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1.
1. The interactions between cytochrome c (native and [(14)C]carboxymethylated) and monolayers of phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidic acid and cardiolipin at the air/water interface was investigated by measurements of surface radioactivity, pressure and potential. 2. On a subphase of 10mm-or m-sodium chloride, penetration of cytochrome c into egg phosphatidylcholine monolayers, as measured by an increase of surface pressure, and the number of molecules penetrating, as judged by surface radioactivity, were inversely proportional to the initial pressure of the monolayer and became zero at 20dynes/cm. The constant of proportionality was increased when the cytochrome c was carboxymethylated or decreased when the phospholipid was hydrogenated, but the cut-off point remained at 20dynes/cm. 3. Penetrated cytochrome c could be removed almost entirely by compression of the phosphatidylcholine monolayer above 20dynes/cm. 4. With phosphatidic acid and cardiolipin monolayers on 10mm-sodium chloride the binding of cytochrome c was much stronger and cytochrome c penetrated into films nearing the collapse pressure (>40dynes/cm.). The penetration was partly electrostatically facilitated, since it was decreased by carrying out the reaction on a subphase of m-sodium chloride, and the relationship between the surface pressure increment and the initial film pressure moved nearer to that observed with phosphatidylcholine. 5. Surface radioactivity determinations showed that [(14)C]carboxymethylated cytochrome c was still adsorbed on phosphatidic acid and cardiolipin monolayers after the cessation of penetration. This adsorption was primarily electrostatic in nature because it could be prevented and substantially reversed by adding m-sodium chloride to the subphase and there was no similar adsorption on phosphatidylcholine films. 6. The penetration into and adsorption on the three phospholipid monolayers was examined as a function of the pH of the subphase and compared with the state of ionization of both the phospholipid and the protein, and the area occupied by the latter at an air/water interface. 7. It is concluded that the binding of cytochrome c to phospholipids can only be partially understood by a consideration of the ionic interaction between the components and that subtle conformational changes in the protein must affect the magnitude and stability of the complex. 8. If cytochrome c is associated with a phospholipid in mitochondria then cardiolipin would fulfil the characteristics of the binding most adequately.  相似文献   

2.
1. Measurements have been made of the interaction of cytochrome c, bovine serum albumin and synthetic oxytocin with low-pressure (2dyn/cm) monolayers of stearic acid, phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine. 2. [(14)C]Carboxymethylation of the cytochrome c and albumin followed by surface-radioactivity determinations have shown that only a proportion of the protein added to the subphase is bound to the monolayers and that initially the degree of binding is dependent on the protein concentration. The binding is irreversible in the sense that the adsorbed protein cannot be removed by transferring the film containing the interacted protein to a fresh subphase containing no protein. 3. Three successive types of interaction can usually be recognized. (a) Initially, whole molecules of protein penetrate the lipid film and occupy the same area as those of the protein spread at the air/water interface. (b) Above certain film pressures a part of each protein molecule, probably hydrophobic side chains, penetrates the film. The change in surface pressure per unit of bound protein is much smaller than in (a). (c) At higher film pressures, adsorption without penetration occurs. With cytochrome c this is initially dependent on a favourable electrostatic interaction.  相似文献   

3.
Stability of unimolecular films of 32P-labelled lecithin   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
1. The stability of monolayers of a highly unsaturated yeast lecithin labelled with (32)P has been investigated by a surface radioactivity technique. 2. Lecithin films on distilled water at all surface pressures between 6 and 48dynes/cm. were completely stable on rapid perfusion of the subphase and on addition of ionic amphipathic substances to the film. 3. Ultrasonically treated lecithin added to the subphase caused a slow loss of surface radioactivity but little pressure change. 4. The addition of proteins to the subphase caused negligible changes in the film even when conditions were favourable for electrostatic heterocoagulation and penetration. 5. Lecithin films were not hydrolysed by a strongly acid subphase at room temperature. The very low rate of hydrolysis produced by alkali was proportional to the subphase OH(-)ion concentration: the apparent activation energy and temperature coefficient (Q(10)) of the reaction were 14250 cal. and 2.37 respectively. 6. Alkaline hydrolysis of lecithin monolayers was markedly stimulated by adding methanol (10-20%, v/v) to the subphase. The addition of ionic amphipaths to the monolayer had the expected type of effect on the hydrolysis rate, but its magnitude was far less than that suggested by an application of the Poisson-Boltzmann equation for ion distribution at a charged interface (Davies & Rideal, 1963).  相似文献   

