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1.
The fatty acid composition of cultured Friend erythroleukemia cells was modified by supplementation of the medium with oleic or linoleic acid. There was a 30% reduction in saturated and a 35% reduction in polyunsaturated fatty acids in microsomal phospholipids when the cells were grown in media supplemented with oleic acid, and a 3-fold increase in polyunsaturated fatty acids when the cells were grown in linoleic acid-supplemented media. Electron-spin resonance studies with the 5-nitroxystearate probe demonstrated that there was no appreciable change in microsomal lipid mobility as measured by the order parameters. In contrast, changes in lipid mobility were detected with the spin-label probe when microsomes were first isolated from Friend erythroleukemia cells and subsequently modified by incubation with liposomes composed of either dioleoyl- or dilinoleoylphosphatidylcholine plus bovine liver phospholipid-exchange protein. The fatty acid compositional changes produced in these microsomes were similar to those obtained when the intact cells were grown in media containing supplemental fatty acids. These findings indicate that the lipid mobility of Friend cell microsomes can be altered by phospholipid replacements in vitro, but that this does not occur when similar microsomal fatty acid modifications are produced during culture of the intact cell.  相似文献   

2.
Characterization of highly purified ornithine decarboxylase from rat heart   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The fatty acid composition of cultured Friend erythroleukemia cells was modified by supplementation of the medium with oleic or linoleic acid. There was a 30% reduction in saturated and a 35% reduction in polyunsaturated fatty acids in microsomal phospholipids when the cells were grown in media supplemented with oleic acid, and a 3-fold increase in polyunsaturated fatty acids when the cells were grown in linoleic acid-supplemented media. Electron-spin resonance studies with the 5- nitroxystearate probe demonstrated that there was no appreciable change in microsomal lipid mobility as measured by the order parameters. In contrast, changes in lipid mobility were detected with the spin-label probe when microsomes were first isolated from Friend erythroleukemia cells and subsequently modified by incubation with liposomes composed of either dioleoyl- or dilinoleoylphosphatidylcholine plus bovine liver phospholipid-exchange protein. The fatty acid compositional changes produced in these microsomes were similar to those obtained when the intact cells were grown in media containing supplemental fatty acids. These findings indicate that the lipid mobility of Friend cell microsomes can be altered by phospholipid replacements in vitro, but that this does not occur when similar microsomal fatty acid modifications are produced during culture of the intact cell.  相似文献   

3.
Acholeplasma laidlawii, a mycoplasma, is unable to synthesize unsaturated fatty acids but it will incorporate them into its plasma membrane if they are supplied exogeneously. Thus the fatty acid composition of the cell membrane can be defined by growing the organism in media containing specific fatty acids. We obtained cells with predominantly one type of unsaturated fatty acid (either oleic, linoleic or linolenic acid) or cells with only saturated fatty acid in the cell membrane. The cells were irradiated with 7 MeV electrons and the effect of membrane fatty acid composition on cell survival was examined. At 200 Gy/min and 0.5 degrees C (melting ice) there was little difference in the radiation sensitivities of the cells grown in unsaturated fatty acids either in aerated or anoxic radiation conditions. However, the cells containing saturated fatty acids irradiated in anoxic conditions were markedly more sensitive than the cells containing unsaturated fatty acids. At 200 Gy/min and 37 degrees C the two types of cells were of similar sensitivity both in aerated and anoxic radiation conditions. At 5 Gy/min at 0.5 degrees C the cells containing linolenic acid (18:3) were less sensitive than those containing solely saturated fatty acids. However, at 5 Gy/min at 37 degrees C there was no difference in sensitivity between these two types of cell. Our results strongly argue against the involvement of lipid peroxidation as a molecular change leading to cell death.  相似文献   

