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1.
Multiple data are available on the self-assembly of mixtures of bilayer-forming amphiphiles, particularly phospholipids and micelle-forming amphiphiles, commonly denoted detergents. The structure of such mixed assemblies has been thoroughly investigated, described in phase diagrams, and theoretically rationalized in terms of the balance between the large spontaneous curvature of the curvophilic detergent and the curvophobic phospholipids. In this critical review, we discuss the mechanism of this process and try to explain the actual mechanism involved in solubilization. Interestingly, membrane solubilization by some detergents is relatively slow and the common attribute of these detergents is that their trans-bilayer movement, commonly denoted flip-flop, is very slow. Only detergents that can flip into the inner monolayer cause relatively rapid solubilization of detergent-saturated bilayers. This occurs via the following sequence of events: 1), relatively rapid penetration of detergent monomers into the outer monolayer; 2), trans-membrane equilibration of detergent monomers between the two monolayers; 3), saturation of the bilayer by detergents and consequent permeabilization of the membrane; and 4), transition of the whole bilayer to thread-like mixed micelles. When the detergent cannot flip to the inner monolayer, the outer monolayer becomes unstable due to mass imbalance between the monolayers and inclusion of the curvophilic detergent molecules in a flat surface. Consequently, the outer monolayer forms mixed micellar structures within the outer monolayer. Shedding of these micelles into the aqueous solution results in partial solubilization. The consequent leakage of detergent into the liposome results in trans-membrane equilibration of detergent and subsequent micellization through the rapid bilayer-saturation mechanism.  相似文献   

2.
D Levy  A Gulik  M Seigneuret  J L Rigaud 《Biochemistry》1990,29(40):9480-9488
The processes of liposome solubilization and reconstitution were studied by using n-dodecyl octaethylene glycol monoether (C12E8). The solubilization of large unilamellar liposomes prepared by reverse-phase evaporation was systematically investigated by turbidity, 31P nuclear magnetic resonance, and centrifugation experiments. The solubilization process is well described by the three-stage model previously proposed for other detergents, and our results further demonstrate the validity of some of the postulates related to this model. In stage I, the detergent distributes between the bilayers and the aqueous solution with a partition coefficient of 1.6 mM-1. In stage II, the detergent-saturated liposomes convert into mixed micelles, the conversion being complete by stage III where all the phospholipids are present as mixed micelles. The agreement between the three methods was excellent, and the results allowed quantitative determination of the effective detergent to phospholipid ratios at which the lamellar to micellar transformation begins and is complete, which amounted to 0.66 and 2.2 (mol/mol), respectively. Furthermore, compositional analysis determined from centrifugation experiments directly demonstrate that the properties of detergent-saturated liposomes and mixed micelles remain constant throughout most of stage II: the C12E8 to phospholipid ratios in the pelleted vesicles and in micelles are constant during stage II and similar to the ratios at which stage II was initiated and complete, respectively. On the other hand, bilayer formation upon detergent removal from mixed C12E8-phospholipid micelles by SM2 Bio-Beads is demonstrated to be the symmetrical opposite of bilayer solubilization.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
The detergent solubilization and reformation of phospholipid vesicles was studied for various detergents. Two distinct mechanisms of vesicle-to-micelle and micelle-to-vesicle transition were observed by turbidimetry and cryo-electron microscopy. The first mechanism involves fast solubilization of phospholipids and occurs via open vesicular intermediates. The reverse process, micelle-to-vesicle transition, mimics the vesicle-to-micelle transition. In the second mechanism the solubilization is a slow process that proceeds via micelles that pinch off from closed vesicles. During vesicle reformation, the micelle-to-vesicle transition, a large number of densely packed multilamellar vesicles are formed. The route used, for solubilization and reformation, by a given detergent-phospholipid combination is critically dependent on the overall packing parameter of the detergent-saturated phospholipid membranes. By a change of the overall packing parameter the solubilization and or reformation mechanism could be changed. All five detergents tested fit within the proposed model. With two detergents the mechanism could be changed by changing the phospholipid composition or the medium conditions.  相似文献   

