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1.
The fluorescence spectra of 6-propionyl-2-(dimethylamino)naphthalene (Prodan) and 6-dodecanoyl-2-(dimethylamino)naphthalene (Laurdan) in bilayer membranes of 1,2-distearoylphosphatidylcholine (DSPC) were observed as a function of pressure at constant temperature. The emission spectra of Prodan and Laurdan varied with the pressure-induced states of bilayer membranes. The maximum emission wavelength (lambda(max)) of Prodan characteristic of the liquid crystalline (L(alpha)), lamellar gel (L(beta)') and pressure-induced interdigitated gel (L(beta)I) phases of the DSPC bilayer was 480, 440 and 500 nm, respectively. On the other hand, the lambda(max) of Laurdan characteristic of the L(alpha) and L(beta)' phases was 480 and 440 nm in a similar manner as Prodan probe. However, no change in the lambda(max) was observed in spite of the occurrence of the interdigitation of bilayer. Since the lambda(max) reflects the solvent property around the probe molecules, we could speculate about the location of fluorescent probe in the bilayer membranes. In the L(alpha) phase the same chromophore group of Prodan and Laurdan probes distributes around phosphate group of lipid (i.e., polar region). The transformation of bilayer into the L(beta)' phase causes the Prodan and Laurdan molecules to move into the glycerol backbone (i.e., less polar) region. In the ripple gel (P(beta)') phase, the emission spectrum of Prodan shows a broad peak at about 480 nm and a shoulder around 440 nm, which means that the Prodan molecules are widespread over the wide range from the glycerol backbone to the hydrophilic part of bilayer. The P(beta)'/L(beta)I phase transition causes the Prodan molecule to squeeze out from the glycerol backbone region and to move the hydrophilic region near the bilayer surface. Contrarily, the Laurdan molecule was not squeezed out from the glycerol backbone region because the long acyl chain of Laurdan serves as an anchor in the hydrophobic core of bilayer. The ratio of fluorescence intensity of Prodan at 480 nm to that at 440 nm, F(480)/F(440), is available to observation of bilayer phase transitions. The plot of F(480)/F(440) versus pressure seems to be useful for the recognition of bilayer phase transition, especially the bilayer interdigitation.  相似文献   

2.
Quercetin (QCT) is an important bioactive natural compound found in numerous edible plants. Since the lipid bilayer represents an essential compound of the cell membrane, QCT's direct interaction with this structure is of great interest. Therefore, we proposed to study the effects of QCT on DMPC liposomes containing cholesterol (Chol), and for this purpose Laurdan fluorescence was used. As a fluorescent probe, Laurdan is able to detect changes in membrane phase properties. When incorporated in lipid bilayers, Laurdan emits from two different excited states, a non-relaxed one when the bilayer packing is tight and a relaxed state when the bilayer packing is loose. The main tool for quantifying QCT's effects on phospholipid membranes containing Chol has been the analysis, the decomposition of Laurdan emission spectra in sums of two Gaussian functions on energy. This kind of approach has allowed good analysis of the balance between the two emitting states of Laurdan. Our results show that both Laurdan emission states are present to different extents in a wide temperature range for DMPC liposomes with Chol. QCT is decreasing the phase transition temperature in pure DMPC liposomes as proved by generalized polarization (GP) values. QCT also quenches Laurdan fluorescence, depending on the temperature and the presence of Chol in the membrane. Stern-Volmer constants were calculated for different lipid membrane compositions, and the conclusion was that the relaxed state favors the nonradiative transitions of the fluorophore.  相似文献   