4.
The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of altering the fatty acid profile of the lipid membrane on storage survival of freeze‐dried probiotic, Lactobacillus acidophilus La‐5, as well as study the membrane integrity and lipid oxidation. The fatty acid composition of the lipid membrane of L. acidophilus La‐5 was significantly different upon growth in MRS (containing Tween 80, an oleic acid source), or in MRS with Tween 20 (containing C12:0 and C14:0), linoleic, or linolenic acid supplemented. Bacteria grown in MRS showed the highest storage survival rates. No indications of loss of membrane integrity could be found, and membrane integrity could therefore not be connected with loss of viability. Survival of bacteria grown with linoleic or linolenic acid was more negatively affected by the presence of oxygen, than bacteria grown in MRS or with Tween 20 supplemented. A small, but significant, loss of linolenic acid during storage could be identified, and an increase of volatile secondary oxidation products during storage was found for bacteria grown in MRS, or with linoleic, or linolenic acid supplemented, but not for bacteria grown with Tween 20. Overall, the results indicate that lipid oxidation and loss of membrane integrity are not the only or most important detrimental reactions which can occur during storage. By altering the fatty acid composition, it was also found that properties of oleic acid gave rise to more robust bacteria than more saturated or unsaturated fatty acids did. © 2015 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Biotechnol. Prog., 31:799–807, 2015  相似文献   

5.
The aim of this study was to investigate the influence of supplementing growth medium with unsaturated fatty acids on the technical properties of the probiotic strain Lactobacillus johnsonii NCC 533, such as heat and acid tolerance, and inhibition of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium infection. Our results showed that the membrane composition and morphology of L. johnsonii NCC 533 were significantly changed by supplementing a minimal Lactobacillus medium with oleic, linoleic, and linolenic acids. The ratio of saturated to unsaturated plus cyclic fatty acids in the bacterial membrane decreased by almost 2-fold when minimal medium was supplemented with unsaturated fatty acids (10 μg/ml). The subsequent acid and heat tolerance of L. johnsonii decreased by 6- and 20-fold when the strain was grown in the presence of linoleic and linolenic acids, respectively, compared with growth in oleic acid (all at 10 μg/ml). Following acid exposure, significantly higher (P < 0.05) oleic acid content was detected in the membrane when growth medium was supplemented with linoleic or linolenic acid, indicating that saturation of the membrane fatty acids occurred during acid stress. Cell integrity was determined in real time during stressed conditions using a fluorescent viability kit in combination with flow cytometric analysis. Following heat shock (at 62.5°C for 5 min), L. johnsonii was unable to form colonies; however, 60% of the bacteria showed no cell integrity loss, which could indicate that the elevated heat inactivated vital processes within the cell, rendering it incapable of replication. Furthermore, L. johnsonii grown in fatty acid-enriched minimal medium had different adhesion properties and caused a 2-fold decrease in S. enterica serovar Typhimurium UK1-lux invasion of HT-29 epithelial cells compared with bacteria grown in minimal medium alone. This could be related to changes in the hydrophobicity and fluidity of the membrane. Our study shows that technical properties underlying probiotic survivability can be affected by nutrient composition of the growth medium.  相似文献   

6.
Perturbation of the fatty acid composition of human lymphocytes in vitro was investigated by addition of linoleic acid complexed to bovine serum albumin (BSA-LA) and by mitogenic stimulation with phytohaemagglutinin (PHA). BSA-LA resulted in a 45% increase in linoleic acid in phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) and over 100% in phosphatidylcholine (PC) in peripheral blood cells. Supplementation with BSA-LA in PHA-stimulated lymphocytes produced even greater changes: 100% increase in linoleic acid content for PE and over 300% for PC. There was a large decrease in oleic acid: 40% for PE and almost 100% in PC. Significant decreases in arachidonic acid occurred in both phospholipid fractions. PHA alone also altered membrane phospholipid fatty acid composition, with reductions in palmitic, stearic and linoleic acid for PE and increases in oleic acid and arachidonic acid (almost 100%). For PC, there were large decreases in stearic (40%), linoleic (30%) and arachidonic (40%) acids, together with an increase in oleic acid (65%). Cells supplemented with linoleic acid grown in the presence of PHA, compared with those grown in linoleic acid-supplemented medium alone, showed a 40% decrease in palmitic acid and a 55% increase in arachidonic acid in PE. For PC, there were large decreases in stearic acid (40%) and arachidonic acid (57%). Antibody-induced redistribution of surface molecules ('capping') was inhibited by some 14% after incubation with BSA-LA. However, no consistent alterations in PHA-induced cell proliferation were observed. These data suggest that profound alterations of membrane fatty acid composition occur spontaneously during the mitotic cycle, and may be further induced by experimental manipulation, without gross perturbation of cell function.  相似文献   