4.
The effect of 131I-labelled concanavalin A on the surface pressure and surface radioactivity of monolayers formed from phospholipids and from natural and synthetic glycolipids has been studied. The lectin binds to and penetrates dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine monolayers at a surface pressure of 15 dynes/cm and this interaction is inhibited by the presence of α-methyl mannose int he subphase. At surface pressures of 25 dynes/cm or higher, concanavalin A will interact with monoglucosyl diglyceride or diglucosyl diglyceride from Acholeplasma laidlawii and with synthetic glycolipids containing 2 or 3 α1 → 4-linked D-glucose residues in the headgroup, but not with phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylglycerol, or with the ganglioside II3NeuAc-GgOse4-Cer. The binding to the glycolipid sugar group and penetration of the hydrocarbon region seem to occur simultaneously, as the time courses for the development of surface pressure and surface radioactivity coincide.  相似文献   

5.
The interaction of acetylcholine receptor and acetylcholinesterase with lipid monolayers was followed by measuring changes in surface pressure.When injected into the subphase of a lipid monolayer, the proteins caused increases in surface pressure from 5 to 10 dynes/cm, indicating a penetration of protein into the monolayer. At pH values below the isoelectric point of the proteins the incorporation was improved. The same was observed when Ca2+ (2 mM) was added.The presence of the enzyme in the mixed film could be demonstrated by using diiso[3H]propyl fluorophosphate-labelled acetylcholinesterase as well as by measuring enzyme activity. Acetylcholine receptor was shown to be present in the mixed film by using a complex made of the receptor and α-[3H]neurotoxin.  相似文献   

6.
1. The hydrolysis of monolayers of phosphatidyl[Me-(14)C]choline at the air/water interface by phospholipase D (phosphatidylcholine phosphatidohydrolase) was investigated by a surface-radioactivity technique by using a flow counter. 2. Phosphatidylcholine of high specific radioactivity was prepared biosynthetically in good yield from [Me-(14)C]choline by using Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 3. At initial monolayer pressures between 12 and 25 dynes/cm. the hydrolysis occurred in two stages, an initial slow hydrolysis followed by a rapid hydrolysis. Below 3dynes/cm. and above 28dynes/cm. no enzymic hydrolysis of pure phosphatidylcholine monolayers could be detected. 4. The rapid hydrolysis was proportional to the enzyme concentration in the subphase, its pH optimum was 6.6, and 0.2mm-Ca(2+) was required for maximal activity. 5. Hydrolysis of the film was accompanied by a pronounced fall in the surface pressure even though the phosphatidic acid formed did not leave the film. When the pressure fell to low values the hydrolysis ceased even if the film was only partially hydrolysed. 6. Above monolayer pressures of 28dynes/cm. enzymic hydrolysis could be initiated by inclusion of phosphatidic acid (and less effectively stearyl hydrogen sulphate) in the film, although the rates were not appreciably higher than those observed at 25dynes/cm. with a pure phosphatidylcholine film. 7. The initiation of the hydrolysis by phosphatidic acid was facilitated by the inclusion of high Ca(2+) concentrations and certain carboxylic acid buffer anions in the subphase, although these did not activate by themselves. 8. The initiation of the hydrolysis at high pressures could not be related to any change in the surface potential brought about by the addition of the long-chain anions to the film, nor could it be ascribed to a surface dilution effect. 9. The results are discussed in relation to previous studies on the hydrolysis of phosphatidylcholine particles by the enzyme and also similar investigations on phosphatidylcholine monolayers with other phospholipases.  相似文献   

7.
1. The redistribution of mitochondrial cytochrome c during homogenization and subcellular fractionation of the liver was studied. Chromatographically homogeneous (14)C-labelled cytochrome c was added in different amounts to liver suspensions immediately before homogenization and the adsorption of radioactivity was determined in cytochrome c fractions extracted at pH4.0, first with water and then with 0.15m-sodium chloride. 2. The soluble cytochrome c remaining in the cell sap after subcellular fractionation was 7% of the calculated amount of cytochrome c passing through a soluble form during the whole process. The total amount of cytochrome c released in a soluble form and subsequently redistributed was 25-30% of the total liver cytochrome c. 3. In the standard microsomal fraction the cytochrome c extracted with water originated entirely from redistribution whereas that extracted with 0.15m-sodium chloride was 80% endogenous. In the mitochondrial fraction both cytochrome c pools were truly endogenous, so that practically none of the mitochondrial cytochrome c released to the soluble cell sap was readsorbed by the mitochondria. 4. These results support our former hypothesis that the cytochrome c extracted with 0.15m-sodium chloride at pH4.0 from the standard microsomes represents the cytochrome c newly synthesized in situ, since it does not originate from redistribution. However, the microsomal pool extracted with water cannot be an intermediate in the postulated transfer of cytochrome c from the microsomal particles to the mitochondria, since this pool arises from redistribution of mitochondrial cytochrome c.  相似文献   