3.
The naphthalene-based fluorescent probes Patman and Laurdan detect bilayer polarity at the level of the phospholipid glycerol backbone. This polarity increases with temperature in the liquid–crystalline phase of phosphatidylcholines and was observed even 90 °C above the melting temperature. This study explores mechanisms associated with this phenomenon. Measurements of probe anisotropy and experiments conducted at 1 M NaCl or KCl (to reduce water permittivity) revealed that this effect represents interactions of water molecules with the probes without proportional increases in probe mobility. Furthermore, comparison of emission spectra to Monte Carlo simulations indicated that the increased polarity represents elevation in probe access to water molecules rather than increased mobility of relevant bilayer waters. Equilibration of these probes with the membrane involves at least two steps which were distinguished by the membrane microenvironment reported by the probe. The difference in those microenvironments also changed with temperature in the liquid–crystalline phase in that the equilibrium state was less polar than the initial environment detected by Patman at temperatures near the melting point, more polar at higher temperatures, and again less polar as temperature was raised further. Laurdan also displayed this level of complexity during equilibration, although the relationship to temperature differed quantitatively from that experienced by Patman. This kinetic approach provides a novel way to study in molecular detail basic principles of what happens to the membrane environment around an individual amphipathic molecule as it penetrates the bilayer. Moreover, it provides evidence of unexpected and interesting membrane behaviors far from the phase transition.  相似文献   

4.
The hydration properties of the interface between lipid bilayers and bulk water are important for determining membrane characteristics. Here, the emission properties of a solvent-sensitive fluorescence probe, 6-lauroyl-2-dimethylamino naphthalene (Laurdan), were evaluated in lipid bilayer systems composed of the sphingolipids D-erythro-N-palmitoyl-sphingosylphosphorylcholine (PSM) and D-erythro-N-palmitoyl-dihydrosphingomyelin (DHPSM). The glycerophospholipids 1-palmitoyl-2-palmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine and 1-oleoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine were used as controls. The fluorescence properties of Laurdan in sphingolipid bilayers indicated multiple excited states according to the results obtained from the emission spectra, fluorescence anisotropy, and the center-of-mass spectra during the decay time. Deconvolution of the Laurdan emission spectra into four components based on the solvent model enabled us to identify the varieties of hydration and the configurational states derived from intermolecular hydrogen bonding in sphingolipids. Sphingolipids showed specific, interfacial hydration properties stemming from their intra- and intermolecular hydrogen bonds. Particularly, the Laurdan in DHPSM revealed more hydrated properties compared to PSM, even though DHPSM has a higher Tm than PSM. Because DHPSM forms hydrogen bonds with water molecules (in 2NH configurational functional groups), the interfacial region of the DHPSM bilayer was expected to be in a highly polar environment. The careful analysis of Laurdan emission spectra through the four-component deconvolution in this study provides important insights for understanding the multiple polarity in the lipid membrane.  相似文献   

5.
Fluorescence spectral features of 6-propionyl-2-dimethylaminonaphthalene (Prodan) in phospholipid vesicles of different phase states are investigated. Like the spectra of 6-lauroyl-2-dimethylaminonaphthalene (Laurdan), the steady-state excitation and emission spectra of Prodan are sensitive to the polarity of the environment, showing a relevant shift due to the dipolar relaxation phenomenon. Because of the different lengths of their acyl residues, the partitioning of the two probes between water and the membrane bilayer differs profoundly. To account for the contribution of Prodan fluorescence arising from water, we introduce a three-wavelength generalized polarization method that makes it possible to separate the spectral properties of Prodan in the lipid phase and in water, and to determine the probe partitioning between phospholipid and water and between the gel and the liquid-crystalline phases of phospholipids. In contrast to Laurdan, Prodan preferentially partitions in the liquid-crystalline phase with respect to the gel and is sensitive to the polar head pretransition, and its partition coefficient between the membrane and water depends on the phase state, i.e., on the packing of the bilayer. Prodan is sensitive to polarity variations occurring closer to the bilayer surface than those detected by Laurdan.  相似文献   