7.
The incorporation of exogenously supplied fatty acids, palmitic acid, palmitoleic acid, oleic acid and linoleic acid, was examined in the yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe at two growth temperatures, 20 °C and 30 °C. Fatty acids supplied to S. pombe in the growth medium were found to be preferentially incorporated into the cells, becoming a dominant species. The relative increase in exogenous fatty acids in cells came at the expense of endogenous oleic acid as a proportion of total fatty acids. Lowering the temperature at which the yeast were grown resulted in decreased levels of incorporation of the fatty acids palmitic acid, palmitoleic acid and linoleic acid compared to cells supplemented at 30 °C. In addition, the relative amount of the endogenously produced unsaturated fatty acid oleic acid, while greatly reduced compared to unsupplemented cells, was increased in cells supplemented with fatty acids at 20 °C compared to supplemented cells at 30 °C. The differential production of oleic acid in S. pombe cells indicates that regulation of unsaturated fatty acid levels, possibly by control of the stearoyl-CoA desaturase, is an important control point in membrane composition in response to temperature and diet in this species.  相似文献   

8.
Diets supplemented with high levels of saturated or unsaturated fatty acids supplied by addition of sheep kidney fat or sunflower seed oil, respectively, were fed to rats with or without dietary cholesterol. The effects of these diets on cardiac membrane lipid composition, catecholamine-stimulated adenylate cyclase and beta-adrenergic receptor activity associated with cardiac membranes, were determined. The fatty acid-supplemented diets, either with or without cholesterol, resulted in alterations in the proportion of the (n-6) to (n-3) series of unsaturated fatty acids, with the sunflower seed oil increasing and the sheep kidney fat decreasing this ratio, but did not by themselves significantly alter the ratio of saturated to unsaturated fatty acids. However, cholesterol supplementation resulted in a decrease in the proportion of saturated and polyunsaturated fatty acids and a dramatic increase in oleic acid in cardiac membrane phospholipids irrespective of the nature of the dietary fatty acid supplement. The cholesterol/phospholipid ratio of cardiac membrane lipids was also markedly increased with dietary cholesterol supplementation. Although relatively unaffected by the nature of the dietary fatty acid supplement, catecholamine-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity was significantly increased with dietary cholesterol supplementation and was positively correlated with the value of the membrane cholesterol/phospholipid ratio. Although the dissociation constant for the beta-adrenergic receptor, determined by [125I](-)-iodocyanopindolol binding, was unaffected by the nature of the dietary lipid supplement, the number of beta-adrenergic receptors was dramatically reduced by dietary cholesterol and negatively correlated with the value of the membrane cholesterol/phospholipid ratio. These results indicate that the activity of the membrane-associated beta-adrenergic/adenylate cyclase system of the heart can be influenced by dietary lipids particularly those altering the membrane cholesterol/phospholipid ratio and presumably membrane physico-chemical properties. In the face of these dietary-induced changes, a degree of homeostasis was apparent both with regard to membrane fatty acid composition in response to an altered membrane cholesterol/phospholipid ratio, and to down regulation of the beta-adrenergic receptor in response to enhanced catecholamine-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity.  相似文献   