8.
J A Ibdah  M C Phillips 《Biochemistry》1988,27(18):7155-7162
To better understand the factors controlling the binding of apolipoprotein molecules at the surfaces of serum lipoprotein particles, the adsorption of human apolipoprotein A-I to phospholipid monolayers has been studied. The influence of lipid packing was investigated by spreading the monolayers at various initial surface pressures (pi i) and by using various types of lipid. The adsorption of 14C-methylated apolipoprotein A-I was monitored by simultaneously following the surface radioactivity (which could be converted to the surface concentration of protein, gamma) and the change in surface pressure (delta pi). In general, increasing the pi i of lipid monolayers reduces the adsorption of apolipoprotein A-I; for expanded egg phosphatidylcholine (PC) monolayers at pi i greater than or equal to 32 dyn/cm, gamma and delta pi are zero. The degree of adsorption of the apolipoprotein is also influenced by the physical state of the lipid monolayers. Thus, at a given pi i, apolipoprotein A-I adsorbs more to expanded monolayers than to condensed monolayers so that, at a given subphase concentration of protein, gamma of apolipoprotein A-I with various phospholipid monolayers decreases in the order egg PC greater than egg sphingomyelin greater than distearoyl-PC. The plot of gamma against pi i for adsorption of apolipoprotein A-I to dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) monolayers shows an inflection at pi i = 8 dyn/cm; at this pi, the DPPC monolayer undergoes a phase transition from liquid (expanded) to solid (condensed) state. Addition of cholesterol generally decreases the adsorption of apolipoprotein A-I to egg PC monolayers.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
1. In order to determine the initial intracellular site of synthesis of cytochrome c in the liver cell, groups of rats were injected with [(14)C]lysine and killed 7.5, 15, 30 and 60min. later. The livers were homogenized in 0.3m-sucrose and subcellular fractions obtained. The mitochondrial fraction was further subfractionated. Pure cytochrome c was isolated from extracts of each fraction, obtained first with water at pH4.0 and then with 0.15m-sodium chloride. 2. A comparison of the kinetics of incorporation of [(14)C]lysine into total protein for each particulate fraction showed the usual two different kinds of kinetics. Incorporation into all the mitochondrial subfractions and the nuclear fraction rose gradually to a plateau value at about 20min., in contrast with that into the two microsomal fractions which rose rapidly to a peak value about seven times that for the mitochondrial fractions. The kinetics for the incorporation into mitochondrial cytochrome c showed a plateau value at 30min. about three times that for the total mitochondrial protein. There was no difference in the specific radioactivity of the mitochondrial cytochrome c extracted with water or 0.15m-sodium chloride or between the different mitochondrial subfractions. In contrast, the cytochrome c isolated from water extracts of the microsomal fractions had a lower specific radioactivity than that obtained from the 0.15m-sodium chloride extract. The specific radioactivity of the latter showed a rapid rise to a peak value about four times that for the mitochondrial cytochrome c, and the shape of the curve was similar to that for the total protein of the microsomal fraction. The results suggest that cytochrome c is synthesized in toto by the morphological components of the microsomal fraction. It seems first to be bound tightly to a microsomal particle, passing then to a looser microsomal binding and being finally transferred to the mitochondria. The newly synthesized cytochrome c in the mitochondrion could not be differentiated from the old by its degree of extractability at pH 4.0.  相似文献   

