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1.
Three model membrane systems have been characterized in terms of their interaction with phospholipid exchange proteins. Large unilamellar vesicles of phosphatidylcholine prepared by ether vaporization are shown to be homogeneous by gel filtration. Phospholipid exchange proteins from three sources are capable of catalyzing the rapid exchange of approximately half of the phospholipid from these vesicles. The remaining pool of radioactive phospholipid is virtually nonexchangeable (t1/2 of several days). Small unilamellar vesicles of phosphatidylcholine prepared by cholate dialysis also exhibit two pools of phospholipid (65% rapidly exchangable, 35% very slowly exchangeable) when incubated with beef liver phospholipid exchange protein. Cytochrome oxidase vesicles prepared both by a cholate dialysis method and by a direct incorporation method have been fractionated on a Ficoll discontinuous gradient, and tested for interaction with beef heart exchange protein. Two pools of phospholipid are once again observed (70% rapidly exchangable, 30% nonexchangeable), even for vesicles which have incorporated the transmembranous enzyme at a phospholipid to protein weight ratio of 2. The size of the rapidly exchangeable pool of phosphatidylcholine for each of the vesicle systems is consistent with the calculated fraction of phospholipid in the outer monolayer. The extremely slow rate of exchange of the second pool of the second pool of phospholipid reflects the virtual nonexistence of phospholipid flip-flop in any of these model membranes.  相似文献   

2.
A novel method has been developed for the study of phospholipid exchange and fusion of phospholipid vesicles. Two homogeneous populations of single bilayer phosphatidylcholine vesicles of similar size but markedly different density have been prepared. /ldDense/rd vesicles were made from brominated dioleoyl phosphatidylcholine. /ldLight/rd vesicles were prepared from dioleoyl phosphatidylcholine. The two populations were easily separated by density gradient centrifugation. Phosphatidylcholine exchange protein from beef liver was used to promote lecithin exchange between the vesicle populations. Only the lecithin of the external monolayers of the vesicles was available for exchange by exchange protein, implying that flip-flop of vesicle phosphatidylcholine did not take place at a detectable frequency. No spontaneous intervesicle phosphatidylcholine exchange was observed. However, the dense and light vesicles did spontaneously fuse, over several hours, to produce particles of hybrid density.  相似文献   

3.
Size enlargement of dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine vesicles was greatly accelerated in the range of the phase-transition temperatures, when fatty acid concentration was above a threshold level (‘critical’ concentration). This ‘critical’ concentration varied with the length of the fatty acid chain. The size enlargement process had second-order kinetics dependent on the vesicle concentration. Alkaline pH and low ionic strength inhibited the rate of size enlargement.Phospholipid exchange between dimyristoyl and dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine vesicles increased abruptly above a ‘critical’ fatty acid concentration. The donor vesicles were those vesicles in which fatty acids reached the ‘critical’ concentration. The phospholipid exchange occurred both in fluid- and in solid-state vesicles. The ‘critical’ fatty acid concentration accelerating the phospholipid exchange process was lower than that accelerating the size enlargement process.The phospholipid exchange process explained in terms of a diminished hydrophobic attraction among the phospholipid molecules of the bilayer occurs via a free phospholipid molecule transfer through the aqueous phase. The size enlargement process is interpreted in terms of high fatty acid concentration in the membrane fluid domains. The membrane structure is locally perturbed inducing vesicle sticking after collision.  相似文献   

4.
Bovine liver phospholipid exchange protein catalyzes the transfer of phosphatidylcholine between donor and acceptor populations of single bilayer phospholipid vesicles. In comparing egg and dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine vesicles, larger transfer rates are found for the unsaturated phospholipid. The bidirectional transfer rates measured from donor to acceptor and from acceptor to donor, are equivalent, suggesting that the protein facilitates an exchange rather than a net transfer of phosphatidylcholine.  相似文献   

