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1.
The origin of the cyanine dye fluorescence signal in murine and human peripheral blood leukocytes was investigated using the oxa- and indo-carbocyanines di-O-C5(3) and di-I-C5(3). Fluorescence signals from individual cells suspended with nanomolar concentrations of the dyes were measured in a flow cytometer modified to permit simultaneous four-parameter analysis (including two-color fluorescence or fluorescence polarization measurements). The contributions of mitochondrial membrane potential (psi m) and plasma membrane potential (psi pm) to the total voltage-sensitive fluorescence signal were found to depend on the equilibrium extracellular dye concentration, manipulated in these experiments by varying the ratio of dye to cell density. Hence, conditions could be chosen that amplified either the psi m or the psi pm component. Selective depolarization of lymphocytes or polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) in mixed cell suspensions demonstrated that defining the partition of dye between cells and medium is requisite to assessing the heterogeneity of cell responses by cyanine dye fluorescence. At extracellular dye concentrations exceeding 5 nM in equilibrated cell suspensions, both mitochondrial and plasma membrane dye toxicity were observed. In murine splenic lymphocytes, plasma membrane toxicity (dye-induced depolarization) was selective for the B lymphocytes. Certain problems in calibration of psi pm with valinomycin at low dye concentrations and perturbations of psi pm by mitochondrial inhibitors are presented. These findings address the current controversy concerning psi m and psi pm measurement in intact cells by cyanine dye fluorescence. The finding of selective toxicity at low cyanine dye concentrations suggest that purported differences in resting psi m among cells or changes in psi pm with cell activation may reflect variable susceptibility to dye toxicity rather than intrinsic cell properties.  相似文献   

2.
1. Pigeon erythrocytes, resealed lysed erythrocytes or liposomes derived from erythrocyte lipids were suspended in solutions containing up to 2 micrometer-3,3'-dipropyloxadicarbocyanine iodide. Gramicidin, valinomycin, nigericin or carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxy-phenylhydrazone, or combinations of these, were used to induce electrical diffusion potentials dependent on Na+, K+ or protons. In each instance hyperpolarization of the cell membrane lowered the fluorescence of the cell suspension, a process that was completed in about 1 min. Subsequent depolarization caused an increase in fluorescence. 2. Quenching of the fluorescence of the cell suspension appeared to be due to the reversible binding of the dye to the cells. Much larger amounts of dye were bound, both to the intact and to the resealed erythrocytes, than would be expected if partitioning of the dye cation followed the Nernst equation. The dependence of the binding on the extracellular dye concentration was studied in the presence and absence of valinomycin. The results were consistent with the suggestion of Sims, Waggoner, Wang & Hoffman [(1974) Biochemistry 13, 3315-3330] that the dye was bound at both membrane surfaces and that, at low dye concentrations, hyperpolarizing the cells promoted dye binding at the inner membrane surface. 3. The applications of the technique are limited by the circumstance that the direct effect of the electric field on the uptake of the dye into the cells is amplified by a binding process that may be affected by other physiological variables.  相似文献   