10.
We studied the interactions of tetracycline antibiotics, TCs, with phospholipid monolayers with the two-fold aim of elucidating the mechanism of action of TCs and to provide a first step for the realization of bio-mimetic sensor for such drugs by means of the Langmuir-Blodgett technique. Preliminary surface tension studies demonstrated that surface activity of tetracycline is moderate and dependent on the pH of the subphase. We selected three phospholipids having hydrophobic chains of the same length but differing in the polar head structures, i.e. dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine, dipalmitoylphosphatidylethanolamine, and dipalmitoylphosphatidic acid. Surface pressure- and surface potential- area isotherms were employed to investigate the behavior of the phospholipid monolayers at the water-air interface when tetracycline was added to the aqueous subphase. Analysis of the results indicated that the electrostatic interaction is the driving force for migration of tetracycline towards the interface where localized adsorption to the head groups occurs. Nevertheless, such interactions appear to be insufficient to promote penetration of tetracycline through the hydrophobic layer.  相似文献   

11.
α-Lactalbumin interacts more strongly with lecithin and cardiolipin monolayers at pH 3~4 than at pH 7 to 10. At physiological pH this protein does not penetrate monolayers of DPPC and cardiolipin above pressures of 30 dynes/cm. Enzymatic hydrolysis of these monolayers by phospholipase C (Clostridium Welchii) is inhibited partially or totally when α-lactalbumin is injected in the subphase prior to the enzyme injection.  相似文献   

12.
Activation of protein kinase C in lipid monolayers   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The potential of lipid monolayers spread at an air-water interface was investigated as a well defined membrane model able to support protein kinase C (PKC) association and activation. PKC association to a mixed phospholipid film (phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylserine) could be detected by an increase of the monolayer surface pressure. This association was strikingly dependent upon the presence of submicromolar concentrations of Ca2+. The effect of Ca2+ resulted in an increase of the PKC penetration into the lipid core at a given permissive surface pressure as well as in a marked increase of the critical surface pressure (29-38 dynes/cm) above which the enzyme was excluded from the membrane. Inclusion of diacylglycerol or tetradecanoate phorbol acetate (TPA) did not modify the PKC-monolayer association in a detectable manner. PKC associated to the lipid layer exhibited the expected catalytic property and was fully activated when diacylglycerol or TPA was included in the membrane. PKC activity was highly dependent upon the surface pressure of the lipid monolayer, being optimal between 30 and 35 dynes/cm. Study of the compression isotherm of various diacylglycerol structures revealed that all potent PKC agonists exhibited an expanded liquid phase behavior with collapse pressure below 40 dynes/cm, in contrast to weak activators which showed condensed isotherms with high collapse pressure (approximately equal to 60 dynes/cm). These observations showed that the lipid monolayer system is well adapted to the study of the molecular mechanisms involved in the regulation of PKC activity at a model membrane interface. They are in line with the suggestion of a major role of Ca2+ in the association (translocation) of PKC to membrane in living cell and suggest that diacylglycerol (and TPA) might activate membrane-associated PKC through local change in the surrounding lipid phase organization.  相似文献   

13.
The contraction or decrease in area of fatty acid monolayers maintained at a constant surface pressure of 16 dynes/cm was studied as a function of fatty acid chain length, unsaturation, temperature, and the hydrogen ion concentration in the subphase. The data were consistent with the hypothesis that fatty acid solution from the monolayer into the subphase was the mechanism for film loss. Autoxidative reactions did not contribute significantly to film loss since contraction occurred with saturated fatty acid monolayers and with unsaturated fatty acid monolayers in an anaerobic environment. The decrease in area per unit time or the solution rate was inversely proportional to chain length and directly proportional to the degree of unsaturation. Arrhenius plots showed activation energies of 1.5-2.5 kcal mole(-1) for tetradecanoic, octadecenoic, and octadecadienoic acids, and 25 kcal mole(-1) for hexadecanoic acid. The solution rate from the monolayer increased in a sigmoidal fashion with an increase in subphase pH, and the apparent surface pK(a) was estimated as the point where the solution rate was half-maximum. Apparent surface pK(a) values were: hexadecanoic acid, 9.7; octadecenoic acid, 8.3; tetradecanoic acid, 7.9; and octadecadienoic acid, 8.0.  相似文献   

14.
Adsorption of procaine at the air/water interface and its penetration into stearic acid monolayers from aqueous subphase of pH 8 are studied by measuring surface tension of aqueous procaine solutions and by recording surface pressure vs. mean molecular area curves for stearic acid monolayers spread onto procaine solutions of different concentrations. The amount of procaine in the interface is derived by means of Gibbs' equation. Results are compared to those obtained earlier at pH 2 and on unbuffered subphases. With increasing pH an increasing procaine adsorption and procaine penetration is observed. This phenomenon is interpreted in terms of protolytic equilibria in which participate both surfactants procaine and stearic acid.  相似文献   