4.
The mechanisms governing the solubilization by Triton X-100, octyl glucoside, and sodium cholate of large unilamellar liposomes prepared by reverse-phase evaporation were investigated. The solubilization process is described by the three-stage model previously proposed for these detergents [Lichtenberg, D., Robson, R.J., & Dennis, E.A.(1983) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 737, 285-304]. In stage I, detergent monomers are incorporated into the phospholipid bilayers until they saturate the liposomes. At that point, i.e., stage II, mixed phospholipid-detergent micelles begin to form. By stage III, the lamellar to micellar transition is complete and all the phospholipids are present as mixed micelles. The turbidity of liposome preparations was systematically measured as a function of the amount of detergent added for a wide range of phospholipid concentrations (from 0.25 to 20 mM phospholipid). The results allowed a quantitative determination of RSat, the effective detergent to lipid molar ratios in the saturated liposomes, which were 0.64, 1.3, and 0.30 for Triton X-100, octyl glucoside, and sodium cholate, respectively. The corresponding ratios in the mixed micelles, RSol, were 2.5, 3.8, and 0.9 mol of detergent/mol of phospholipid. The monomer concentrations of the three detergents in the aqueous phase were also determined at the lamellar to micellar transitions (0.18, 17, and 2.8 mM, respectively). These transitions were also investigated by 31P NMR spectroscopy, and complete agreement was found with turbidity measurements. Freeze-fracture electron microscopy and permeability studies in the sublytic range of detergent concentrations indicated that during stage I of solubilization detergent partitioning between the aqueous phase and the lipid bilayer greatly affects the basic permeability of the liposomes without significantly changing the morphology of the preparations. A rough approximation of the partition coefficients was derived from the turbidity and permeability data (K = 3.5, 0.09, and 0.11 mM-1 for Triton X-100, octyl glucoside, and sodium cholate, respectively). It is concluded that when performed systematically, turbidity measurements constitute a very convenient and powerful technique for the quantitative study of the liposome solubilization process by detergents.  相似文献   

5.
The detergent solubilization and reformation of phospholipid vesicles was studied for various detergents. Two distinct mechanisms of vesicle-to-micelle and micelle-to-vesicle transition were observed by turbidimetry and cryo-electron microscopy. The first mechanism involves fast solubilization of phospholipids and occurs via open vesicular intermediates. The reverse process, micelle-to-vesicle transition, mimics the vesicle-to-micelle transition. In the second mechanism the solubilization is a slow process that proceeds via micelles that pinch off from closed vesicles. During vesicle reformation, the micelle-to-vesicle transition, a large number of densely packed multilamellar vesicles are formed. The route used, for solubilization and reformation, by a given detergent-phospholipid combination is critically dependent on the overall packing parameter of the detergent-saturated phospholipid membranes. By a change of the overall packing parameter the solubilization and or reformation mechanism could be changed. All five detergents tested fit within the proposed model. With two detergents the mechanism could be changed by changing the phospholipid composition or the medium conditions.  相似文献   

6.
Bile salts are essential for phospholipid secretion into the bile. To study the relevance of the structure of phospholipids for their interaction with bile salts, we used spin-labeled or fluorescent phospholipid analogues of different head groups and acyl chain length. Those analogues form micelles in aqueous suspension. Their solubilization by bile salts resulting in the formation of mixed micelles was followed by the decrease of spin-spin interaction of spin-labeled analogues or by the relief of fluorescence self-quenching of (7-nitro-2-1,3-benzooxadiazol (NBD))-labeled analogues. Solubilization of analogue micelles occurred at and above the critical micellar concentration (CMC) of the bile salts. As revealed by stopped-flow technique, solubilization of NBD-analogues was very rapid with half times as low as 0.1 sec above the CMC of taurocholate. Both kinetics and extent of solubilization were independent of the phospholipid head group, but were significantly affected by the fatty acid chain length. Furthermore, using vesicles with varying phospholipid composition and different types of analogues in self-quenching concentrations, we could show that bile salt-mediated vesicle solubilization depended on the fatty acid chain length of phospholipids. In contrast, neither for phospholipids nor for analogues could an influence of the lipid head group on the solubilization process be observed. These findings support a head group-independent mechanism of bile salt-mediated enrichment of specific phospholipids in the bile fluid.  相似文献   