6.
The sensitivity of Laurdan (6-dodecanoyl-2-dimethylaminonaphthalene) excitation and emission spectra to the physical state of the membrane arises from dipolar relaxation processes in the membrane region surrounding the Laurdan molecule. Experiments performed using phospholipid vesicles composed of phospholipids with different polar head groups show that this part of the molecule is not responsible for the observed effects. Also, pH titration in the range from pH 4 to 10 shows that the spectral variations are independent of the charge of the polar head. A two-state model of dipolar relaxation is used to qualitatively explain the behavior of Laurdan. It is concluded that the presence of water molecules in the phospholipid matrix are responsible for the spectral properties of Laurdan in the gel phase. In the liquid crystalline phase there is a relaxation process that we attribute to water molecules that can reorientate during the few nanoseconds of the excited state lifetime. The quantitation of lipid phases is obtained using generalized polarization which, after proper choice of excitation and emission wavelengths, satisfies a simple addition rule.  相似文献   

7.
The fluorescence generalized polarization (GP) of 2-dimethylamino-6-lauroylnaphthalene (Laurdan) reveals different effects of cholesterol on the phase behavior of phospholipid bilayers. Phospholipid vesicles composed of gel, liquid-crystalline, and coexisting domains of the two phases have been studied at temperatures from 1 to 65 degrees C, without cholesterol and with cholesterol concentrations of 3-50 mol %. Laurdan GP measurements show the general effect of cholesterol of increasing the molecular dynamics of the gel and of decreasing the molecular dynamics of the liquid-crystalline phase. In the liquid-crystalline phase, the increased order yields Laurdan GP values close to those obtained in the gel phase. At cholesterol concentrations > 15 mol % a phase transition cannot be detected. Using the wavelength dependence of the excitation and emission GP spectra we determine that differences between the two phospholipid phases cannot be detected. In particular, in vesicles composed of coexisting gel and liquid-crystalline phases the GP wavelength dependence characteristic of coexisting domains cannot be observed at cholesterol concentrations > or = 15 mol %. Cholesterol causes the decrease in both the polarity and the dipolar relaxation effects on the neighborhood of the fluorescent naphthalene moiety of Laurdan. Probably because of a cholesterol-induced increase in the bilayer packing, these effects do not occur continuously with the increase of cholesterol concentration in the bilayer. Cholesterol concentrations inducing higher Laurdan GP values have been determined at about 5, 10, 15, 30, and 45 mol % with respect to phospholipids. We propose that the formation of ordered molecular microdomains at critical cholesterol concentrations can explain the occurrence of the observed discontinuities.  相似文献   

8.
In this study, we have examined how the headgroup size and properties affect the membrane properties of sphingomyelin and interactions with cholesterol. We prepared N-palmitoyl ceramide phosphoethanolamine (PCPE) and compared its membrane behavior with D-erythro-N-palmitoyl-sphingomyelin (PSM), both in monolayers and bilayers. The pure PCPE monolayer did not show a phase transition at 22 degrees C (in contrast to PSM), but displayed a much higher inverse isothermal compressibility as compared to the PSM monolayer, indicating stronger intermolecular interactions between PCPEs than between PSMs. At 37 degrees C the PCPE monolayer was more expanded (than at 22 degrees C) and displayed a rather poorly defined phase transition. When cholesterol was comixed into the monolayer, a condensing effect of cholesterol on the lateral packing of the lipids in the monolayer could be observed. The phase transition from an ordered to a disordered state in bilayer membranes was determined by diphenylhexatriene steady-state anisotropy. Whereas the PSM bilayer became disordered at 41 degrees C, the PCPE bilayer main transition occurred around 64 degrees C. The diphenylhexatriene steady-state anisotropy values were similar in both PCPE and PSM bilayers before and after the phase transition, suggesting that the order in the hydrophobic core in both bilayer types was rather similar. The emission from Laurdan was blue shifted in PCPE bilayers in the gel phase when compared to the emission spectra from PSM bilayers, and the blue-shifted component in PCPE bilayers was retained also after the phase transition, suggesting that Laurdan molecules sensed a more hydrophobic environment at the PCPE interface compared to the PSM interface both below and above the bilayer melting temperature. Whereas PSM was able to form sterol-enriched domains in dominantly fluid bilayers (as determined from cholestatrienol dequenching experiments), PCPE failed to form such domains, suggesting that the size and/or properties of the headgroup was important for stabilizing sphingolipid/sterol interaction. In conclusion, our study has highlighted how the headgroup in sphingomyelin affect its membrane properties and interactions with cholesterol.  相似文献   

