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1.
Mycoplasma gallisepticum was adapted to grow with delta 5-sterols modified in the aliphatic side chain, and stopped-flow kinetic measurements of filipin association were made to estimate the sterol distribution between the two leaflets of the membrane. Cholesterol derivatives with unsaturated side chains (desmosterol, cis- and trans-22-dehydrocholesterol, and cholesta-5,22E,24-trien-3 beta-ol) or an alkyl substituent (beta-sitosterol) were predominantly (86-94%) localized in the outer leaflet of the bilayer. However, cholesterol, 20-isocholesterol, and sterols with side chains of varying lengths (in the 20(R)-n-alkylpregn-5-en-3 beta-ol series where the alkyl group ranged from ethyl to undecyl) were distributed nearly symmetrically between the two halves of the bilayer. Kinetic measurements of beta-[14C]sitosterol and [14C]desmosterol exchange between M. gallisepticum cells and an excess of sonicated sterol/phosphatidylcholine vesicles confirmed the filipin-binding studies. More than 90% of these radiolabeled sterols underwent exchange at 37 degrees C with unlabeled sterols in vesicles over a period of 12-14 h in the presence of 2% (w/v) albumin. beta-[14C]Sitosterol exchange was characterized by biphasic exchange kinetics, indicative of two pools of sitosterol molecules in the cell membrane. Only a single kinetic pool was detected for [14C]desmosterol exchange. Stopped flow measurements of filipin binding to beta-sitosterol and stigmasterol also revealed an asymmetrical localization of these sterols in membranes of growing Mycoplasma. capricolum cells. When an early exponential culture of beta-sitosterol- or stigmasterol-adapted M. capricolum was transferred to a sterol-rich medium at 37 degrees C, approximately three-quarters of the beta-sitosterol or stigmasterol was localized in the outer leaflet after growth was continued for 6 h; in contrast, cholesterol was distributed symmetrically after about 1 h. The asymmetric localization of sterols with alkylated or unsaturated side chains suggests that growth-supporting sterols need not be translocated extensively into the inner leaflet of the bilayers of M. gallisepticum and M. capricolum.  相似文献   

2.
We have studied the effects of modification of the endogenous phosphatidylglycerol (PG) and diphosphatidylglycerol (DPG) content of the plasma membrane of Mycoplasma capricolum on the kinetics of spontaneous [14C]cholesterol and 14C-labeled phospholipid exchange between M. capricolum membranes and lipid vesicles. The PG/DPG molar ratio of M. capricolum membranes changed when cells were grown in media supplemented with 0.5 mM CaCl2 and/or egg phosphatidylcholine (PC) (10-20 micrograms/ml), increasing from 3.9 to 6.3 on supplementation with Ca2+; this ratio decreased to 1.1 in media supplemented with PC and to 1.8 in media containing both PC and Ca2+. The ratio of palmitate to oleate in both PG and DPG decreased when cells were grown with PC or with PC and Ca2+. Bilayer disruptions were seen in freeze-fracture electron micrographs of trypsin-treated M. capricolum membranes from cells grown with both Ca2+ and PC, and numerous lipidic particles and other bilayer disruptions were observed in trypsin-treated M. capricolum membranes and their lipid extracts. The rates of spontaneous exchange of 14C-labeled cholesterol and PC from membranes isolated from cells grown with PC and Ca2+ to acceptor lipid vesicles were exchanged by approximately 30%, and the rate of the rapidly exchangeable cholesterol pool in intact cells was enhanced by 64%. The enhancements in cholesterol and PC exchange rates are considered to result from structural defects expected in the M. capricolum membranes obtained from cells grown with Ca2+ supplementation. Our findings parallel previous examples of functional modifications of membranes induced by bilayer instability arising from a pretransitional state leading to the onset of a nonlamellar phase.  相似文献   