5.
Transbilayer migration of membrane phospholipid arising from membrane insertion of the terminal human complement proteins has been investigated. Asymmetric vesicles containing pyrene-labeled phosphatidylcholine (pyrenePC) concentrated in the inner monolayer were prepared by outer monolayer exchange between pyrenePC-containing large unilamellar vesicles and excess (unlabeled) small unilamellar vesicles, using bovine liver phosphatidylcholine-specific exchange protein. After depletion of pyrenePC from the outer monolayer, the asymmetric large unilamellar vesicles were isolated by gel filtration and exposed to the purified C5b-9 proteins at 37 degrees C. Transbilayer exchange of phospholipid between inner and outer monolayers during C5b-9 assembly was monitored by changes in pyrene excimer and monomer fluorescence. Membrane deposition of the C5b67 complex (by incubation with C5b6 + C7) caused no change in pyrenePC fluorescence. Addition of C8 to the C5b67 vesicles resulted in a dose-dependent decrease in the excimer/monomer ratio. This change was observed both in the presence and absence of complement C9. No change in fluorescence was observed for control vesicles exposed to C8 (in the absence of membrane C5b67), or upon C5b-9 addition to vesicles containing pyrenePC symmetrically distributed between inner and outer monolayers. These data suggest that a transbilayer exchange of phospholipid between inner and outer monolayers is initiated upon C8 binding to C5b67. The fluorescence data were analyzed according to a "random walk" model for excimer formation developed for the case where pyrenePC is asymmetrically distributed between lipid bilayers. Based on this analysis, we estimate that a net transbilayer migration of approximately 1% of total membrane phospholipid is initiated upon C8 binding to C5b67. The potential significance of this transbilayer exchange of membrane phospholipid to the biological activity of the terminal complement proteins is considered.  相似文献   

6.
The topological distribution of the two major phospholipids of brush-border membrane, phosphatidylcholine (PC) and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), has been investigated using brush-border membrane vesicles from rabbit small intestine. Bee venom phospholipase A2 and phosphatidylcholine exchange protein from bovine liver were used as membrane probes. It is shown that the brush-border membrane retains its integrity under conditions of phospholipase hydrolysis and intermembrane phospholipid exchange. Kinetic analysis of the data of phospholipase hydrolysis and phospholipid exchange at temperatures under 10 degrees C shows that both PC and PE occur in two pools: a minor (about 25%) more readily accessible pool and a major one (about 75%) less readily available. The rate of PC exchange between these two pools is relatively fast. The half-time derived under conditions of phospholipase hydrolysis is of the order of 20 min. Under conditions of phospholipid exchange the exchange rates may be even faster. The difference in exchange kinetics observed with the two methods of probing is probably due to changes in membrane properties such as the bilayer fluidity induced by the probing process itself. It is proposed that the two pools represent the transverse distribution of the phospholipids. The two major phospholipids of brush-border membranes, PC and PE, would be distributed mainly on the inner (cytoplasmic) side of the brush-border membrane. The phospholipid exchange between the brush-border vesicles and unilamellar phosphatidylcholine vesicles in the presence of phosphatidylcholine exchange protein reveals that significant quantities of phospholipid are taken up by brush-border membrane independently, i.e., in a separate process independent of the exchange protein-catalyzed phosphatidylcholine exchange.  相似文献   

7.
ESR spectrometry has been used to study fatty acid spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine exchange from single bilayer donor vesicles to various acceptor systems, such as intact or differently treated mitochondria, phospholipid multilamellar vesicles or single bilayer vesicles. This exchange is catalyzed by soluble non-specific rat liver protein, first investigated by Bloj and Zilversmit in 1977 (J. Biol. Chem. 252, 1613--1619). Non-catalyzed phosphatidylcholine exchange has also been studied. Full inhibition of both mechanisms occurs with lipid-depleted acceptor mitochondria, while N-ethylmaleimide-treated mitochondria behave as good acceptors during catalyzed exchange but are in no way effective during spontaneous exchange. Non-catalyzed exchange does not take place with phospholipase D-treated mitochondria as acceptors, while the pure catalyzed mechanism is inhibited by 28%. Neither multilamellar nor single bilayer phospholipid vesicles exchange spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine in the absence of protein, the former being a poorer acceptor system than the latter during catalyzed exchange, when this activity is 31 and 80%, respectively, of that of intact mitochondria. The hypothesis is made that the spontaneous mechanism is active among intact natural membranes and could be of some importance in vivo. Furthermore, the biomembrane protein moiety is assumed to be involved in the catalyzed exchange more as a phospholipid spacer than as a binder between the exchange protein and the membrane involved. Phospholipids, on the contrary, appear to be important for both functions.  相似文献   