9.
The membrane lipid aliphatic chains of Clostridium acetobutylicum ATCC 4259 have been extensively modified by growth in biotin-free medium containing vitamin-free casein hydrolysate supplemented with either elaidic acid, oleic acid, or mixtures of palmitic and oleic acids. Growth with elaidic acid resulted in polar lipids containing 88.6% 18:1 acyl chains and 94.5% 18:1 ether-linked chains. Growth with oleic acid resulted in comparable levels of enrichment of the lipids with 18:1 chains and C19 chains containing cyclopropane rings. When cells were grown with mixtures of palmitic and oleic acids, the ether-linked chains of the plasmalogens were greater than or equal to 64% 18:1 plus C19 chains containing cyclopropane rings at all ratios of oleic to palmitic acid in the medium. The acyl chains reflected the palmitic acid content of the medium more closely. Marked changes were observed in both phospholipid and glycosyldiglyceride compositions as the lipid acyl and ether-linked chains became more enriched with unsaturated and cyclopropane chains. The ratio of the glycerol acetal of plasmenylethanolamine to phosphatidylethanolamine increased, the ratio of cardiolipin to phosphatidylglycerol decreased, and the ratio of diglycosyldiglyceride to monoglycosyldiglyceride increased. However, the monoglycosyldiglyceride/diglycosyldiglyceride ratio was lower for cells grown on 100% oleic acid than for cells grown on 60 or 80% oleic acid. In the membranes of cells grown on 100% oleic acid, the ratio of glycolipids to phospholipids was lower than that found in cells grown on 60% oleic acid. These results indicate that C. acetobutylicum regulates its polar lipid composition in a complex manner involving phospholipids and glycosyldiglycerides. These changes can affect the equilibria between those lipids that form bilayers and those lipids that tend to form nonlamellar phases when enriched with unsaturated aliphatic chains. Phosphoglycolipids of unknown structure were also observed in cells grown either with biotin or with fatty acids. The content of the most abundant phosphoglycolipid also varied with the degree of unsaturation of the cellular lipids.  相似文献   

10.
The fatty acid composition of human skin fibroblasts grown in 10% dialyzed fetal calf serum can be modified considerably by adding supplemental fatty acids to the culture medium. The degree of modification was dependent on the concentration of added fatty acid over the range tested, 2.5 X 10(-5) to 1 X 10(-4) M. At the higher concentration, the extent of the modifications was as those which can be produced in nonhuman or malignant cell lines. Although the greatest changes were produced in the neutral lipid fraction, the cellular phospholipids also exhibited appreciable modifications. The phospholipids isolated from a microsomal fraction prepared from the cell homogenate exhibited similar changes in fatty acyl composition. These findings indicate that the human fibroblast can tolerate considerable variability in fatty acid composition, even in membrane phospholipids. The triglyceride content of the cells increased when they were grown in the presence of added fatty acids, but the phospholipid and cholesterol content remained unchanged. Growth was not affected by either oleic or linoleic acids, but it was reduced up to 50% when palmitic linolenic, or arachidonic acid was added in concentrations of 5 X 10(-5) M or above. Extensive modifications in phospholipid fatty acid composition also were produced in confluent monolayers of these fibroblasts. This suggest that some membrane lipid turnover occurs even when the cultures are not rapidly growing. Fatty acid modifications also were produced in the commercially available IMR-90 strain of human lung fibroblasts, suggesting that the ability to tolerate considerable differences in fatty acid composition is not a special property of the skin fibroblast line that was isolated locally.  相似文献   

