed with a Cameca NanoSIMS 50. As the cholesterol composition increased from 0 to 19mol%, the circular ordered domains became more elongated, and the amount of (15)N-DLPC in the gel-phase domains remained constant at 6-7mol%. Individual and micron-sized clusters of nanoscopic domains enriched in D(70)-DSPC were abundant in the 19mol% cholesterol membrane. AFM imaging showed that these lipid domains had irregular borders, indicating that they were gel-phase domains, and not non-ideally mixed lipid clusters or nanoscopic liquid-ordered domains.  相似文献   

17.
Evidence is now accumulating that the plasma membrane is organized in different lipid and protein subdomains. Thus, glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored proteins are proposed to be clustered in membrane microdomains enriched in cholesterol and sphingolipids, called rafts.By a detergent-mediated method, alkaline phosphatase, a GPI-anchored enzyme, was efficiently inserted into the membrane of sphingolipids- and cholesterol-rich liposomes as demonstrated by flotation in sucrose gradients. We have determined the enzyme extraluminal orientation. Using defined lipid components to assess the possible requirements for GPI-anchored protein insertion, we have demonstrated that insertion into membranes was cholesterol-dependent as the cholesterol addition increased the enzyme incorporation in simple phosphatidylcholine liposomes.  相似文献   

18.
Evidence is now accumulating that the plasma membrane is organized in different lipid and protein subdomains. Thus, glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored proteins are proposed to be clustered in membrane microdomains enriched in cholesterol and sphingolipids, called rafts.By a detergent-mediated method, alkaline phosphatase, a GPI-anchored enzyme, was efficiently inserted into the membrane of sphingolipids- and cholesterol-rich liposomes as demonstrated by flotation in sucrose gradients. We have determined the enzyme extraluminal orientation. Using defined lipid components to assess the possible requirements for GPI-anchored protein insertion, we have demonstrated that insertion into membranes was cholesterol-dependent as the cholesterol addition increased the enzyme incorporation in simple phosphatidylcholine liposomes.  相似文献   

19.
Within the cell membrane glycosphingolipids and cholesterol cluster together in distinct domains or lipid rafts, along with glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored proteins in the outer leaflet and acylated proteins in the inner leaflet of the bilayer. These lipid rafts are characterized by insolubility in detergents such as Triton X-100 at 4 degrees C. Studies on model membrane systems have shown that the clustering of glycosphingolipids and GPI-anchored proteins in lipid rafts is an intrinsic property of the acyl chains of these membrane components, and that detergent extraction does not artefactually induce clustering. Cholesterol is not required for clustering in model membranes but does enhance this process. Single particle tracking, chemical cross-linking, fluorescence resonance energy transfer and immunofluorescence microscopy have been used to directly visualize lipid rafts in membranes. The sizes of the rafts observed in these studies range from 70-370 nm, and depletion of cellular cholesterol levels disrupts the rafts. Caveolae, flask-shaped invaginations of the plasma membrane, that contain the coat protein caveolin, are also enriched in cholesterol and glycosphingolipids. Although caveolae are also insoluble in Triton X-100, more selective isolation procedures indicate that caveolae do not equate with detergent-insoluble lipid rafts. Numerous proteins involved in cell signalling have been identified in caveolae, suggesting that these structures may function as signal transduction centres. Depletion of membrane cholesterol with cholesterol binding drugs or by blocking cellular cholesterol biosynthesis disrupts the formation and function of both lipid rafts and caveolae, indicating that these membrane domains are involved in a range of biological processes.  相似文献   

20.
The raft hypothesis proposes that microdomains enriched in sphingolipids, cholesterol, and specific proteins are transiently formed to accomplish important cellular tasks. Equivocally, detergent-resistant membranes were initially assumed to be identical to membrane rafts, because of similarities between their compositions. In fact, the impact of detergents in membrane organization is still controversial. Here, we use phase contrast and fluorescence microscopy to observe giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs) made of erythrocyte membrane lipids (erythro-GUVs) when exposed to the detergent Triton X-100 (TX-100). We clearly show that TX-100 has a restructuring action on biomembranes. Contact with TX-100 readily induces domain formation on the previously homogeneous membrane of erythro-GUVs at physiological and room temperatures. The shape and dynamics of the formed domains point to liquid-ordered/liquid-disordered (Lo/Ld) phase separation, typically found in raft-like ternary lipid mixtures. The Ld domains are then separated from the original vesicle and completely solubilized by TX-100. The insoluble vesicle left, in the Lo phase, represents around 2/3 of the original vesicle surface at room temperature and decreases to almost 1/2 at physiological temperature. This chain of events could be entirely reproduced with biomimetic GUVs of a simple ternary lipid mixture, 2:1:2 POPC/SM/chol (phosphatidylcholine/sphyngomyelin/cholesterol), showing that this behavior will arise because of fundamental physicochemical properties of simple lipid mixtures. This work provides direct visualization of TX-100-induced domain formation followed by selective (Ld phase) solubilization in a model system with a complex biological lipid composition.  相似文献   

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