8.
G Lipka  J A Op den Kamp  H Hauser 《Biochemistry》1991,30(51):11828-11836
All classes of phospholipids present in brush border membrane are exchanged in a 1:1 ratio for egg phosphatidylcholine when brush border membrane vesicles from rabbit small intestine are incubated with small unilamellar vesicles of egg phosphatidylcholine. The exchange reaction exhibits biphasic kinetics similar to those of the hydrolysis of brush border membrane phospholipids by phospholipase A2 and sphingomyelinase C. In both reactions there is an initial fast phase followed by a markedly slower one. The phospholipid exchange appears to be catalyzed by intrinsic brush border membrane protein(s), while the digestion by phospholipases is mediated by externally added enzymes. From a comparison of the kinetics of phospholipid exchange and phospholipid hydrolysis, the following conclusions can be drawn: Both sets of experiments indicate the presence of two phospholipid pools differing in the rate of phospholipid exchange and hydrolysis. Except for sphingomyelin, the size of the two phospholipid pools derived from phospholipid exchange is in good agreement with that derived from phospholipid hydrolysis. This is the main finding of this work, and on the basis of this result the two lipid pools are tentatively assigned to phospholipid molecules located on the outer and inner layer of the brush border membrane. The slow rate of phospholipid exchange reflects the rate of transverse or flip-flop movement of phospholipids. The half-time of this motion is approximately 8 h for isoelectric (neutral) phospholipids such as phosphatidylethanolamine and approximately 80 h for negatively charged phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylinositol. Isoelectric phospholipids (phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine) are preferentially located on the inner (cytoplasmic) side (to about 70%) while the negatively charged phospholipids are more evenly distributed: 55-60% are located on the inner side.  相似文献   

9.
Mono- and dipalmitoylphosphatidylethanolamine derivatives have been synthesized and used to evaluate the role of cross-links between the amino groups of two phospholipid molecules in the rate of cholesterol movement between membranes. Incorporation of the cross-linked phospholipids into small unilamellar vesicles (the donor species) decreased the rate of spontaneous cholesterol exchange with acceptor membranes (small unilamellar vesicles or Mycoplasma gallisepticum cells). These results suggest that the cross-linking of aminophospholipids by reactive intermediates, which may be one of the degenerative transformations associated with peroxidation of unsaturated lipids and cellular aging, can inhibit cholesterol exchangeability in biological membranes. The rates of spontaneous [14C]cholesterol and protein-mediated 14C-labeled phospholipid exchange from diamide-treated mycoplasma and erythrocyte membranes have also been measured. The formation of extensive disulfide bonds in the membrane proteins of M. gallisepticum enhanced the 14C-labeled phospholipid exchange rate but did not affect the rate of [14C]cholesterol exchange. The rates of radiolabeled cholesterol and phospholipid exchange between erythrocyte ghosts and vesicles were both enhanced (but to different extents) when ghosts were treated with diamide. These observations suggest that diamide-induced oxidative cross-linking of sulfhydryl groups in membrane proteins does not lead to random defects in the lipid domain.  相似文献   

10.
ESR spectrometry has been used to study fatty acid spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine exchange from single bilayer donor vesicles to various acceptor systems, such as intact or differently treated mitochondria, phospholipid multilamellar vesicles or single bilayer vesicles. This exchange is catalyzed by soluble non-specific rat liver protein, first investigated by Bloj and Zilversmit in 1977 (J. Biol. Chem. 252, 1613–1619). Non-catalyzed phosphatidylcholine exchange has also been studied. Full inhibition of both mechanisms occurs with lipid-depleted acceptor mitochondria, while N-ethylmaleimide-treated mitochondria behave as good acceptors during catalyzed exchange but are in no way effective during spontaneous exchange. Non-catalyzed exchange does not take place with phospholipase D-treated mitochondria as acceptors, while the pure catalyzed mechanism is inhibited by 28%. Neither multilamellar nor single bilayer phospholipid vesicles exchange spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine in the absence of protein, the former being a poorer acceptor system than the latter during catalyzed exchange, when this activity is 31 and 80%, respectively, of that of intact mitochondria. The hypothesis is made that the spontaneous mechanism is active among intact natural membranes and could be of some importance in vivo. Furthermore, the biomembrane protein moiety is assumed to be involved in the catalyzed exchange more as a phospholipid spacer than as a binder between the exchange protein and the membrane involved. Phospholipids, on the contrary, appear to be important for both functions.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Phospholipid exchange between phosphatidylinositol and phosphatidylcholine vesicles has been studied by NMR spectroscopy with use of hydrophilic paramagnetic lanthanide probes (Pr3+ and Eu3+ ions). The dependence of the lanthanide induced shifts in the 1H and 31P NMR spectra on the phospholipid composition of the vesicles could be used for its quantitative evaluation. The method has been proved to be applicable for studying phospholipid exchange stimulated by soluble proteins (postmicrosomal supernatant fraction) from rat liver. Furthermore it has been shown that the phospholipid molecules newly introduced by protein-stimulated exchange are predominantly incorporated into the outer monolayer of the vesicular bilayer membrane. This makes it possible to produce liposomes with asymmetric distribution of the phospholipids across the bilayer.  相似文献   