3.
1. The fluorescent intensity of the dye 3,3'-dipropylthiodicarbocyanine iodide was measured in suspensions of Ehrlich ascites tumor cells in an attempt to monitor their membrane potentials under a variety of different ionic and metabolic conditions. 2. In the presence of valinomycin, fluorescent intensity is dependent on log [K+]medium (the fluorescent intensity increased with increasing [K+]medium) where K+ replaced Na+ in the medium. Cellular K+ content also influenced fluorescent intensity in the presence of valinomycin. With lower cellular K+, fluorescent intensity in the presence of valinomycin for any given concentration was increased. 3. In the presence of gramicidin fluorescent intensity was highest in Krebs-Ringer and decreased with the substitution of choline+ for Na+. 4. The observations with ionophores are consistent with the hypothesis that the dye monitors membrane potential in these cells with an increase in fluorescence indicating membrane depolarization (internal becomes more positive). 5. The estimated membrane potentials were influenced by the way in which the cells were treated. Upon dilution of the cells from 1 in 20 to 1 in 300 the initial estimations were between -50 and -60 mV. With incubation at 1 in 300 dilution for 1 h at room temperature or a 37 degrees C, the membrane potentials ranged from -18 to -42 mV. 6. Estimations of membrane potential on the basis of chloride distribution (Cl-cell/Cl-medium) in equilibrated cells ranged from -13 to -32 mV. 7. Addition of glucose to cells equilibrated at 37 degrees C for 30 min in the presence of rotenone led to a decrease in fluorescent intensity indicating hyperpolarization. Addition of ouabain in turn led to a 70 to 100% reversal of fluorescent intensity. This hyperpolarization is therefore probably due to the electrogenic activity of the sodium pump. 8. The addition of amino acids known to require external Na+ for transport increased fluorescent intensity (depolarization) reaching a maximum at higher concentrations of amino acids. Plots of 1/deltafluorescence vs. 1/[glycine] were linear with an apparent Km of 2-3 mM. The increase in fluorescence with amino acids always required external Na+. Plots of 1/fluorescence vs. 1/[Na+]medium were also linear with an apparent Km of 29 mM. These apparent Km values compare favorably with those derived from amino acid transport studies using tracers. These data indicate that the Na+-dependent transport of amino acids in these cells is electrogenic.  相似文献   

4.
The effects of valinomycin and nigericin on sugar chemotaxis in Spirochaeta aurantia were investigated by using a quantitative capillary assay, and the fluorescent cation, 3,3'-dipropyl-2,2'-thiodicarbocyanine iodide was used as a probe to study effects of chemoattractants on membrane potential. Addition of a chemoattractant, D-xylose, to cells in either potassium or sodium phosphate buffer resulted in a transient membrane depolarization. In the presence of valinomycin, the membrane potential of cells in potassium phosphate buffer was reduced, and the transient membrane depolarization that resulted from the addition of D-xylose was eliminated. Although there was no detectable effect of valinomycin on motility, D-xylose taxis of cells in potassium phosphate buffer was completely inhibited by valinomycin. In sodium phosphate buffer, valinomycin had little effect on membrane potential or D-xylose taxis. Nigericin is known to dissipate the transmembrane pH gradient of S. aurantia in potassium phosphate buffer. This compound did not dissipate the membrane potential or the transient membrane depolarization observed upon addition of D-xylose to cells in either potassium or sodium phosphate buffer. Nigericin did not inhibit D-xylose taxis in either potassium or sodium phosphate buffer. This study indicates that the membrane potential but not the transmembrane pH gradient of S. aurantia is somehow involved in chemosensory signal transduction.  相似文献   

5.
The lysosomal proton pump is electrogenic   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
Lysosomes were purified approximately 40-fold from rat kidney cortex by differential and Percoll density gradient centrifugation. In a sucrose medium, the lysosomes quenched the fluorescence of the potential sensitive dye diS-C3-(5) (3,3'-dipropylthiocarbo-cyanine iodide) in a time-dependent manner, indicating that the dye accumulates within the lysosomal interior. After treatment of the lysosomes with valinomycin, the dye fluorescence displayed a logarithmic dependence upon the external K+ concentration; thus, the fluorescence signal provides a semiquantitative measure of the lysosomal membrane potential (delta psi). In the absence of valinomycin, lysosomal quenching of diS-C3-(5) fluorescence was partially reversed by agents which collapse the lysosomal pH gradient (ammonium sulfate, chloroquine, and K nigericin), suggesting that the proton gradient across the lysosomal membrane contributes to delta psi. A rapid increase in diS-C3-(5) fluorescence, indicative of an increase in delta psi, was observed upon the addition of Mg-ATP to the lysosomes. The ATP-dependent fluorescence change was inhibited by protonophores, K valinomycin, permeable anions, and N-ethylmaleimide, but was unaffected by ammonium sulfate, K nigericin, or sodium vanadate. Oligomycin had no effect at concentrations below 2 micrograms/ml; at higher concentrations, oligomycin partially inhibited the fluorescence response to Mg-ATP, but it also inhibited the fluorescence response to K valinomycin, suggesting that it had modified the permeability of the lysosomal membrane. Dicylohexylcarbodiimide behaved similarly to oligomycin. Mg-ATP also altered the lysosomal distribution of 86Rb+ (in the presence of valinomycin) and S[14C]CN-, consistent with an increase in the potential of the lysosomal interior of 40-50 mV. The results demonstrate that the lysosomal proton pump is electrogenic.  相似文献   