3.
Small unilamellar vesicles (SUV) were prepared from the total lipid extract of Mycoplasma capricolum. The SUV were labeled with the fluorescent probe octadecylrhodamine B chloride (R18) to a level at which the R18 fluorescence was self-quenched. At pH 7.4 and 37 degrees C, and in the presence of 5% polyethylene glycol, an increase in the R18 fluorescence with time was observed when the R18-labeled SUV were introduced to a native M. capricolum cell suspension. The fluorescence dequenching resulting from dilution of the R18 into the unlabeled membranes of M. capricolum, was interpreted as a result of lipid mixing during fusion between the SUV and the mycoplasma cells. The presence of cholesterol in the SUV was found to be obligatory to allow SUV-mycoplasma fusion to occur. Adaptation of M. capricolum cells to grow in a medium containing low cholesterol concentration provided cells in which the unesterified cholesterol content was as low as 17 micrograms/mg cell protein. The fusion activity of the adapted cells was very low or nonexistent. Nonetheless, when an early exponential phase culture of the adapted cells was transferred to a cholesterol-rich medium, the cells accumulated cholesterol and regained their fusogenic activity. The cholesterol requirement for fusion in the target mycoplasma membrane was met by a variety of planar sterols having a free beta-hydroxyl group, but differing in the aliphatic side chain, e.g., beta-sitosterol or ergosterol, even though these sterols, having a bulky side chain, are preferentially localized in the outer leaflet of the lipid bilayer.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
Cholesterol is an essential molecule in the membranes of mammalian cells. It is known to be distributed heterogeneously within the cells, between the bilayer leaflets, as well as between lateral domains within the bilayer. However, we do not know exactly how cholesterol is distributed and what forces drive this sorting process because it extremely difficult to study using currently available methods. To further elucidate this distribution, we measured how cholesterol partitions between different phospholipid (PL) environments using different methods based on cholesterol, TopFluor-cholesterol, and cholesta-5,7,9(11)-triene-3-β-ol. Based on the obtained relative partition coefficients, we made predictions regarding how cholesterol would be distributed between lateral domains and between the inner and outer leaflets of the plasma membrane. In addition, using a trans-parinaric acid fluorescence-based method, we tested how cholesterol could influence lateral segregation through its interaction with unsaturated PLs with different headgroups. The results showed that the lower the affinity of cholesterol was for the different unsaturated PLs, the more cholesterol stimulated lateral segregation in a ternary bilayer of unsaturated PL/N-palmitoyl-D-erythro-sphingomyelin and cholesterol. Overall, the results indicate that both the distribution of cholesterol between different lipid environments and the impact of cholesterol on lateral segregation can be predicted relatively accurately from determined relative partition coefficients.  相似文献   

5.
Rapid kinetic studies of filipin binding to intact cells and isolated membranes were performed with a stopped-flow apparatus to determine the distribution of cholesterol in the outer and inner surfaces of mycoplasma membranes. The initial rates of association of filipin with cholesterol in Mycoplasma gallisepticum and Mycoplasma capricolum intact cells were slower than those obtained with isolated membrane preparations. Ratios of the second-order rate constants for filipin binding to cells relative to membranes indicate that cholesterol is distributed symmetrically in membranes of M. gallisepticum cells whereas in M. capricolum ~66% of the free cholesterol is localized in the outer half of the lipid bilayer.  相似文献   

6.
The transfer of elaidate-enriched Acholeplasma laidlawii cells in culture from 37°C to 4°C virtually arrested exogenous cholesterol incorporation into the cell membrane. Cholesterol uptake continued, though at a slower rate, in oleate-enriched A. laidlawii cells undergoing similar temperature shift-down. It is concluded that the incorporation of exogenous cholesterol into the cell membrane of living mycoplasmas is rapid when the membrane lipid bilayer is in the liquid-crystalline state and very slow when the lipid bilayer is in the gel state.  相似文献   

7.
S Rottem  G M Slutzky  R Bittman 《Biochemistry》1978,17(14):2723-2726
The time course and extent of transfer of [14C]-cholesterol from resting Mycoplasma gallisepticum cells or membrane preparations to high-density lipoproteins were studied. More than 90% of the total cholesterol in isolated, unsealed membrane preparations was exchanged in a single kinetic process. In intact cells, however, cholesterol exists in two different environments. Cholesterol in one environment, representing approximately 50% of the total unesterified cholesterol, is readily exchanged with the cholesterol of high-density lipoproteins, with a half-time of about 4 h at 37 degrees C. The rate of exchange of [14C]cholesterol from the other environment was exceedingly slow, with a half-time of about 18 days. The fraction of the total cholesterol in the readily exchangeable cholesterol pool in intact cells increased somewhat upon aging of the culture. Electron spin resonance spectra of nitroxide-labeled stearic acids incorporated into membranes of M. gallisepticum cells indicated increased rigidity at the late exponential phase of growth. These results suggest that cholesterol is present in approximately equal concentrations on both surfaces of the M. gallisepticum membrane and that in resting cells the rate of movement of cholesterol molecules from the inner to outer halves of the lipid bilayer is exceedingly slow or nonexistent.  相似文献   