11.
The membrane lipid composition of Tetrahymena pyriformis NT-I was observed to change in a manner markedly dependent on the progress of culture age. The pellicular, mitochondrial and microsomal membranes were isolated from cell harvested at various growth phases (I, early exponential; II, mid-exponential; III, late exponential; IV, early stationary; V, late stationary) and their lipid composition was analyzed by thin-layer and gas-liquid chromatography. Although the phospholipid composition varied somewhat among membrane fractions, the most general age-dependent alteration was a considerable decrease in the content of phosphatidylethanolamine accompanied by a small increase in phosphatidylcholine. The 2-aminoethylphosphonolipid, enriched in the surface membrane pellicle, did not undergo a consistent change. As for fatty acid composition the most notable variation occurred in unsaturated fatty acids; a great increase in oleic and linoleic acids and a compensatory decrease in palmitoleic acid. This resulted in an augmented unsaturation of the overall phospholipid fatty acid profile of the aged membranes. The age-associated drastic decline in the palmitoleic acid content in membrane phospholipids could be accounted for by the markedly lowered activity of palmitoyl-CoA desaturase. The microsomes from the early exponential phase cells possess a 4-fold higher activity of the desaturase as compared to that of the late stationary phase microsomes. The decreased desaturase activity associated with the culture age was also reflected in the corresponding decrease in the conversion rate of [14C]palmitate to [14C]palmitoleate in cells labelled in vivo. The ESR spectra of the spin-labeled phospholipids extracted from the pellicular and microsomal membranes have led to the suggestion that these types of membrane would become more fluid with the age of growth.  相似文献   

12.
The nature of the interactions between cytochrome c oxidase and the phospholipids in mitochondrial membranes has been investigated by varying the nature of the fatty acyl components of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. A double fatty acid yeast mutant, FAI-4C, grown in combinations of unsaturated (oleic, linoleic, linolenic, and eicosenoic) and saturated (lauric and palmitic) fatty acids, was employed to modify mitochondrial membranes. The supplemented fatty acids constituted a unique combination of different acyl chain lengths with varying degrees of unsaturation which were subsequently incorporated into mitochondrial phospholipids. Phosphatidylethanolamine and cardiolipin, the predominant phospholipids of the inner mitochondrial membrane, were characterized by their high levels of supplemented unsaturated fatty acids. Increasing the chain length or the degree of unsaturation of mitochondrial membrane phospholipids had no effect on altering the nature of the phospholipid polar head group but did result in a profound change on the specific activity of cytochrome c oxidase. When studied under conditions of different ionic strengths and pHs the enzyme's activity, as documented by Eadie-Hofstee plots, showed biphasic kinetics. The kinetic parameters for the low affinity reaction were greatly influenced by the changes in the membrane fatty acids and only marginal effects were noted at the high affinity reaction site. The discontinuities in the steady-state fluorescence anisotropy of 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene, monitored at increasing temperatures, suggested that changes in membrane fluidity were conditioned by alterations in mitochondrial membrane fatty acid constituents. These results indicate that the lipid changes affecting the low affinity binding site of cytochrome c oxidase may be the result of lipid-protein interactions which lead to enzyme conformational changes or may be due to gross changes in membrane fluidity. It may, therefore, follow that this enzyme site may be embedded in or be juxtaposed to the outer surface of the inner mitochondrial membrane bilayer in contrast to the high affinity site which has been shown to be significantly above the membrane plane.  相似文献   