6.
Cyclosporin A (CsA) exerts its major immunosuppressive effect by inhibition of T-lymphocyte proliferation. The precise mechanism and target of its action has not yet been completely identified. CsA is also known to induce a rapid membrane depolarization in T lymphocytes. We have tested the role of CsA-dependent depolarization in the inhibition of T-cell proliferation by the drug. In these studies, induced membrane depolarization (in the presence of gramicidin or by replacing the Na+ content of the medium with K+) or hyperpolarization (in the presence of valinomycin) had no influence on the induction of T-cell competence by phorbol dibutyrate/ionomycin or by submitogenic concentrations of PHA, a target for CsA immunosuppression. However, regardless of the state of membrane potential during the induction of T-cell competence, the inhibition by CsA was the same as seen in normally polarized cells. We conclude that the depolarization induced by CsA is not a critical element in its inhibitory effect on T-cell proliferation.  相似文献   

7.
《FEBS letters》1987,224(2):337-342
Unilamellar phosphatidylcholine/cholesterol (5:1, w/w) vesicles and the fluorescent dye safranine O mixed in appropriate ratios produced a membrane potential-dependent enhancement of dye fluorescence. The fluorescence enhancement was shown to be dependent on the sign and magnitude of valinomycin-induced potassium diffusion potentials. The enhancement and a blue-shifted maximum (both of which also occur in ethanol vs aqueous solution) provided evidence that the enhanced fluorescence arises from an additional population of safranine O molecules which become associated with a hydrophobic region of the vesicular membrane. Consistent with this interpretation, the polarization of safranine O fluorescence was also found to increase in a potential-dependent manner. A time-dependent decay of the fluorescence enhancement — presumably due to decay of the membrane potential — was attributed to non-specific ion leakage at valinomycin concentrations above 3 μM.  相似文献   

8.
H L Jenssen  K Redmann  E Mix 《Cytometry》1986,7(4):339-346
Potential-dependent accumulation of the lipophilic cationic dye 3,3' dihexyloxacarbocyanine (DiOC6(3)) in macrophages has been investigated. Resulting fluorescence of cells was measured by flow cytometry. Alterations of membrane potential of macrophages were induced by ionophore treatment (valinomycin and gramicidin) in a dose-dependent (10(-5) M-10(-7) M) and time-dependent (0 min-45 min) manner. Resulting changes in relative fluorescence intensity were compared with changes of transmembrane potential measured by intracellular recordings obtained by applying glass microelectrodes. The comparative studies offer the possibility to calibrate the flow cytometric estimate of membrane potential of suspended cells. Equilibration of dye partition between cells and surrounding medium is strictly potential-dependent at dye concentrations between 5 X 10(-8) M and 10(-7) M and within an incubation interval from 10 min up to 30 min after addition of dye. Conclusions are drawn concerning the field of application of the optical method. Dynamics of electrical processes following ionophore treatment are discussed in terms of molecular mechanisms of altered ionic transport.  相似文献   