7.
Membrane proteins, lipids and detergents: not just a soap opera   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Studying membrane proteins represents a major challenge in protein biochemistry, with one of the major difficulties being the problems encountered when working outside the natural lipid environment. In vitro studies such as crystallization are reliant on the successful solubilization or reconstitution of membrane proteins, which generally involves the careful selection of solubilizing detergents and mixed lipid/detergent systems. This review will concentrate on the methods currently available for efficient reconstitution and solubilization of membrane proteins through the use of detergent micelles, mixed lipid/detergent micelles and bicelles or liposomes. We focus on the relevant molecular properties of the detergents and lipids that aid understanding of these processes. A significant barrier to membrane protein research is retaining the stability and function of the protein during solubilization, reconstitution and crystallization. We highlight some of the lessons learnt from studies of membrane protein folding in vitro and give an overview of the role that lipids can play in stabilizing the proteins.  相似文献   

8.
Over 50 detergents were tested to establish which would be most effective in releasing proteins from membrane-bounded compartments without denaturating them. Various concentrations of each detergent were tested for two activities: (1) solubilization of egg phospholipid liposomes as measured by reduction of turbidity and (2) effect of detergent concentration on the activities of soluble, hydrolytic enzymes. Those detergents must effective in solubilizing 0.2% lipid and least detrimental to enzymes were five pure, synthetic compounds recently introduced: CHAPS, CHAPSO, Zwittergents 310 and 312, and octylglucoside. Industrial detergents were generally much inferior, insofar as they solubilized membranes inefficiently and/or inactivated certain hydrolytic enzymes readily. The five detergents were characterized by (a) an unusually high critical micelle concentration and (b) a preference for forming mixed micelles with lipids instead of forming pure micelles, as indicated by an ability to solubilize lipid at concentrations of detergent significantly below the critical micelle concentration. This characteristic permits solubilization of high concentrations of membrane below the critical micelle concentration of the detergent so that protein denaturation is minimized. A generally applicable guideline that emerged from this study is that detergents should be used at approximately their critical micelle concentration which should not be exceeded by the concentration of membrane. Similar considerations should apply to the use of detergents in purifying and reconstituting intrinsic membrane proteins.  相似文献   

9.
A method has been developed for identifying the step in a detergent-mediated reconstitution procedure at which an integral membrane protein can be associated with phospholipids to give functional proteoliposomes. Large liposomes prepared by reverse-phase evaporation were treated with various amounts of the detergents Triton X-100, octyl glucoside, or sodium cholate as described in the preceding paper [Paternostre, M.-T., Roux, M., & Rigaud, J. L. (1988) Biochemistry (preceding paper in this issue)]. At each step of the solubilization process, we added bacteriorhodopsin, the light-driven proton pump from Halobacterium halobium. The protein-phospholipid detergent mixtures were then subjected to SM2 Bio-Beads treatments to remove the detergent, and the resulting vesicles were analyzed with respect to protein insertion and orientation in the membrane by freeze-fracture electron microscopy, sucrose density gradients, and proton pumping measurements. The nature of the detergent used for reconstitution proved to be important for determining the mechanism of protein insertion. With sodium cholate, proteoliposomes were formed only from ternary phospholipid-protein-detergent micelles. With octyl glucoside, besides proteoliposome formation from ternary mixed micelles, direct incorporation of bacteriorhodopsin into preformed liposomes destabilized by saturating levels of this detergent was observed and gave proteoliposomes with optimal proton pumping activity. With Triton X-100, protein insertion into destabilized liposomes was also observed but involved a transfer of the protein initially present in phospholipid-Triton X-100-protein micelles into Triton X-100 saturated liposomes. Our results further demonstrated that protein orientation in the resulting proteoliposomes was critically dependent upon the mechanism by which the protein was incorporated.  相似文献   