13.
L K Bar  Y Barenholz  T E Thompson 《Biochemistry》1987,26(17):5460-5465
Spontaneous cholesterol exchange between small unilamellar vesicles comprised of different phospholipids and their binary mixtures has been studied in order to understand the factors involved in the establishment and maintenance of intracellular cholesterol distributions. Exchange was performed from neutral donor vesicles containing different cholesterol concentrations, traces of [3H]cholesterol, and [14C]cholesteryl oleate as a nonexchangeable marker. The acceptor vesicles, in 10-fold excess, had the same composition, but 15 mol % phosphatidylglycerol was included to permit chromatographic separation. Data were best fitted by a single exponential and a base value. In donor vesicles containing only one phospholipid, the kinetic rate constants agreed with data reported previously; however, the base values were larger than the expected equilibrium value of 9.09%. The size of this nonexchangeable pool and the exchange rate were found to depend on the type of phospholipid. In binary phospholipid donor systems, well above the transition temperatures of the lipid components, the exchange parameters were preferentially closer to those of one component according to the order POPC greater than DMPC greater than DPPC greater than bovine brain SPM.  相似文献   

14.
A new, simple and versatile method to measure phospholipid transfer has been developed, based on the use of a fluorescent phospholipid derivative, 1-acyl-2-parinaroylphosphatidylcholine. Vesicles prepared of this phospholipid show a low level of fluorescence due to interactions between the fluorescent groups. When phospholipid transfer protein and vesicles consisting of non-labeled phosphatidylcholine are added the protein catalyzes an exchange of phosphatidylcholine between the labeled donor and non-labeled acceptor vesicles. The insertion of labeled phosphatidylcholine into the non-labeled vesicles is accompanied by an increase in fluorescence due to abolishment of self-quenching. The initial rate of fluorescence enhancement was found to be proportional to the amount of transfer protein added. This assay was applied to determine the effect of membrane phospholipid composition on the activity of the phosphatidylcholine-, phosphatidylinositol- and non-specific phospholipid transfer proteins. Using acceptor vesicles of egg phosphatidylcholine and various amounts of phosphatidic acid it was observed that the rate of phosphatidylcholine transfer was either stimulated, inhibited or unaffected by increased negative charge depending on the donor to acceptor ratio and the protein used. In another set of experiments acceptor vesicles were prepared of phosphatidylcholine analogues in which the ester bonds were replaced with ether bonds or carbon-carbon bonds. Assuming that only a strictly coupled exchange between phosphatidylcholine and analogues gives rise to the observed fluorescence increase, orders of substrate preference could be established for the phosphatidylcholine- and phosphatidylinositol transfer proteins.  相似文献   

15.
Small unilamellar phosphatidylcholine vesicles, formed by solubilizing phosphatidylcholine with sodium cholate and removing the detergent by gel filtration, have been studied in their interaction with phospholipid exchange protein. The exchange of phosphatidylcholine between the vesicles and erythrocyte ghosts was greatly stimulated by the phosphatidylcholine-specific exchange protein from bovine liver. It was found that 95% of the phosphatidylcholine was readily available for exchange within 3 h at 37°C. In similar vesicles prepared by sonication only 70% of the phosphatidylcholine was rapidly exchangeable. Our results indicate that the transmembrane movement of phosphatidylcholine across the bilayer of vesicles prepared by the cholate technique is a relatively fast process. The results are discussed with respect to the presence of trace amounts of lipid-associated cholate which may facilitate the transbilayer exchange of phosphatidylcholine.  相似文献   