15.
M D Bazzi  G L Nelsestuen 《Biochemistry》1988,27(18):6776-6783
The association of protein kinase C (PKC) with phospholipid (PL) monolayers spread at the air-water interface was examined. PKC-PL binding induced surface pressure changes that were dependent on the amount of PKC, the phospholipid composition of the monolayers, the presence of Ca2+, and the initial surface pressure of the monolayer (pi 0). Examination of surface pressure increases induced by PKC as a function of phospholipid surface pressure, pi 0, revealed that PKC-phosphatidylserine (PS) association had a critical pressure of 43 dyn/cm. Above this surface pressure, PKC cannot cause further surface pressure changes. This high critical pressure indicated that PKC should be able to penetrate many biological membranes which appear to have surface pressures of about 30 dyn/cm. PKC-induced surface pressure changes were Ca2+ dependent only for PL monolayers spread at a pi 0 greater than 26 dyn/cm. PKC alone (in the absence of PL) formed a film at the air-water interface with a surface pressure of about 26 dyn/cm. Calcium-dependent binding was studied at the higher surface pressures which effectively excluded PKC from the air-water interface. Subphase depletion measurements suggested that association of PKC with PS monolayers consisted of two stages: a rapid Ca2+-dependent interaction followed by a slower process that resulted in irreversible binding of PKC to the monolayer. The second stage appeared to involve penetration of PKC into the hydrocarbon region of the phospholipid. The commonly used in vitro substrates for PKC, histone and protamine sulfate, also associated with and penetrated PS monolayers with critical pressures of 50 and 60 dyn/cm, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
The action of purified phospholipases on monomolecular films of various interfacial pressures is compared with the action on erythrocyte membranes. The phospholipases which cannot hyorolyse phospholipids of the intact erythrocyte membrane, phospholipase C from Bacillus cereus, phospholipase A2 from pig pancreas and Crotalus adamanteus and phospholipase D from cabbage, can hydrolyse phospholipid monolayers at pressure below 31 dynes/cm only. The phospholipases which can hydrolyse phospholipids of the intact erythrocyte membrane, phospholipase C from Clostridium welchii phospholipase A2 from Naja naja and bee venom and sphingomyelinase from Staphylococcus aureus, can hydrolyse phospholipid monolayers at pressure above 31 dynes/cm. It is concluded that the lipid packing in the outer monolayer of the erythrocyte membrane is comparable with a lateral surface pressure between 31 and 34.8 dynes/cm.  相似文献   

17.
Ascorbyl palmitate (ASC16) is an anionic amphiphilic molecule of pharmacological interest due to its antioxidant properties. We found that ASC16 strongly interacted with model membranes. ASC16 penetrated phospholipid monolayers, with a cutoff near the theoretical surface pressure limit. The presence of a lipid film at the interface favored ASC16 insertion compared with a bare air/water surface. The adsorption and penetration time curves showed a biphasic behavior: the first rapid peak evidenced a fast adsorption of charged ASC16 molecules to the interface that promoted a lowering of surface pH, thus partially neutralizing and compacting the film. The second rise represented an approach to the equilibrium between the ASC16 molecules in the subphase and the surface monolayer, whose kinetics depended on the ionization state of the film. Based on the Langmuir dimiristoylphosphatidylcholine + ASC16 monolayer data, we estimated an ASC16 partition coefficient to dimiristoylphosphatidylcholine monolayers of 1.5 × 105 and a ΔGp = − 6.7 kcal·mol− 1. The rheological properties of the host membrane were determinant for ASC16 penetration kinetics: a fluid membrane, as provided by cholesterol, disrupted the liquid-condensed ASC16-enriched domains and favored ASC16 penetration. Subphase pH conditions affected ASC16 aggregation in bulk: the smaller structures at acidic pHs showed a faster equilibrium with the surface film than large lamellar ones. Our results revealed that the ASC16 interaction with model membranes has a highly complex regulation. The polymorphism in the ASC16 bulk aggregation added complexity to the equilibrium between the surface and subphase form of ASC16, whose understanding may shed light on the pharmacological function of this drug.  相似文献   