10.
The physico-chemical properties of short-chain phosphatidylcholine are reviewed to the extent that its biological activity as a mild detergent can be rationalized. Long-chain diacylphosphatidylcholines are typical membrane phospholipids that form preferentially smectic lamellar phases (bilayers) when dispersed in water. In contrast, the preferred phase of the short-chain analogues dispersed in excess water is the micellar phase. The preferred conformation and the dynamics of short-chain phosphatidylcholines in the monomeric and micellar state present in H(2)O are discussed. The motionally averaged conformation of short-chain phosphatidylcholines is then compared to the single-crystal structures of membrane lipids. The main conclusion emerging is that in terms of preferred conformation and motional averaging short-chain phosphatidylcholines closely resemble their long-chain analogues. The dispersing power of short-chain phospholipids is emphasized in the second part of the review. Evidence is presented to show that this class of compounds is superior to most other detergents used in the solubilization of membrane proteins and the reconstitution of the solubilized proteins to artificial membrane systems (proteoliposomes). The prominent feature of the solubilization/reconstitution of integral membrane proteins by short-chain PC is the retention of the native protein structure and hence the protein function. Due to their special detergent-like properties, short-chain PC lend themselves very well not only to membrane solubilization but also to the purification of integral membrane proteins. The retention of the native protein structure in the solubilized state, i.e. in mixed micelles consisting of the integral membrane protein, intrinsic membrane lipids and short-chain PC, is rationalized. It is hypothesized that short-chain PC interacts primarily with the lipid bilayer of a membrane and very little if at all with the membrane proteins. In this way, the membrane protein remains associated with its preferred intrinsic membrane lipids and retains its native structure and its function.  相似文献   

11.
The effect of bio-surfaces of contrasting curvature, on the kinetic parameters of ortho-nitrophenyl-beta-D-galactopiranoside hydrolysis catalyzed by E. coli beta-galactosidase, was investigated. The self-aggregating state and structure of the amphiphiles (Phosphatidylcholine, Lubrol-PX, Triton X-100, DocNa, SDS and CTAB) were inferred from their c.m.c. values and light-scattering measurements. Low curvature phosphatidylcholine or mixed phosphatidylcholine-detergent vesicles increased V(max) without affecting K(M). High curvature micellar structures containing ionic detergents modulated negatively the enzyme activity (decreased or abolished V(max) and increased K(M)). Neither micelles containing non-ionic detergents nor the amphiphiles in a monomeric form, affected enzyme activity. CTAB at a concentration below its c.m.c but incorporated into a bilayer, became an activator (K(M) decreased respect to the control). Non-enzymatic interfacial hydrolysis of the substrate was discarded. Enzyme-membrane interaction and membrane elasticity, were evaluated using monomolecular layers at the air-water interface. Beyond particular molecular structures, topology affected the direction of the modulatory effects exerted by these amphiphiles on beta-galactosidase activity.  相似文献   

12.
The use of neutron scattering in studying the organisation of detergents in pure micelles, in protein/detergent mixed micelles and in crystals of membrane proteins, is reviewed. Small angle scattering has been used to study the size, shape and composition of pure and mixed protein/detergent micelles as well as the effects of adding small amphiphiles. The technique of contrast variation applied to single crystals is described and its application to the determination of the organization of detergent in single crystals of membrane proteins is discussed. A better understanding of protein/detergent interactions should help in producing crystals of membrane proteins more easily as well as clues to the nature of protein/lipid interactions in vivo.  相似文献   