9.
At high temperature, the presence of cholesterol in phospholipid membranes alters the influence of membrane dipoles, including water molecules, on naphthalene-based fluorescent probes such as Laurdan and Patman (solvatochromism). Although both of these probes report identical changes to their emission spectra as a function of temperature in pure phosphatidylcholine bilayers, they differ in their response to cholesterol. Computer simulations of the spectra based on a simple model of solvatochromism indicated that the presence of cholesterol reduces the probability of bilayer dipole relaxation and also blunts the tendency of heat to enhance that probability. While the overall effect of cholesterol on membrane dipoles was detected identically by the two probes, Laurdan was influenced much more by the additional effect on temperature sensitivity than was Patman. A comparison of the fluorescence data with simulations using a coarse-grained bilayer model (de Meyer et al., 2010) suggested that these probes may be differentially sensitive to two closely related properties distinguishable in the presence of cholesterol. Specifically, Patman fluorescence correlated best with the average phospholipid acyl chain order. On the other hand, Laurdan fluorescence tracked more closely with the area per lipid molecule which, although affected generally by chain order, is also impacted by additional membrane-condensing effects of cholesterol. We postulate that this difference between Laurdan and Patman may be attributed to the bulkier charged headgroup of Patman which may cause the probe to preferentially locate in juxtaposition to the diminutive headgroup of cholesterol as the membrane condenses.  相似文献   

10.
The organization of lipids surrounding membrane proteins can influence their properties. We have used 6-dodecanoyl-2-dimethylaminonaphthalene (Laurdan) to study phase coexistence and phase interconversion in membrane model systems. The fluorescence properties of Laurdan provide a unique possibility to study lipid domains because of the different excitation and emission spectra of this probe in the gel and in the liquid-crystalline phase. The difference in excitation spectra allows photoselection of Laurdan molecules in one of the two phases. Using the difference in emission spectra it is then possible to observe interconversion between the two phases. We have performed experiments in dipalmitoyl-phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) vesicles at different temperatures, in particular in the region of the phase transition, where phase coexistence and interconversion between phases is likely to be maximal. We have also studied vesicles of different lipids and mixtures dilauroyl-phosphatidylcholine (DLPC), DPPC, and 50% DLPC in DPPC. Both steady-state fluorescence intensity and polarization data have been collected. To quantitate phase coexistence and interconversion we have introduced the concept of "generalized polarization." We have also performed time-resolved experiments to directly prove the interconversion process. We have found that in DLPC-DPPC mixtures, at 20 degrees C, phase interconversion occurs in approximately 30-40 ns.  相似文献   

11.
The effect of PAF on the plasma membrane polarity of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) was investigated by measuring the steady-state fluorescence emission spectra of 2-dimethylamino(6-1auroyl) naphthalene (Laurdan), which is known to be incorporated at the hydrophobic-hydrophilic interface of the bilayer, displaying spectral sensitivity to the polarity of its surrounding. Laurdan shows a marked steady-state emission blue-shift in non-polar solvents, with respect to polar solvents. Our results demonstrate that PAF (10(-7) M) induces a blue shift of the fluorescence emission spectra of Laurdan. These changes are blocked in the presence of the PAF antagonist, L-659,989. Our data indicate that the interaction between PAF and PMNs is accompanied by a decrease in polarity in the hydrophobic-hydrophilic interface of the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