8.
Cholesterol Reporter Molecules   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Cholesterol is a major constituent of the membranes in most eukaryotic cells where it fulfills multiple functions. Cholesterol regulates the physical state of the phospholipid bilayer, affects the activity of several membrane proteins, and is the precursor for steroid hormones and bile acids. Cholesterol plays a crucial role in the formation of membrane microdomains such as "lipid rafts" and caveolae. However, our current understanding on the membrane organization, intracellular distribution and trafficking of cholesterol is rather poor. This is mainly due to inherent difficulties to label and track this small lipid. In this review, we describe different approaches to detect cholesterol in vitro and in vivo. Cholesterol reporter molecules can be classified in two groups: cholesterol binding molecules and cholesterol analogues. The enzyme cholesterol oxidase is used for the determination of cholesterol in serum and food. Susceptibility to cholesterol oxidase can provide information about localization, transfer kinetics, or transbilayer distribution of cholesterol in membranes and cells. The polyene filipin forms a fluorescent complex with cholesterol and is commonly used to visualize the cellular distribution of free cholesterol. Perfringolysin O, a cholesterol binding cytolysin, selectively recognizes cholesterol-rich structures. Photoreactive cholesterol probes are appropriate tools to analyze or to identify cholesterol binding proteins. Among the fluorescent cholesterol analogues one can distinguish probes with intrinsic fluorescence (e.g., dehydroergosterol) from those possessing an attached fluorophore group. We summarize and critically discuss the features of the different cholesterol reporter molecules with a special focus on recent imaging approaches.  相似文献   

9.
Cholesterol is distributed unevenly between different cellular membrane compartments, and the cholesterol content increases from the inner bilayers toward the plasma membrane. It has been suggested that this cholesterol gradient is important in the sorting of transmembrane proteins. Cholesterol has also been to shown play an important role in lateral organization of eukaryotic cell membranes. In this study the aim was to determine how transmembrane proteins influence the lateral distribution of cholesterol in phospholipid bilayers. Insight into this can be obtained by studying how cholesterol interacts with bilayer membranes of different composition in the presence of designed peptides that mimic the transmembrane helices of proteins. For this purpose we developed an assay in which the partitioning of the fluorescent cholesterol analog CTL between LUVs and mβCD can be measured. Comparison of how cholesterol and CTL partitioning between mβCD and phospholipid bilayers with different composition suggests that CTL sensed changes in bilayer composition similarly as cholesterol. Therefore, the results obtained with CTL can be used to understand cholesterol distribution in lipid bilayers. The effect of WALP23 on CTL partitioning between DMPC bilayers and mβCD was measured. From the results it was clear that WALP23 increased both the order in the bilayers (as seen from CTL and DPH anisotropy) and the affinity of the sterol for the bilayer in a concentration dependent way. Although WALP23 also increased the order in DLPC and POPC bilayers the effects on CTL partitioning was much smaller with these lipids. This indicates that proteins have the largest effect on sterol interactions with phospholipids that have longer and saturated acyl chains. KALP23 did not significantly affect the acyl chain order in the phospholipid bilayers, and inclusion of KALP23 into DMPC bilayers slightly decreased CTL partitioning into the bilayer. This shows that transmembrane proteins can both decrease and increase the affinity of sterols for the lipid bilayers surrounding proteins. This is likely to affect the sterol distribution within the bilayer and thereby the lateral organization in biomembranes.  相似文献   

10.
Gimpl G  Gehrig-Burger K 《Steroids》2011,76(3):216-231
Cholesterol is a multifunctional lipid in eukaryotic cells. It regulates the physical state of the phospholipid bilayer, is crucially involved in the formation of membrane microdomains, affects the activity of many membrane proteins, and is the precursor for steroid hormones and bile acids. Thus, cholesterol plays a profound role in the physiology and pathophysiology of eukaryotic cells. The cholesterol molecule has achieved evolutionary perfection to fulfill its different functions in membrane organization. Here, we review basic approaches to explore the interaction of cholesterol with proteins, with a particular focus on the high diversity of fluorescent and photoreactive cholesterol probes available today.  相似文献   