13.
Specific degradation of the phospholipid membrane of guinea-pig liver microsomal fraction with phospholipase A inactivated glucuronyltransferase. The inactivation was reversed by phosphatidylcholine and mixed microsomal phospholipid micelles at concentrations similar to those present in intact microsomal preparations. The other commonly occurring phospholipids did not reactivate phospholipase A-treated enzyme. Since the mixed microsomal phospholipids consisted mainly of phosphatidylcholine, it is concluded that the reactivation by phospholipids is phosphatidylcholine-specific. Reactivation was also achieved by low concentrations of the cationic detergents cetylpyridinium chloride and cetyltrimethylammonium bromide. Higher concentrations of these detergents inactivated the glucuronyltransferase activity of intact and phospholipase A-treated microsomal fractions. Anionic detergents were potent inactivators of the glucuronyltransferase activity of untreated and phospholipase A-treated microsomal fractions, whereas non-ionic detergents had little effect on the activity of either preparation. Measurements of the zeta-potentials of the micellar species used in this study showed that no obvious relationship existed between the zeta-potentials and the ability to reactivate glucuronyltransferase. However, high positive or negative zeta-potentials were correlated with the ability of the amphipathic compound to inactivate glucuronyltransferase.  相似文献   

14.
The interaction of sodium deoxycholate, sodium cholate and octyl glucoside with sonicated vesicles of L alpha-dimyristoyl-phosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and L alpha-dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) at concentrations below the critical micellization concentration (cmc) of the detergents was studied by high-sensitivity DSC (hs-DSC), Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR) and freeze-fracture electron microscopy. The two phospholipids exhibited a striking different thermotropic behaviour in the presence of these detergents. For DPPC vesicles, the detergents were found to interact exclusively in the aqueous interface region of the bilayer below the membrane saturation concentration Rsat while in DMPC vesicles two coexisting interaction sites below this concentration persist. These are detergents which interact at the aqueous interface region (site 1) and in the acyl chain region (site 2) of the DMPC vesicles. The partition coefficients K of the detergents between DPPC vesicles and the water phase were calculated from the hs-DSC results at two detergent/phospholipid molar ratios Rtot less than or equal to Rsat as 0.35, 0.049 and 0.040 mol-1 for sodium deoxycholate, sodium cholate and octyl glucoside, respectively. In contrast, for DMPC the K values for Rtot less than or equal to Rsat were found to be dependent on Rtot due to the occupation of site 2 by the detergents above a certain Rtot. The model is discussed on the basis of the detergents free energies of transfer from the water phase to site 1 and site 2 of the vesicles, respectively. The solubilization behaviour of DPPC vesicles, dependent on whether the total detergent concentration is above or below the cmc at Rsat, differed significantly as revealed by hs-DSC. This suggests that in the latter case an additional hydrophobic effect could facilitate the formation of disc shaped mixed micelles. Moreover, this different behaviour was employed to measure the cmc values of the detergents studied in the presence of the vesicles by hs-DSC.  相似文献   

15.
The understanding of integral membrane protein (IMP) structure and function is hampered by the difficulty of handling these proteins. Aqueous solubilization, necessary for many types of biophysical analysis, generally requires a detergent to shield the large lipophilic surfaces of native IMPs. Many proteins remain difficult to study owing to a lack of suitable detergents. We introduce a class of amphiphiles, each built around a central quaternary carbon atom derived from neopentyl glycol, with hydrophilic groups derived from maltose. Representatives of this maltose-neopentyl glycol (MNG) amphiphile family show favorable behavior relative to conventional detergents, as manifested in multiple membrane protein systems, leading to enhanced structural stability and successful crystallization. MNG amphiphiles are promising tools for membrane protein science because of the ease with which they may be prepared and the facility with which their structures may be varied.  相似文献   

16.
Crystallization of porin using short chain phospholipids   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A protein from outer membranes of Escherichia coli K-12, porin OmpF was crystallized either with short acyl chain phospolipids or with various detergents as amphiphiles. In dihexanoyl phosphatidylcholine, crystals greater than 0.3 mm in all dimensions were obtained that diffract X-rays beyond 3.5 A. Crystal morphology and unit cell dimensions were indistinguishable from those of detergent-grown crystals, indicating that the role of the phospholipids used is similar to those of many conventional detergents.  相似文献   