9.
Thrombin causes a dose-dependent depolarization of the transmembrane potential of normal human platelets which can be continuously measured by the fluorescent probe, 3,3'-dipropylthiodicarbocyanine, whose distribution across the plasma membrane has been shown to be dependent upon the membrane potential. The dose-dependent depolarization of the platelet's negative membrane potential by thrombin is in large part due to a rapid uptake of sodium. Both the membrane potential change and the rapid sodium influx can be inhibited by a fast acting analog of amiloride, a sodium channel blocker, while valinomycin, a potassium ionophore, has no effect on the potential change nor on the sodium uptake, suggesting that the transmembrane potassium gradient is not important in the thrombin-induced depolarization. Neither the secretion of serotonin nor that of lysosomal enzymes nor the secondary release of the fluorescent probe which correlates with the lysosomal enzyme secretion occur if treatment with valinomycin precedes activation by thrombin. It is thus apparent that: 1) the change in the membrane potential induced by thrombin is directly dependent upon the transmembrane sodium gradient and is primarily due to a dose-dependent sodium uptake by the platelets; and 2) the thrombin-induced secretory processes are dependent upon maintenance of the transmembrane potassium gradients.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Cationic cyanine dyes have been widely used to measure electrical potentials of red blood cells and other membrane preparations. A quantitative analysis of the binding of the most extensively studied of these dyes, diS-C3-(5), to red blood cells and their constituents is presented here. Absorption spectra were recorded for the dye in suspensions of isolated red cell membranes and in solutions of cell lysate. The dependence of the spectra on the concentrations of dye and cell constituents shows that the dye binds to these membranes as monomers with an absorbance maximum at 670 nm instead of 650 nm as for free aqueous dye and that the dye binds to oxyhaemoglobin partly as monomer but primarily as dimer, with absorbance maxima ca. 670 and 595 nm, respectively. Quantitative estimates are derived for all binding constants and extinction coefficients. These estimates are applied to suspensions of whole cells to predict the dye binding, absorbance spectra, and calibration curves of binding and fluorescencevs. membrane voltage. Satisfactory agreement is found with binding and absorbance data for whole cells at zero membrane potential and with the binding and fluorescence data reported by Hladky and Rink (J. Physiol. (London) 263:287, 1976) for cells driven to positive and negative potentials using valinomycin. The marked tendency of oxyhaemoglobin to bind dye as dimer is not shared by some other proteins tested, including deocyhaemoglobin and oxymyoglobin.  相似文献   

11.
The regulation of the plasma membrane potential of rat peritoneal mast cells at the resting state and during activation was investigated using bisoxonol as a potential-sensitive fluorescent dye. Fluorescence microphotography showed that this negatively charged probe was not only present in the plasma membrane, but was also distributed in the cytoplasm. The intracellular localization of bisoxonol was confirmed by conducting experiments which showed that bisoxonol fluorescence was not enhanced in ATP-permeabilized mast cells. Rotenone (10(-7) M) and oligomycin (10(-6) M) did not change the fluorescence of bisoxonol showing, therefore, mitochondrial depolarization was not recorded with bisoxonol and suggesting that bisoxonol may represent a useful probe to study plasma membrane potential changes in the absence of exocytosis. We showed that, in non-stimulated mast cells, the blockade of the sodium pump enhanced the fluorescence of bisoxonol as did gramicidin a non selective ionophore used to fully depolarize the cells. High concentration of potassium (30 mM) as well as different ionic channel blockers did not significantly change the fluorescence intensity of bisoxonol, suggesting that ionic channel permeabilities were not involved in maintaining the resting plasma membrane potential of mast cells. Mast cells stimulated by compound 48/80 completely lost the fluorescence, shown by fluorescence microphotography, suggesting that exocytotic phenomena might induce a dye redistribution which is not only due to changes in the plasma membrane potential. In mast cells pretreated with pertussis toxin, which blocks mast cell-exocytosis, compound 48/80 induced a delayed (2 min) decrease of bisoxonol fluorescence which was shown to be dependent on the activity of the sodium pump. Considering that bisoxonol is a useful potential-sensitive probe in exocytosis-deprived mast cells, our results suggest that the sodium pump is mainly involved in the changes of plasma membrane potential of mast cells.  相似文献   

12.
The fluorescence response of a positively charged cyanine dye: 3,3'-dimethylindodicarbocyanine iodide can be specifically related to the generation in Escherichia coli cells and E. coli membrane vesicles of an electrical membrane potential induced either by substrate oxidation or by an artificially imposed potassium diffusion gradient. The energy-dependent quenching of the dye fluorescence correlates well with the known effect on delta phi of: oxidation of various energy sources, external pH and solute accumulation. Thus, in the vesicles, the fluorescence quenching of the dye increases from succinate to D-lactate, to ascorbate/phenazine methosulfate and parallels the increasing ability of these electron donors to generate a delta phi. In the vesicles, delta phi is only weakly dependent on external pH, whereas in the cells, delta phi increases with increasing external pH. Lactose accumulation in the vesicles results in the partial utilization of delta phi. A calibration of the dye fluorescence in terms of delta phi has been determined using valinomycin-induced potassium diffusion potential.  相似文献   