18.
Pulmonary surfactant contains two families of hydrophobic proteins, SP-B and SP-C. Both proteins are thought to promote the formation of the phospholipid monolayer at the air-fluid interface of the lung. The Wilhelmy plate method was used to study the involvement of SP-B and SP-C in the formation of phospholipid monolayers. The proteins were either present in the phospholipid vesicles which were injected into the subphase or included in a preformed phospholipid monolayer. In agreement with earlier investigators, we found that SP-B and SP-C, present in phospholipid vesicles, were able to induce the formation of a monolayer, as became apparent by an increase in surface pressure. However, when the proteins were present in a preformed phospholipid monolayer (20 mN/m) at similar lipid to protein ratios, the rate of surface pressure increase after injection of pure phospholipid vesicles into the subphase at similar vesicle concentrations was 10 times higher. The process of phospholipid insertion from phospholipid vesicles into the protein-containing monolayers was dependent on (1) the presence of (divalent) cations, (2) the phospholipid concentration in the subphase, (3) the size of the phospholipid vesicles, (4) the protein concentration in the preformed monolayer, and (5) the initial surface pressure at which the monolayers were formed. Both in vesicles and in preformed monolayers, SP-C was less active than SP-B in promoting the formation of a phospholipid monolayer. The use of preformed monolayers containing controlled protein concentrations may allow more detailed studies on the mechanism by which the proteins enhance phospholipid monolayer formation from vesicles.  相似文献   

19.
Monolayer techniques were used to study the interactions of various lipids (cholesterol, lysophosphatidyl choline, phosphatidal ethanolamine, phosphatidyl choline, sphingomyelin, stearic acid, and lipids extracted from plasma high density lipoproteins and very low density lipoprotein) with the lipid-free protein subunit of rat plasma high density lipoprotein and with rat plasma albumin. The proteins were injected under the lipid monolayer at fixed area, and the increase in surface pressure (decrease in surface tension) was measured as a function of time. With all lipids, both the rate and magnitude of this increase were greater with the apolipoprotein than with albumin. The degree of film penetration of pure lipid films (at an initial film pressure of 15 dynes/cm) by the two proteins followed the same order: cholesterol > phosphatidal ethanolamine > phosphatidyl choline > stearic acid > sphingomyelin > lysophosphatidyl choline. Other variables studied were protein concentration, initial film pressure, and pH. Two distinctive properties of the apolipoprotein were the penetration of lipid films at pressures above the collapse pressure of the protein, and the formation of a film even at low salt concentration. High surface activity and strong interaction of HDL-protein with lipid monolayers may be associated with the flexibility of the protein molecule due to absence of disulfide bridges. The unusual surface activity of HDL-protein may be intimately related to the mechanism of formation of the lipoprotein.  相似文献   

20.
A monolayer technique was used to study the substrate specificity of hepatic lipase (HL) and the effect of surface pressure and apolipoproteins on hydrolysis of lipid monolayers by this enzyme. HL hydrolyzed readily phosphatidylethanolamine monolayers. Pure trioctanoylglycerol was found to be a poor substrate but when progressively diluted with nonhydrolyzable 1,2-didodecanoylphosphatidylcholine hydrolysis of triacylglycerol by HL reached maximum at a molar ratio of 1:1 triacylglycerol to phosphatidylcholine. The activation of triacylglycerol hydrolysis was not due to altered penetration of HL. The surface pressure optimum of HL for the hydrolysis of phosphatidylethanolamine monolayers was broad between 12.5 and 25 mN/m. When apolipoprotein E was injected beneath the monolayer of phosphatidylethanolamine prior to enzyme addition, a 3-fold activation of HL was observed at surface pressures equal to or below 15 mN/m. Below surface pressures of 20 mN/m apolipoprotein E did not affect the penetration of HL into the lipid-water interface. Apolipoprotein E slightly activated the hydrolysis of triacylglycerol by HL at 10 mN/m. At a high surface pressure of 25 mN/m all apolipoproteins tested (apolipoproteins A-I, A-II, C-I, C-II, C-III, and E) inhibited the penetration into and HL activity on phosphatidylethanolamine At 18.5 mN/m all apolipoproteins except apolipoprotein E inhibited the hydrolysis of triacylglycerol in the triacylglycerol:phosphatidylcholine mixed film. Based on these results we present a hypothesis that phospholipid present in apolipoprotein E-rich high density lipoprotein-1 and triacylglycerol in intermediate density lipoprotein would be preferred substrates for HL.  相似文献   

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