16.
The interaction and mixing of membrane components in sonicated unilamellar vesicles and also non-sonicated multilamellar vesicles prepared from highly purified phospholipids suspended in NaCl solutions has been examined. Electron microscopy and differential scanning calorimetry were used to characterize the extent and kinetics of mixing of membrane components between different vesicle populations. No appreciable fusion was detected between populations of non-sonicated phospholipid vesicles incubated in aqueous salt (NaCl) solutions. Mixing of vesicle membrane components via diffusion of phospholipid molecules between vesicles was observed in populations of negatively charged phosphatidylglycerol vesicles but similar exchange diffusion was not detected in populations of neutral phosphatidylcholine vesicles. Incubation of sonicated vesicle populations at temperatures close to or above the phospholipid transition temperature resulted in an increase in vesicle size and mixing of vesicle membrane components as determined by a gradual change in the thermotropic properties of the mixed vesicle population. The interaction of purified phospholipid vesicles was also examined in the presence of myristic acid and lysolecithin. Our results indicate that while these agents enhance mixing of vesicle membrane components, in most cases mixing probably proceeds via diffusion of phospholipid molecules rather than by fusion of entire vesicles. Increased mixing of vesicle membrane components was also produced when vesicles were prepared containing a purified hydrophobic protein (myelin proteolipid apoprotein) or were incubated in the presence of dimethylsulfoxide. In these two systems, however, the evidence suggests that mixing of membrane components results from the fusion of entire vesicles.  相似文献   

17.
We examined the interaction of glycolipid-containing phospholipid vesicles with rat hepatocytes in vitro. Incorporation of either N-lignoceroyldihydrolactocerebroside or the monosialoganglioside, GM1, enhanced liposomal lipid uptake 4–5-fold as judged by the uptake of radioactive phosphatidylcholine as a vesicle marker. Cerebroside enhanced phospholipid uptake only when incorporated into dimyristoyl, but not into egg phosphatidylcholine vesicles. The lack of cerebroside effect in egg phosphatidylcholine-containing vesicles appeared to be due to a limited exposure of the carbohydrate part of the glycolipid as suggested by the reduced agglutinability of those vesicles by Ricinus communis agglutinin.In contrast to the results with radioactive phosphatidylcholine, we observed only a 20% increase in vesicle-cell association as a result of glycolipid incorporation, when a trace amount of [14C]cholesteryloleate served as a marker of the liposomal lipids or when using the fluorescent dye, carboxyfluorescein, as a marker of the aqueous space of the vesicles. By the same token, intracellular delivery of vesicle-contents was only slightly enhanced (approx. 10%).The discrepancy between the association with the cells of phosphatidylcholine on the one hand and cholesteryoleate or entrapped marker on the other suggests different mechanisms of uptake for these markers. Our results are compatible with the notion that the main effect of incorporation of glycolipids into the vesicles is the enhancement of exchange or transfer of phospholipid molecules between vesicles and cells. Incubation of the cells with galactose or lactose, prior to addition of vesicles, suggests that this enhanced phospholipid exchange or transfer involves specific recognition of the terminal galactose residues of the glycolipid vesicles by a receptor present on the plasma membranes of hepatocytes.  相似文献   