13.
Mammalian sperm are unable to fertilize the egg immediately after ejaculation; they acquire this capacity during migration in the female reproductive tract. This maturational process is called capacitation and in mouse sperm it involves a plasma membrane reorganization, extensive changes in the state of protein phosphorylation, increases in intracellular pH (pHi) and Ca2+ ([Ca2+]i), and the appearance of hyperactivated motility. In addition, mouse sperm capacitation is associated with the hyperpolarization of the cell membrane potential. However, the functional role of this process is not known. In this work, to dissect the role of this membrane potential change, hyperpolarization was induced in noncapacitated sperm using either the ENaC inhibitor amiloride, the CFTR agonist genistein or the K+ ionophore valinomycin. In this experimental setting, other capacitation-associated processes such as activation of a cAMP-dependent pathway and the consequent increase in protein tyrosine phosphorylation were not observed. However, hyperpolarization was sufficient to prepare sperm for the acrosome reaction induced either by depolarization with high K+ or by addition of solubilized zona pellucida (sZP). Moreover, K+ and sZP were also able to increase [Ca2+]i in non-capacitated sperm treated with these hyperpolarizing agents but not in untreated cells. On the other hand, in conditions that support capacitation-associated processes blocking hyperpolarization by adding valinomycin and increasing K+ concentrations inhibited the agonist-induced acrosome reaction as well as the increase in [Ca2+]i. Altogether, these results suggest that sperm hyperpolarization by itself is key to enabling mice sperm to undergo the acrosome reaction.  相似文献   

14.
Membrane depolarization is one of the earliest events in activation of cells by ligand receptor interaction. It is known that crosslinking of antigen-specific Ig receptors on B cells by antigen can induce membrane depolarization and subsequent Ia antigen expression on the cell surface. To determine whether a tolerance-inducing form of the antigen can also induce membrane depolarization after Ig receptor binding we used splenic B cells enriched for dinitrophenyl (DNP)-specific cells and determined relative membrane potential in these cells after binding of DNP-murine IgG2a (MGG) (tolerogen) or antigens (DNP-keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH) and DNP-Ficoll). Relative membrane potential was determined by loading the cells with the dye, 3.3-dipentyloxacarboxyanine (DiOC5(3)) after 2 hr incubation with ligand and determining relative fluorescence intensity on the fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACS). Carriers alone did not depolarize these normal cell populations, but 100% of DNP-specific cells were depolarized by DNP-KLH and DNP-MGG while 85% were depolarized by DNP-Ficoll. To determine if tolerant B cells could be depolarized by antigen we induced tolerance in vitro or in vivo with DNP-MGG and measured the depolarization of DNP-specific B cells in response to antigens and tolerogen. DNP-specific B cells made tolerant by DNP-MGG underwent membrane depolarization when incubated with either DNP-KLH, DNP-MGG, or DNP-Ficoll but not with carriers alone. These data suggest that tolerogen induces membrane depolarization equally as well as antigen in normal cells. In addition, tolerant cells can be depolarized by Ig receptor crosslinking with either antigen or tolerogen. Thus, tolerance does not block the early membrane events induced by antigen in B cells.  相似文献   