12.
Lateral segregation of cell membrane components gives rise to microdomains with a different structure within the membrane. Most prominently, lipid rafts are defined as domains in liquid ordered phase whereas surrounding membranes are more fluid. Here we review a 2-photon fluorescence microscopy approach, which allows the visualization of membrane fluidity. The fluorescent probe Laurdan exhibits a blue shift in emission with increasing membrane condensation caused by an alteration in the dipole moment of the probe as a consequence of exclusion of water molecules from the lipid bilayer. The quantification of membrane order is achieved by the Generalized Polarization (GP) values, which are defined as normalized intensity ratios of two emission channels. GP images are therefore not biased by probe concentrations and membrane ruffles. Furthermore, Laurdan reports membrane structure independently from the lipid and protein cargo of the membrane domains. We give examples where Laurdan microscopy was instrumental in quantifying the formation of condensed membrane domains and their cellular requirements. Moreover we discuss how microdomains identified by Laurdan microscopy are consistent with domains identified by other methodologies and put GP images in the context of current raft hypotheses.  相似文献   

13.
Fluorescence solvent relaxation experiments are based on the characterization of time-dependent shifts in the fluorescence emission of a chromophore, yielding polarity and viscosity information about the chromophore’s immediate environment. A chromophore applied to a phospholipid bilayer at a well-defined location (with respect to the z-axis of the bilayer) allows monitoring of the hydration and mobility of the probed segment of the lipid molecules. Specifically, time-resolved fluorescence experiments, fluorescence quenching data and molecular dynamic (MD) simulations show that 6-lauroyl-2-dimethylaminonaphthalene (Laurdan) probes the hydration and mobility of the sn-1 acyl groups in a phosphatidylcholine bilayer. The time-dependent fluorescence shift (TDFS) of Laurdan provides information on headgroup compression and expansion induced by the addition of different amounts of cationic lipids to phosphatidylcholine bilayers. Those changes were predicted by previous MD simulations. Addition of truncated oxidized phospholipids leads to increased mobility and hydration at the sn-1 acyl level. This experimental finding can be explained by MD simulations, which indicate that the truncated chains of the oxidized lipid molecules are looping back into aqueous phase, hence creating voids below the glycerol level. Fluorescence solvent relaxation experiments are also useful in understanding salt effects on the structure and dynamics of lipid bilayers. For example, such experiments demonstrate that large anions increase hydration and mobility at the sn-1 acyl level of phosphatidylcholine bilayers, an observation which could not be explained by standard MD simulations. If polarizability is introduced into the applied force field, however, MD simulations show that big soft polarizable anions are able to interact with the hydrophilic/hydrophobic interface of the lipid bilayer, penetrating to the level probed by Laurdan, and that they expand and destabilize the bilayer making it more hydrated and mobile.  相似文献   

14.
In this study, we report the effect of cholesterol content on the dynamic and structural properties of a dimyristoyl-phosphatidylcholine and distearoyl-phosphatidylcholine mixture in large unilamellar vesicles. The range of cholesterol concentrations studied varied around approximately 33.3 mol%, where it has been postulated that an abrupt change in bilayer organization occurs. Steady-state fluorescence measurements demonstrated a typical behavior; at low temperatures in the main phase transition, the cholesterol concentration did not affect the gel phase, but at 37.5 °C (phase coexistence) and in the liquid crystalline phase, the presence of cholesterol produced an increase in the fluorescence anisotropy of DPH and the generalized polarization of Laurdan. The greater effect was observed in the liquid crystalline phase, in which the bilayer became a mixture of fluid-like and liquid-ordered phases. The results obtained at approximately 33.3 mol% of Cholesterol demonstrated that the Generalized Polarization of Laurdan, the DPH lifetime, the limiting anisotropy and the rotational correlation time, as well as the fluorescence quenching of DPH by TEMPO, are at maxima, while the fluorescence intensity of dehydroergosterol and the lipid solubility in TritonX-100 are at minima. These results correlate well with the hypothesis of domain segregation in the DMPC/DSPC/Cholesterol LUV system. In this context, we postulate that at 33.3 mol% of Cho, the proportion of ordered domains reaches a maximum.  相似文献   