11.
Cholesterol sulphate is a potent stabilizer of membrane bilayer structure in both dielaidoylphosphatidylethanolamine and egg phosphatidylethanolamine model membranes, however, the addition of calcium abolishes this bilayer stabilization. Calcium also induces fusion and leakage of egg phosphatidylethanolamine large unilamellar vesicles containing cholesterol sulphate, but has no effect on fusion or leakage of egg phosphatidylcholine large unilamellar vesicles containing cholesterol sulphate. With egg phosphatidylethanoiamine liposomes, the initial rate, and extent of fusion, at constant calcium concentration, vary inversely with the mol percentage of cholesterol sulphate present in the vesicle membrane. The interaction of calcium and cholesterol sulphate, which causes membrane destabilization and fusion in phosphatidylethanolamine containing model systems, may play a role in the acrosome reaction in human sperm.  相似文献   

12.
Cholesterol sulfate is a component of several biological membranes. In erythrocytes, cholesterol sulfate inhibits hypotonic hemolysis, while in sperm, it can decrease fertilization efficiency. We have found cholesterol sulfate to be a potent inhibitor of Sendai virus fusion to both human erythrocyte and liposomal membranes. Cholesterol sulfate also raises the bilayer to hexagonal phase transition temperature of dielaidoyl phosphatidylethanolamine as demonstrated by differential scanning calorimetry and 31P nuclear magnetic resonance spectrometry. Although hexagonal phase structures are not readily found in biological membranes, there is a correlation between the effects of membrane additives on bilayer/non-bilayer equilibria and membrane stabilization. It is proposed that the ability of cholesterol sulfate to alter the physical properties of membranes contributes to its stabilization of biological membranes and the inhibition of membrane fusion.  相似文献   

13.
Cholesterol induced mechanical effects on artificial lipid bilayers are well known and have been thoroughly investigated by AFM force spectroscopy. However, dynamics of cholesterol impingement into bilayers at various cholesterol concentrations and their effects have not been clearly understood. In this paper we present, the effect of cholesterol as a function of its concentration in a simple single component dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC) bilayer. The nature of measured breakthrough forces on a bilayer with the addition of cholesterol, suggested that it is not just responsible to increase the mechanical stability but also introduces irregularities across the leaflets of the bilayer. This cholesterol induced asymmetry across the (in the inner and outer leaflets) bilayer is related to the phenomena of interleaflet coupling and is a function of cholesterol concentration probed by AFM can provide an unprecedented direction on mechanical properties of lipid membrane as it can be directly correlated to biophysical properties of a cell membrane.  相似文献   

14.
The essential oxygen requirement for sterol biosynthesis dates this molecule as a relative latecomer in cellular evolution. Structural details of the cholesterol molecule and related sterols can be rationalized in terms of optimal hydrophobic interactions between the planar sterol ring system and phospholipid acyl chains in the membrane bilayer. The prediction that the cholesterol precursor lanosterol (4,4',14 trimethyl cholastadienol) is incompetent for membrane function is verified by in vivo experiments with eucaryotic sterol auxotrophs and microviscosity measurements of sterol-containing artificial membranes. For procaryotic cells the sterol specificity is very much broader. Methylococcus capsulatus produces 4,4-dimethyl- and 4-monomethyl sterols, but not sterols of the cholesterol type. Similarly lanosterol and its partially demethylated derivatives satisfy the sterol requirement of Mycoplasma capricolum. A more primitive but unspecified role of cyclized squalene derivatives is therefore postulated for procaryotic membranes. The finding that cholesterylmethyl ether satisfies the sterol requirement of certain microbial systems is at variance with current views on the role played by the sterol hydroxyl group in membrane organization and function.  相似文献   