13.
We have studied the changes in the fatty acid profiles of red blood cell membrane phospholipids in 47 infants who were exclusively fed human milk from birth to 1 month of life. Twenty blood samples were obtained from cord, 15 at 7 days and 12 at 30 days after birth. Membrane phospholipids were obtained from erythrocyte ghosts by thin-layer chromatography and fatty acid composition was determined by gas liquid chromatography. Phosphatidylcholine showed the most important changes during early life; stearic, w6 eicosatrienoic and arachidonic acids decreased whereas oleic and linoleic acids increased. In phosphatidylethanolamine, palmitic and stearic acid declined and oleic, linoleic and docosahexenoic acids increased with advancing age. Small changes were noted for individual fatty acids in phosphatidylserine. In sphingomyelin stearic acid increased from birth to 1 month and linoleic, arachidonic and nervonic acids decreased. Total polyunsaturated fatty acids of the w6 series greater than 18 carbon atoms increased with advancing age in phosphatidylethanolamine and decreased in choline and serine phosphoglycerides and in sphingomyelin. Long chain fatty acids derived from linoleic acid decreased in phosphatidylcholine but increased in ethanolamine and serine phosphoglycerides. The different behavior in the changes observed in fatty acid patterns for each erythrocyte membrane phospholipid may be a consequence of its different location in the cell membrane bilayer and specific exchange with plasma lipid fractions.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of different dietary fat intake on the lipid composition and enzyme behaviour of sarcolemmal (Na+ + K+)ATPase and sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase from rat heart were investigated. Rat diets were supplemented with either sunflower seed oil (unsatd./satd. 5.6) or sheep kidney fat (unsatd./satd. 0.8). Significant changes in the phospholipid fatty acid composition were observed in both membranes after 9 weeks dietary lipid treatment. For both membranes, the total saturated/unsaturated fatty acid levels were unaffected by the dietary lipid treatment, however the proportions of the major unsaturated fatty acids were altered. Animals fed the sunflower seed oil diet exhibited an increase in n-6 fatty acids, including linoleic (18:2(n-6] and arachidonic (20:4(n-6] while the sheep kidney fat dietary rats were higher in n-3 fatty acids, principally docosahexaenoic (22:6), with the net result being a higher n-6/n-3 ratio in the sunflower seed oil group compared to sheep kidney fat dietary animals. Fluorescence polarization indicated that the fluidity of sarcoplasmic reticular membrane was greater than that of sarcolemmal membrane, with a dietary lipid-induced decrease in fluidity being observed in the sarcoplasmic reticular membrane from sheep kidney fat dietary animals. Despite these significant changes in membrane composition and physical properties, neither the specific activity nor the temperature-activity relationship (Arrhenius profile) of the associated ATPases were altered. These results suggest that with regard to the parameters measured in this study, the two ion-transporting ATPases are not modulated by changes which occur in the membrane lipid composition as a result of the diet.  相似文献   

15.
Effects of fatty acids on lysis of Streptococcus faecalis.   总被引:6,自引:5,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Palmitic, stearic, oleic, and linoleic acids at concentrations of 200 nmol/ml all inhibited autolysin activity 80% or more in whole cells or cell-free extracts. This concentration of the saturated fatty acids palmitic acid and stearic acid had little or no effect on the growth of whole cells or protoplasts. However, the unsaturated fatty acids oleic acid and linoleic acid induced lysis in both situations. This lytic effect is apparently not related to any uncoupling activity or inhibition of energy catabolism by unsaturated fatty acids. It is concluded that unsaturated fatty acids induce cell and protoplast lysis by acting as more potent membrane destabilizers than saturated fatty acids.  相似文献   

16.
The metabolism of nuclear phospholipid acyl components of liver in uneven-aged rats was studied in vitro under different dietary fat implications. The activity of phospholipases A1 and A2 in the nuclei was found to sharply increase in animals pretreated with excess of fat. The incorporation of labelled palmitic, oleic, linoleic and arachidonic acid into nuclear phospholipids is under control of age and diet manipulations. The observed changes in the level of fatty acids metabolism are more pronounced in cell nuclei of the young rat liver. The lipid composition of cell nuclei in the test 3-month old animals does not differ from that of the control animals. At the same time dietary implications induce deep changes in the composition of nuclear lipids in 24-months old animals.  相似文献   

17.
Saccharomyces cerevisiae GL7 cells require exogenous sterol and unsaturated fatty acid for growth. When grown in the presence of cholesterol or 7-dehydrocholesterol, the cells incorporated less saturated fatty acid into phospholipids than cells grown with ergosterol, stigmasterol, or beta-sitosterol as the sterol source. This lower saturated fatty acid content was most pronounced in phosphatidylethanolamine, slightly less so in phosphatidylcholine, and least evident in phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylinositol. Growing the cells with the various sterols did not affect the ratios of individual phospholipids. The ability of strain GL7 to use 7-dehydrocholesterol as the only sterol supplement for growth was dependent upon the nature of the unsaturated fatty acids added to the growth medium. In the presence of linoleic, linolenic, or a mixture of palmitoleic and oleic acids, excellent growth was observed with either ergosterol, cholesterol, or 7-dehydrocholesterol. However, when the medium was supplemented with either oleic or petroselenic acid, the cells grew more slowly (oleic) or much more poorly (petroselenic) with 7-dehydrocholesterol than with ergosterol. A specific relationship between sterol structure and membrane fatty acid composition in yeast cells is implied.  相似文献   