15.
Liposomes consisted of phosphatidylinositol (PI) and phosphatidylcholine (PC) have been utilized as delivery vehicle for drugs and proteins. In the present work, we studied the effect of soy PI on physical properties of 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DMPC) liposomes such as phase state of lipid bilayer, lipid packing and phase properties using multiple orthogonal biophysical techniques. The 6-dodecanoyl-2-dimethylamino naphthalene (Laurdan) fluorescence studies showed that presence of PI induces the formation of fluid phases in DMPC. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), temperature dependent fluorescence anisotropy measurements, and generalized polarization values for Laurdan showed that the presence of as low as 10mol% of PI induces substantial broadening and shift to lower temperature of phase transition of DMPC. The fluorescence emission intensity of DPH labeled, PI containing DMPC lipid bilayer decreased possibly due to deeper penetration of water molecules in lipid bilayer. In order to further delineate the effect of PI on the physico chemical properties of DMPC is due to either significant hydrophobic mismatch between the acyl chains of the DMPC and that of soy PI or due to the inositol head group, we systematically replaced soy PI with PC species of similar acyl chain composition (DPPC and 18:2 (Cis) PC) or with diacylglycerol (DAG), respectively. The anisotropy of PC membrane containing soy PI showed largest fluidity change compared to other compositions. The data suggests that addition of PI alters structure and dynamics of DMPC bilayer in that it promotes deeper water penetration in the bilayer, induces fluid phase characteristics and causes lipid packing defects that involve its inositol head group.  相似文献   

16.
Coexisting gel and liquid-crystalline phospholipid phase domains can be observed in synthetic phospholipid vesicles during the transition from one phase to the other and, in vesicles of mixed phospholipids, at intermediate temperatures between the transitions of the different phospholipids. The presence of cholesterol perturbs the dynamic properties of both phases to such an extent as to prevent the detection of coexisting phases. 6-Lauroyl-2-dimethylaminopahthalene (Laurdan) fluorescence offers the unique advantage of well resolvable spectral parameters in the two phospholipid phases that can be used for the detection and quantitation of coexisting gel and liquid-crystalline domains. From Laurdan fluorescence excitation and emission spectra, the generalized polarization spectra and values were calculated. By the generalized polarization phospholipid phase domain coexistence can be detected, and each phase can be quantitated. In the same phospholipid vesicles where without cholesterol domain coexistence can be detected, above 15 mol% and, remarkably, at physiological cholesterol concentrations, > or = 30 mol%, no separate Laurdan fluorescence signals characteristic of distinct domains can be observed. Consequences of our results on the possible size and dynamics of phospholipid phase domains and their biological relevance are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
R M Epand  B T Leon 《Biochemistry》1992,31(5):1550-1554
The fluorescence emission spectrum of N epsilon-dansyl-L-Lys undergoes a marked blue shift when incorporated from aqueous solution into phospholipid bilayers. This shift is greater for membranes composed of dipalmitoleoylphosphatidylcholine than for membranes of dipalmitoleoylphosphatidylethanolamine. With the latter but not the former lipid, the fluorescence emission from N epsilon-dansyl-L-Lys is markedly temperature-dependent. The marked temperature dependence of N epsilon-dansyl-L-Lys fluorescence in bilayers of dipalmitoleoylphosphatidylethanolamine is greatest as the sample is heated close to the bilayer to hexagonal phase transition temperature. The fluorescence emission properties of another probe of membrane surface hydrophobicity, Laurdan, also exhibit marked changes at temperatures just below the bilayer to hexagonal phase transition temperature. At these temperatures, the generalized polarization begins to increase rather than decrease with temperature, and the emission intensity decreases markedly. Such effects are not observed over the same temperature range with phosphatidylcholine. Thus, both dansyl-L-lysine and Laurdan provide probes to measure changes in the physical properties of membrane bilayers which occur when these bilayers are heated close to the temperature required for transition to the hexagonal phase.  相似文献   