15.
We have previously shown that anacardic acid has an uncoupling effect on oxidative phosphorylation in rat liver mitochondria using succinate as a substrate (Life Sci. 66 (2000) 229-234). In the present study, for clarification of the physicochemical characteristics of anacardic acid, we used a cyanine dye (DiS-C3(5)) and 9-aminoacridine (9-AA) to determine changes of membrane potential (DeltaPsi) and pH difference (DeltapH), respectively, in a liposome suspension in response to the addition of anacardic acid to the suspension. The anacardic acid quenched DiS-C3(5) fluorescence at concentrations higher than 300 nM, with the degree of quenching being dependent on the log concentration of the acid. Furthermore, the K(+) diffusion potential generated by the addition of valinomycin to the suspension decreased for each increase in anacardic acid concentration used over 300 nM, but the sum of the anacardic acid- and valinomycin-mediated quenching was additively increasing. This indicates that the anacardic acid-mediated quenching was not due simply to increments in the K(+) permeability of the membrane. Addition of anacardic acid in the micromolar range to the liposomes with DeltaPsi formed by valinomycin-K(+) did not significantly alter 9-AA fluorescence, but unexpectedly dissipated DeltaPsi. The DeltaPsi preformed by valinomycin-K(+) decreased gradually following the addition of increasing concentrations of anacardic acid. The DeltaPsi dissipation rate was dependent on the pre-existing magnitude of DeltaPsi, and was correlated with the logarithmic concentration of anacardic acid. Furthermore, the initial rate of DeltapH dissipation increased with logarithmic increases in anacardic acid concentration. These results provide the evidence for a unique function of anacardic acid, dissimilar to carbonylcyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone or valinomycin, in that anacardic acid behaves as both an electrogenic (negative) charge carrier driven by DeltaPsi, and a 'proton carrier' that dissipates the transmembrane proton gradient formed.  相似文献   

16.
Optical potentiometric indicators have been used to monitor the transmembrane electrical potential (Em) of many cells and organelles. A better understanding of the mechanisms of dye response is needed for the design of dyes with improved responses and for unambiguous interpretation of experimental results. This paper describes the responses to delta Em of 20 impermeant oxonols in human red blood cells. Most of the oxonols interacted with valinomycin, but not with gramicidin. The fluorescence of 15 oxonols decreased with hyperpolarization, consistent with an "on-off" mechanism, whereas five oxonols unexpectedly showed potential-dependent increases in fluorescence at less than 2 microM [dye]. Binding curves were determined for two dyes (WW781, negative response and RGA451, positive response) at 1 mM [K]o (membrane hyperpolarized with gramicidin) and at 90 mM [K]o (delta Em = 0 with gramicidin). Both dyes showed potential-dependent decreases in binding. Changes in the fluorescence of cell suspensions correlated with changes in [dye]bound for WW781, in accordance with the "on-off" mechanism, but not for RGA451. Large positive fluorescence changes (greater than 30%) dependent on Em were observed between 0.1 and 1.0 microM RGA451. A model is suggested in which RGA451 moves between two states of different quantum efficiencies within the membrane.  相似文献   

17.
Egg yolk phosphatidyl choline liposomes containing variable amounts of phosphatidyl ethanolamine, phosphatidyl inositol or phosphatidyl serine demonstrated important variations in the fluorescence of 3.3' dipropylthiodicarbocyanine. When the membrane contained no cholesterol, fluorescence was not correlated with membrane fluidity as measured by diphenyl hexatriene polarization. Increasing cholesterol concentration in valinomycin containing liposome membranes decreased the potassium induced apparent membrane potential and prevented sorption of dye to the membrane. Discontinuity in the apparent potential occurred at 30 mol% cholesterol but could not be correlated with changes in microviscosity. These results indicate that great care should be taken when correlating rapid variations of fluorescence to changes in membrane potential. We propose that changes in phospholipid metabolism could well explain fluorescent changes when monitoring the fluorescence of cyanine dye molecules sorbed to biological membranes.  相似文献   