18.
Dispersions of a pure unsaturated phospholipid, dilinoleoylphosphatidyl choline, formed conjugated diene hydroperoxides when irradiated in air with 7 MeV electrons (150 Gy and 300 Gy). Peroxide formation was optimized when the dispersions were irradiated in air at 37 degrees C at a dose rate of 5 Gy/min. No significant loss of linoleic acid from the irradiated phospholipid dispersions was observed after doses of 150 or 300 Gy. Small amounts of thiobarbituric acid-reactive material were formed in irradiated unsaturated phospholipid dispersions. However, lipids or membranes isolated from 48 hour cultures of Acholeplasma laidlawii grown in media supplemented with either linoleic or linolenic acid did not appear to be peroxidized by irradiation under the same conditions.  相似文献   

19.
The response of a yeast unsaturated fatty acid auxotroph, defective in delta 9-desaturase activity, to heat and ethanol stresses was examined. The most heat- and ethanol-tolerant cells had membranes enriched with oleic acid (C18:1), followed in order by cells enriched with linoleic (C18:2) and linolenic (C18:3) acids. Cells subjected to a heat shock (25-37 degrees C for 30 min) accumulated trehalose and synthesized typical heat shock proteins. Although there were no obvious differences in protein profiles attributable to lipid supplementation of the mutant, relative protein synthesis as determined by densitometric analysis of autoradiograms suggested that hsp expression was different. However, there was no consistent relationship between the synthesis of heat shock proteins and the acquisition of thermotolerance in the lipid supplemented auxotroph or related wild type. Furthermore, trehalose accumulation was also not closely related to stress tolerance. On the other hand, the data presented indicated a more consistent role for membrane lipid composition in stress tolerance than trehalose, heat shock proteins, or ergosterol. We suggest that the sensitivity of C18:3-enriched cells to heat and ethanol may be attributable to membrane damage associated with increases in membrane fluidity and oxygen-derived free radical attack of membrane lipids.  相似文献   

20.
The lipid fluidity in purified plasma membranes (PM) of murine leukemic GRSL cells, as measured by fluorescence polarization, is much higher than in PM of normal thymocytes. This was found to be due to relatively low contents of cholesterol and sphingomyelin and a high amount of unsaturated fatty acyl chains, especially linoleic acid, in the phospholipids. PM from GRSL cells contain markedly more phosphatidylethanolamine than those from thymocytes. For both GRSL cells and thymocytes the detailed lipid composition of isolated PM was compared with that of the corresponding shed extracellular membranes (ECM), which were isolated from the ascites fluid and from thymus cell suspensions, respectively. The somewhat decreased lipid fluidity of thymocyte ECM as compared to their PM, can be ascribed to the increased cholesterol/phospholipid molar ratio (0.88 vs. 0.74). No other major differences were found between the lipid composition of these membranes. In contrast, significant differences were found between PM and ECM from GRSL cells. In this system a much lower lipid fluidity of the shed ECM was found, due to the much increased cholesterol/phospholipid molar ratio (3.5-fold) and sphingomyelin (9-fold) content, as compared to the PM. Further, the ECM contain relatively more lysophosphatidylethanolamine and less phosphatidylcholine and -inositol. ECM contain a higher amount of polyunsaturated fatty acids, especially in the phosphatidylethanolamine and lysophosphatidylethanolamine classes. On the other hand, the fatty acids of phosphatidylcholine and lysophosphatidylcholine are more saturated than in PM. In particular, ECM of GRSL cells contain less oleic and linoleic acid residues and more arachidonic acid and 22:polyunsaturated fatty acid residues than PM. The possible relevance of these differences with respect to the mechanism of shedding of vesicles from the cell surface, is discussed.  相似文献   

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