17.
Detergents are amphiphilic molecules widely used to solubilize biological membranes and/or extract their components. Nevertheless, because of the complex composition of biomembranes, their solubilization by detergents has not been systematically studied. In this review, we address the solubilization of erythrocytes, which provide a relatively simple, robust and easy to handle biomembrane, and of biomimetic models, to stress the role of the lipid composition on the solubilization process. First, results of a systematic study on the solubilization of human erythrocyte membranes by different series of non-ionic (Triton, CxEy, Brij, Renex, Tween), anionic (bile salts) and zwitterionic (ASB, CHAPS) detergents are shown. Such quantitative approach allowed us to propose Re sat—the effective detergent/lipid molar ratio in the membrane for the onset of hemolysis as a new parameter to classify the solubilization efficiency of detergents. Second, detergent-resistant membranes (DRMs) obtained as a result of the partial solubilization of erythrocytes by TX-100, C12E8 and Brij detergents are examined. DRMs were characterized by their cholesterol, sphingolipid and specific proteins content, as well as lipid packing. Finally, lipid bilayers of tuned lipid composition forming liposomes were used to investigate the solubilization process of membranes of different compositions/phases induced by Triton X-100. Optical microscopy of giant unilamellar vesicles revealed that pure phospholipid membranes are fully solubilized, whereas the presence of cholesterol renders the mixture partially or even fully insoluble, depending on the composition. Additionally, Triton X-100 induced phase separation in raft-like mixtures, and selective solubilization of the fluid phase only.  相似文献   

18.
The phenomenon of detergent insolubility of bovine hippocampal membranes in Triton X-100 was monitored by estimating the presence of phospholipids in the insoluble pellet. This represents a convenient and unambiguous assay and reports the dependence of the extent of phospholipid solubilization on detergent concentration. The advantage of this approach is its ability to accurately determine the extent of detergent insolubility in natural membranes. Importantly, our results show that when suboptimal concentrations of Triton X-100 are used for solubilization, interpretations of the mechanism and extent of detergent insolubility should be made with adequate caution. At concentrations of Triton X-100 that leads to no further solubilization, ∼44% of phospholipids are left insoluble at 4 °C in bovine hippocampal membranes. Cholesterol depletion using methyl-β-cyclodextrin enhanced phospholipid solubilization at low detergent concentrations but produced no significant change in the amount of insoluble phospholipids at saturating detergent concentration. Progressive solubilization by the detergent resulted in insoluble membranes that contained lipids with higher fatty acyl chain order as reported by fluorescence polarization studies using 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene (DPH). These results suggest that it is the presence of such lipids rather than their association with cholesterol that determines detergent insolubility in membranes.  相似文献   

19.
P A Timmins  J Hauk  T Wacker  W Welte 《FEBS letters》1991,280(1):115-120
The presence of small amphiphiles has been found to be necessary in the crystallization of several membrane-protein/surfactant complexes. It has been suggested that the role of the small amphiphile may be to reduce the size of the surfactant belt around the protein, making the formation of crystals easier. Thus far it was not known if this would involve changes in micellar size in general or whether the small amphiphile would merely replace LDAO during crystal growth. In the present study we have used small angle neutron scattering to study mixed micelles of lauryldimethyl amine oxide (LDAO; hydrogenated and deuterated) and heptane-1,2,3-triol (HP). Our results show that with increasing overall HP concentrations mixed LDAO/HP micelles of decreasing mass and radius are formed. The composition of these micelles has been determined. HP thus may decrease the size of the surfactant belt around a protein before crystallisation by insertion into a host micelle. As HP is a 'small amphiphile' compared to the surfactants used for solubilization of membrane proteins, the curvature of the host micelle will be increased by its insertion.  相似文献   

20.
A class of glycolipopeptides for use as building blocks for a new type of dynamic combinatorial library is reported. The members of the library consist of a variable carbohydrate moiety, coded amino acids, and lipoamino acids in order to convert them into amphiphiles. Glycolipopeptidic amphiphiles interact through non-covalent bonding when mixed together in aqueous phase and form micelles in dynamic close-packed fluid mosaic arrays. The head groups of amphiphiles are exposed on the micelle surface, providing entities which could be screened in biological assays to find the most potent combination of building blocks in order to identify new bioactive carbohydrate ligands.  相似文献   

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