18.
The cationic potentiometric fluorescent probe 3,3'-diethylthiadicarbocyanine iodide [DiS-C2(5)] was used in synaptosomes to assess the relative contributions of plasma and mitochondrial membrane potentials (psi p and psi m, respectively) to overall fluorescence. Addition of synaptosomes to media containing 0.5 microM dye caused a decrease in fluorescence intensity due to dye accumulation, which equilibrated usually within 5 min. Depolarization of mitochondria by combined treatment with cyanide and oligomycin increased fluorescence by 42%, indicating significant prior accumulation of dye into intrasynaptosomal mitochondria. psi p was calculated to be -54 mV and was not altered significantly by prior depolarization of psi m with cyanide and oligomycin (hereafter referred to as "poisoned" synaptosomes). Similarly, the linear relationship between dye fluorescence and psi p was not altered by depolarization of psi m. Valinomycin, a K+ ionophore, caused a psi p-dependent increase in fluorescence in control (nonpoisoned) synaptosomes, but did not alter fluorescence of poisoned synaptosomes except when the extracellular concentration of K+ ([K+]e) was 2 mM, in which case valinomycin hyperpolarized psi p by about 5 mV. The pore-forming antibiotic gramicidin depolarized both psi p and psi m maximally. Under these conditions, Triton X-100 further increased fluorescence by 40%, indicating significant dye binding to synaptosomal components. In poisoned synaptosomes depolarized by 75 mM K+, gramicidin caused a decrease in fluorescence intensity (hyperpolarization of psi p). The organic solvent dimethyl sulfoxide, used as a vehicle for the hydrophobic ionophores, had voltage-dependent effects on psi p and psi m.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
Two independent lines of evidence were obtained indicating that microtubule depolymerization affects the functions and the physical state of membranes in intact Chinese hamster ovary cells. The first type of evidence was obtained by using the dye dihexyloxacarbocyanine iodide to measure membrane potential before and after treatment with several microtubule active agents. Microtubule depolymerization resulted in a decrease in cell fluorescence, whereas stabilization of microtubules with taxol resulted in an increase in cell fluorescence. These effects of the drugs were due to their interactions with microtubules and not to direct effects of the drugs on the plasma membranes for the following reasons: effects were time dependent and required entry into the cells as indicated by the lack of fluorescence change in a multi-drug-resistant mutant that does not accumulate antimicrotubule drugs and a colcemid-resistant tubulin mutant did not show these effects on cell fluorescence. Evidence for altered motional freedom of membrane proteins in the plasma membrane was obtained by using electron spin resonance analysis of maleimide spin probe labeled cells. This study showed that depolymerization of microtubules results in increased motional freedom of maleimide-labeled sulfhydryl group containing proteins. Taken together, these data argue that microtubules function in mammalian cells to regulate the physical state of membranes and modulate membrane potential generated across cell membranes.  相似文献   

20.
BACKGROUND: We set out to develop an assay for the simultaneous analysis of mitochondrial membrane potential and mass using the probes 10-nonyl acridine orange (NAO), MitoFluor Green (MFG), and MitoTracker Green (MTG) in HL60 cells. However, in experiments in which NAO and MFG were combined with orange emitting mitochondrial membrane potential (DeltaPsi(m)) probes, we found clear responses to DeltaPsi(m) altering drugs for both probes. METHODS: The three probes were titrated to determine whether saturation played a role in the response to drugs. The effects of a variety of DeltaPsi(m) altering drugs were tested for MFG and MTG at probe concentrations of 20 nM and 200 nM and for NAO at 0.1 microM and 5 microM, using rhodamine 123 at 0.1 microM as a reference probe. RESULTS: Incubation of GM130, HL60, and U937 cells with 2,3-butanedione monoxime (BDM), nigericin, carbonyl cyanide 3-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP), carbonyl cyanide p-(trifluoromethoxy)phenylhydrazone (FCCP), 2,4-dinitrophenol (DNP), gramicidin, ouabain, and valinomycin resulted in increases of the fluorescence intensity for MFG or MTG with only a few exceptions. The fluorescence intensity of cells stained with 0.1 microM NAO increased following incubation with BDM, nigericin, and decreased for FCCP, CCCP, DNP, gramicidin, and valinomycin. The results with 5 microM NAO were similar. CONCLUSIONS: MFG, MTG, and NAO appeared poor choices for the membrane potential independent analysis of mitochondrial membrane mass. Considering the molecular structure of these probes that favor accumulation in the mitochondrial membrane because of a positive charge, our results are not surprising. Cytometry 39:203-210, 2000. Published 2000 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

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