18.
Vitamin D3 can be hydroxylated sequentially by cytochrome P450scc (CYP11A1) producing 20-hydroxyvitamin D3, 20,23-dihydroxyvitamin D3 and 17,20,23-trihydroxyvitamin D3. The aim of this study was to characterize the ability of vitamin D3 to associate with phospholipid vesicles and to determine the kinetics of metabolism of vitamin D3 by P450scc in vesicles and in 2-hydroxypropyl-beta-cyclodextrin (cyclodextrin). Gel filtration of phospholipid vesicles showed that the vitamin D3 remained quantitatively associated with the phospholipid membrane. Vitamin D3 exchanged between vesicles at a rate 3.8-fold higher than for cholesterol exchange and was stimulated by N-62 StAR protein. The Km of P450scc for vitamin D3 in vesicles was 3.3 mol vitamin D3/mol phospholipid and the rate of conversion of vitamin D3 to 20-hydroxyvitamin D3 was first order with respect to the vitamin D3 concentration for the range of concentrations of vitamin D3 that could be incorporated into the vesicle membrane. 20-Hydroxyvitamin D3 was further hydroxylated by P450scc in vesicles, producing primarily 20,23-dihydroxyvitamin D3, with Km and kcat values 22- and 6-fold lower than those for vitamin D3, respectively. 20,23-dihydroxyvitamin D3 was converted to 17,20,23-trihydroxyvitamin D3 with even lower Km and kcat values. Vitamin D3 and cholesterol were metabolized with comparable efficiencies in cyclodextrin, but the Km for both showed a strong dependence on the cyclodextrin concentration, decreasing with decreasing cyclodextrin. This study shows that vitamin D3 quantitatively associates with phospholipid vesicles, can exchange between membranes, and can be hydroxylated by membrane-associated P450scc but with lower efficiency than for cholesterol hydroxylation. The kcat values for metabolism of vitamin D3 in vesicles and 0.45% cyclodextrin are similar, but the ability to solubilize vitamin D3 at a concentration higher than its Km makes the cyclodextrin system more efficient for producing the hydroxyvitamin D3 metabolites for further characterization.  相似文献   

19.
Two phospholipid exchange proteins from bovine heart have been purified approximately 2000-fold and judged greater than 90% pure. The proteins are similar in molecular weight (both 33,400 by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and 23,500 by gel filtration), in amino acid composition, and in specificity, although they differ in isoelectric points, 5.3 and 5.6. The transfer of phospholipids between artificial membranes is catalyzed by these proteins at the following relative rates: 100 for phosphatidylinositol, 35 for phosphatidylcholine, 5 for sphingomyelin, and 0.1 for phosphatidylethanolamine. The use of these exchange proteins in the study of mixed phospholipid vesicle structure is demonstrated. The purified proteins catalyze the substitution of one membrane phospholipid species for another at a rate comparable to true exchange. The phospholipid exchange activity is inhibited by the presence of sphingomyelin, and also by reagents which react with sulfhydryl groups. Evidence is presented for two sites of N-ethylmaleimide binding on these exchange proteins. Reaction with one site has little effect on activity and occurs in the absence of membranes. Reaction with the second site occurs in the presence of phospholipid vesicles and leads to complete, irreversible inhibition of exchange activity.  相似文献   

20.
The kinetics of exchange of radiolabeled cholesterol and phospholipids between intact Mycoplasma gallisepticum cells and unilamellar lipid vesicles were investigated over a wide range of cholesterol/phospholipid molar ratio. The change in cholesterol/phospholipid molar ratio was achieved by adapting the sterol-requiring M. gallisepticum to grow in cholesterol-poor media, providing cells with decreased unesterified cholesterol content. At least 90% of the cholesterol molecules in unsealed M. gallisepticum membranes underwent exchange at 37 degrees C as a single kinetic pool in the presence of albumin (2%, w/v). However, we observed biphasic exchange kinetics with intact cells, indicating that cholesterol translocation from the inner to outer monolayers was rate-limiting in the exchange process. Approximately 50% of the cholesterol molecules were localized in each kinetic pool, independent of the cholesterol/phospholipid molar ratio in the cells and vesicles. A striking change in the kinetic parameters for cholesterol exchange occurred between 20 and 26 mol % cholesterol; for example, when the cholesterol/phospholipid molar ratio was decreased from 0.36 to 0.25, the half-time for equilibration of the two cholesterol pools at 37 degrees C decreased from 4.6 +/- 0.5 to 2.5 +/- 0.1 h. Phospholipid exchange rates were also enhanced on decreasing the membrane cholesterol content. The ability of cholesterol to modulate its own exchange rate, as well as that of phospholipids, is suggested to arise from the sterol's ability to regulate membrane lipid order. Extensive chemical modification of the membrane surface by cross-linking of some of the protein constituents with 1,4-phenylenedimaleimide decreased the cholesterol exchange rate. Depletion of membrane proteins by treatment of growing cultures with chloramphenicol increased the cholesterol exchange rate, possibly because of removal of some of the protein mass that may impede lipid translocation. The observations that phospholipid exchange was one order of magnitude slower than cholesterol exchange and that dimethyl sulfoxide, potassium thiocyanate, and potassium salicylate enhanced the cholesterol exchange rate are consistent with a mechanism involving lipid exchange by diffusion through the aqueous phase.  相似文献   

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