15.
Sendai and influenza virions are able to fuse with mycoplasmata. Virus-Mycoplasma fusion was demonstrated by the use of fluorescently labeled intact virions and fluorescence dequenching, as well as by electron microscopy. A high degree of fusion was observed upon incubation of both virions with Mycoplasma gallisepticum or Mycoplasma capricolum. Significantly less virus-cell fusion was observed with Acholeplasma laidlawii, whose membrane contains relatively low amounts of cholesterol. The requirement of cholesterol for allowing virus-Mycoplasma fusion was also demonstrated by showing that a low degree of fusion was obtained with M. capricolum, whose cholesterol content was decreased by modifying its growth medium. Fluorescence dequenching was not observed by incubating unfusogenic virions with mycoplasmata. Sendai virions were rendered nonfusogenic by treatment with trypsin, phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, or dithiothreitol, whereas influenza virions were made nonfusogenic by treatment with glutaraldehyde, ammonium hydroxide, high temperatures, or incubation at low pH. Practically no fusion was observed using influenza virions bearing uncleaved hemagglutinin. Trypsinization of influenza virions bearing uncleaved hemagglutinin greatly stimulated their ability to fuse with Mycoplasma cells. Similarly to intact virus particles, also reconstituted virus envelopes, bearing the two viral glycoproteins, fused with M. capricolum. However, membrane vesicles, bearing only the viral binding (HN) or fusion (F) glycoproteins, failed to fuse with mycoplasmata. Fusion between animal enveloped virions and prokaryotic cells was thus demonstrated.  相似文献   

16.
A direct and quantitative analysis of the internal structure and dynamics of a polyunsaturated lipid bilayer composed of 1-stearoyl-2-docosahexaenoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (18:0-22:6n3-PC) containing 29 mol% cholesterol was carried out by neutron diffraction, (2)H-NMR and (13)C-MAS NMR. Scattering length distribution functions of cholesterol segments as well as of the sn-1 and sn-2 hydrocarbon chains of 18:0-22:6n3-PC were obtained by conducting experiments with specifically deuterated cholesterol and lipids. Cholesterol orients parallel to the phospholipids, with the A-ring near the lipid glycerol and the terminal methyl groups 3 ? away from the bilayer center. Previously, we reported that the density of polyunsaturated docosahexaenoic acid (DHA, 22:6n3) chains was higher near the lipid-water interface. Addition of cholesterol partially redistributes DHA density from near the lipid-water interface to the center of the hydrocarbon region. Cholesterol raises chain-order parameters of both stearic acid and DHA chains. The fractional order increase for stearic acid methylene carbons C(8)-C(18) is larger, reflecting the redistribution of DHA chain density toward the bilayer center. The correlation times of DHA chain isomerization are short and mostly unperturbed by the presence of cholesterol. The uneven distribution of saturated and polyunsaturated chain densities and the cholesterol-induced balancing of chain distributions may have important implications for the function and integrity of membrane receptors, such as rhodopsin.  相似文献   

17.
The curvature, cholesterol content,and transbilayer distribution of phospholipids significantly influence the functional properties of cellular membranes, yet little is known of how these parameters interact. In this study, the transbilayer distribution of phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) is determined in vesicles with large (98 nm) and small (19 nm)radii of curvature and with different proportions of PE, phosphatidylcholine, and cholesterol. It was found that the mean diameters of both types of vesicles were not influenced by their lipid composition, and that the amino-reactive compound 2,4,6-trinitrobenzenesulphonic acid (TNBS) was unable to cross the bilayer of either type of vesicle. When large vesicles were treated with TNBS, ~40% of the total membrane PE was derivatized; in the small vesicles 55% reacted. These values are interpreted as representing the percentage of total membrane PE residing in the outer leaflet of the vesicle bilayer. The large vesicles likely contained ~20% of the total membrane lipid as internal membranes. Therefore, in both types of vesicles, PE as a phospholipid class was randomly distributed between the inner and outer leaflets ofthe bilayer. The proportion oftotal PE residing in the outer leaflet was unaffected by changes in either the cholesterol orPE content of the vesicles. However, the transbilayer distributions of individual molecular species of PE were not random, and were significantly influenced by radius of curvature, membrane cholesterol content, or both. For example, palmitate and docosahexaenoate-containing species of PE were preferentially located in the outer leaflet of the bilayer. Membrane cholesterol content affected the transbilayer distributions of stearate-, oleate-, and linoleate-containing species. The transbilayer distributions ofpalmitate-, docosahexaenoate-, and stearate-containing species were significantly influenced by membrane curvature, but only in the presence of high levels of cholesterol. Thus, differences in membrane curvature and cholesterol content alter the array of PE molecules present on the surfaces of phospholipid bilayers. In cells and organelles, these differences could have profound effects on a number of critical membrane functions and processes.  相似文献   