18.
The precise molecular mechanisms by which cells transduce a mechanical stimulus into an intracellular biochemical response have not yet been established. Here, we show for the first time that the fluorescence emission of an environment-sensitive membrane probe Laurdan is modulated by mechanical strain of the lipid bilayer membrane. We have measured fluorescence emission of Laurdan in phospholipid vesicles of 30, 50, and 100 nm diameter to show that osmotically induced membrane tension leads to an increase in polarity (hydration depth) of the phospholipid bilayer interior. Our data indicate that the general polarization of Laurdan emission is linearly dependent on membrane tension. We also show that higher membrane curvature leads to higher hydration levels. We anticipate that the proposed method will facilitate future studies of mechanically induced changes in physical properties of lipid bilayer environment both in vitro and in vivo.  相似文献   

19.
Laurdan and di-4-ANEPPDHQ are used as probes for membrane order, with a blue shift in emission for membranes in liquid-ordered (lo) phase relative to membranes in liquid-disordered (ld) phase. Their use as membrane order probes requires that their spectral shifts are unaffected by membrane proteins, which we have examined by using membrane inserting peptides and large unilamellar vesicles (LUVs). The transmembrane polypeptides, mastoparan and bovine prion protein-derived peptide (bPrPp), were added to LUVs of either lo or ld phase, up to 1:10 peptide/total lipid ratio. The excitation and emission spectra of laurdan and di-4-ANEPPDHQ in both lipid phases were unaltered by peptide addition. The integrity and size distribution of the LUVs upon addition of the polypeptides were determined by dynamic light scattering. The insertion efficiency of the polypeptides into LUVs was determined by measuring their secondary structure by circular dichroism. Mastoparan had an α-helical and bPrPp a β-strand conformation compatible with insertion into the lipid bilayer. Our results suggest that the presence of proteins in biological membranes does not influence the spectra of laurdan and di-4-ANEPPDHQ, supporting that the dyes are appropriate probes for assessing lipid order in cells.  相似文献   

20.
Organization and dynamics of cellular membranes in the nervous system are crucial for the function of neuronal membrane receptors. The lipid composition of neuronal cells is unique and has been correlated with the increased complexity in the organization of the nervous system during evolution. Previous work from our laboratory has established bovine hippocampal membranes as a convenient natural source for studying neuronal receptors such as the G-protein coupled serotonin1A receptor. In this paper, we have explored the organization and dynamics of bovine hippocampal membranes using the amphiphilic environment-sensitive fluorescent probe Laurdan. Our results show that the emission spectra of Laurdan display an additional red shifted peak as a function of increasing temperature in native as well as cholesterol-depleted membranes and liposomes made from lipid extracts of the native membrane. Interestingly, wavelength dependence of Laurdan generalized polarization (GP) in native membranes indicates the presence of an ordered gel-like phase at low temperatures, whereas characteristics of the liquid-ordered phase are observed at high temperatures. Similar experiments performed using cholesterol-depleted membranes show fluidization of the membrane with increasing cholesterol depletion. In addition, results from fluorescence polarization of DPH indicate that the hippocampal membrane is fairly ordered even at physiological temperature. The temperature dependence of Laurdan excitation GP provides a measure of the apparent thermal transition temperature and extent of cooperativity in these membranes. Analysis of time-resolved fluorescence measurements of Laurdan shows reduction in mean fluorescence lifetime with increasing temperature due to change in environmental polarity. These results constitute novel information on the dynamics of hippocampal membranes and its modulation by cholesterol depletion monitored using Laurdan fluorescence.  相似文献   

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