18.
Sonicated cholesterol-phosphatidylcholine (PC) liposomes containing 4 mol % phosphatidic acid (PA) aggregate in 10 mM Ca2+, slowly at low molar fractions of cholesterol (up to 30%) and 15 times faster at higher concentrations; the inflection point is at ca. 35 mol % bilayer cholesterol. O-[[(Methoxyethoxy)ethoxy]ethyl]cholesterol (OH-blocked cholesterol) does not give this rate enhancement. If PC is replaced by diether PC (CO groups abolished), cholesterol does not accelerate aggregation at concentrations in the bilayer below 50 mol %. No change in Ca2+-induced aggregation rates was observed if the ester CO groups of the bridge-forming PA only were replaced by CH2 (diether PA) in liposomes containing PC and cholesterol. PA-mediated Ca2+ membrane traversal seems to be accelerated by the addition of cholesterol to the PC-PA membrane, but analysis shows that the effect is due to the bilayer condensation effect of cholesterol resulting in an increase in the surface concentration of PA and that membrane cholesterol in fact slightly reduces the rate of Ca(PA)2 traversal; OH-blocked cholesterol, however, increases this rate 3-fold. It appears that lipid OH and CO groups interact, directly or with the mediation of water, in establishing the structure of the membrane "hydrogen belts", i.e., the strata containing those hydrogen-bond donors and acceptors. Cholesterol hydroxyl above 33 mol % (saturation of a 2:1 PC/cholesterol complex?) causes a restructuring of the hydrogen belts that facilitates membrane-water-membrane dehydration, the prerequisite for liposome aggregation by trans-Ca(PA)2 formation. On the other hand, the formation of the dehydrated cis-Ca(PA)2 complex that precedes Ca2+ membrane traversal is not accelerated by presence of the cholesterol hydroxyl group.  相似文献   

19.
Cholesterol is a critical regulator of lipid bilayer dynamics and plasma membrane organization in eukaryotes. A variety of ion channels have been shown to be modulated by cellular cholesterol and partition into cholesterol-enriched membrane rafts. However, very little is known about functional role of membrane cholesterol in regulation of mechanically gated channels that are ubiquitously present in living cells. In our previous study, the effect of methyl-beta-cyclodextrin (MbCD), cholesterol-sequestering agent, on Ca2+-permeable stretch-activated cation channels (SACs) has been described. Here, cell-attached patch-clamp method was employed to search for the mechanisms of cholesterol-dependent regulation of SACs and to clarify functional contribution of lipid bilayer and submembranous cytoskeleton to channel gating. Cholesterol-depleting treatment with MbCD significantly decreased open probability of SACs whereas alpha-cyclodextrin had no effect. F-actin disassembly fully restored high level of SAC activity in cholesterol-depleted cells. Particularly, treatment with cytochalasin D or latrunculin B abrogated inhibitory effect of MbCD on stretch-activated currents. Single channel analysis and fluorescent imaging methods indicate that inhibition of SACs after cholesterol depletion is mediated via actin remodeling initiated by disruption of lipid rafts. Our data reveal a novel mechanism of channel regulation by membrane cholesterol and lipid rafts.  相似文献   

20.
Cholesterol has been shown to regulate the activity of several membrane proteins. Although this phenomenon represents an important factor in the regulation of ion homeostasis, insights are needed to fully understand the role of this lipid in cell function in order to better comprehend the effect of bilayer components upon membrane function. Since evolution has shaped the composition of the membrane bilayer, it becomes of interest to study these changes in parallel with the many functions of membranes such as ion transport. The present study employing a plasma membrane preparation obtained from calf ventricular muscle demonstrates that cholesterol partially inhibits the Ca(2+),Mg(2+)-ATPase as the catalytic function of the calcium pump, when incubation reaction temperatures are below 42 degrees C. In contrast, when incubation reaction temperatures are above 42 degrees C, cholesterol apparently promotes enzyme stabilization reflected in higher activity. Although the activation energy values for the enzyme are almost the same at ranges between 15 and 40 degrees C, the use of elevated temperatures promote higher enzyme inactivation rates in control than in cholesterol enriched membranes. Cholesterol apparently is promoting stabilization that in turn protects the enzyme against thermal inactivation. This protective effect is reflected in a decrease of inactivation rate values and energy released during enzyme catalysis. The modification of many membrane properties throughout million of years made it possible for new evolutionary driving forces to show themselves as new characteristics in eukaryotes such as the one discussed in this study, dealing with the presence of cholesterol in the cell membrane directly associated to the promotion of protein thermostability.  相似文献   

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