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1.
Chinese Hamster Ovary (CHO) cells were fused by subjecting cell suspensions to an exponentially decaying electric pulse in the presence of polyethylene glycol (PEG), Dextran or Ficoll. PEG (MW 1,000, 3,350, 8,000, 10,000 and 18,500), Dextran (MW 71,200) and Ficoll (MW 400,000) were added to the pulsing medium. A single exponential electric pulse with peak field strength of 4 kV/cm, and a half-time of 0.72 msec was used. The combination of two techniques, PEG-induced fusion and electrofusion, resulted in highly efficient fusion of CHO cells. Fusion yields (FY) at different concentrations of these polymers were measured using phase-contrast microscopy. FY was highly dependent on the concentration of PEG in media, while the presence of Dextran and Ficoll had no influence on fusion yield. PEG with MW 8,000 was found to be the most effective in causing cell aggregation, and to give the highest FY (40%). An optimal concentration for fusion was found for PEG of each molecular weight. Diluting cells suspended in higher concentrations of PEG to these optimal concentrations after the pulse application regained the optimal FY. It was concluded that PEG-induced prepulse aggregation and moderate cell swelling immediately after the pulse were important factors in achieving high fusion yields.This work is supported by a grant GM-30969 from the National Institutes of Health. Traveling fellowship to N.G.S. was supported from Foundation Cyrill and Methodius and grant N-189 from MCES of Bulgaria.  相似文献   

2.
Hypothermic preservation of hepatocytes : I. Role of cell swelling   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Hepatocytes from isolated rat livers were hypothermically incubated (5 degrees C) in an oxygenated environment with continuous shaking (to simulate organ perfusion preservation). The incubation solution was either a tissue culture medium (L-15), an organ preservation perfusate (UW gluconate), or a simple cold-storage solution used for organ preservation (UW lactobionate). Hepatocyte viability was assessed from the release of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) into the incubation medium. Cell swelling (due to the uptake of water) was also measured. Within 24 hr, hepatocytes hypothermically stored in each of the three incubation solutions became swollen (30 to 40% water gain) and lost a significant amount of LDH (as much as 60%). The addition of polyethylene glycol (PEG; relative molecular mass 8000; 5 g%) to the solutions suppressed cell swelling and allowed the incubated hepatocytes to remain relatively well preserved (30% LDH release) for as long as 120 hr. Adding either dextran (relative molecular mass 10,000 to 78,000; 5 g%) or saccharides (100 mmol/liter) instead of PEG neither prevented cell swelling nor prevented the cells from dying. The results of this study suggest (i) there is a direct correlation (r = 0.873) between hypothermia-induced cell swelling and cell death (i.e., the suppression of cell swelling prevents cell death); (ii) the mechanism by which PEG prevents cell swelling (and thus maintains cell viability) is not related to the osmotic or oncotic properties of the molecule but instead is apparently related to some unknown interaction between PEG and the cell, an interaction that provides stability during hypothermic incubation; and (iii) hypothermia-induced cell swelling must be prevented if isolated hepatocytes are to be used as a model for studying the mechanism by which cell damage occurs during hypothermic organ preservation. By eliminating cell death due to cell swelling, the biochemical mechanisms of cell death can be studied.  相似文献   

3.
Influence of osmotic shrinkage, swelling, and dehydration on large unilamellar liposomes (LUVs) of 1,2-dioleoylsn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DOPC) was investigated using the fluorescent lipid probes 1-palmitoyl-2-[10-(pyren-1-yl)]-decanoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholi ne (PPDPC) and 1,2-bis[10-(pyren-1-yl)]decanoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (bisPDPC). Increasing concentrations of poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG, average molecular weight of 6000) producing osmotic gradients delta omega up to 250 mOsm/kg were first added to the outside of LUV labeled with 0.1 mol% of either of the above fluorescent phospholipids. The resulting osmotic shrinkage was accompanied by a progressive reduction in the lateral diffusion of the membrane-incorporated PPDPC, evident as a decrease in the rate of its intermolecular excimer formation. In contrast, under the same conditions the rate of intramolecular excimer formation by bisPDPC increased. Notably, signals opposite to those described above were observed for both of the fluorescent probes upon osmotic swelling of DOPC liposomes with encapsulated PEG. The lateral diffusion of PPDPC became progressively reduced upon membrane dehydration due to increasing concentrations of symmetrically distributed PEG (with equal polymer concentrations inside and outside of the liposomes) when neither shrinkage nor swelling occurs while enhanced excimer formation by bisPDPC was evident. The later results were interpreted in terms of osmotically induced changes in the hydration of lipids. In brief, the removal of water from the phospholipid hydration shell diminishes the effective size of the polar headgroup, which subsequently allows for an enhanced lateral packing of the phospholipid acyl chains. Our findings are readily compatible with membrane free volume Vf changes due to osmotic forces under three different kinds of stress (shrinkage, swelling, and dehydration) applied on the lipid bilayers.  相似文献   

4.
《The Journal of cell biology》1984,98(3):1063-1071
We demonstrate that there are two experimentally distinguishable steps in the fusion of phospholipid vesicles with planar bilayer membranes. In the first step, the vesicles form a stable, tightly bound pre-fusion state with the planar membrane; divalent cations (Ca++) are required for the formation of this state if the vesicular and/or planar membrane contain negatively charged lipids. In the second step, the actual fusion of vesicular and planar membranes occurs. The driving force for this step is the osmotic swelling of vesicles attached (in the pre- fusion state) to the planar membrane. We suggest that osmotic swelling of vesicles may also be crucial for biological fusion and exocytosis.  相似文献   

5.
Action of polyethylene glycol on the fusion of human erythrocyte membranes   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Summary Factors affecting the polyethylene glycol (PEG)-induced membrane fusion were examined. Human erythrocyte membrane ghosts, cytoskeleton-free vesicles budded from erythrocytes, mechanically disrupted erythrocyte vesicles, and recombinant vesicles from glycophorin and egg phosphatidylcholine were used as models. Fusion was monitored by darkfield light microscopy and by freeze-fracture electron microscopy. Osmotic swelling was found necessary for fusion between membrane ghosts following PEG treatment. The sample with the highest fusion percentage was sealed ghosts incubated in hypotonic media after at least 5 min of treatment in <25% PEG. At similar osmolarity, glycerol, dextran and PEG produced progressively more pronounced intramembranous particle (IMP) patching, correlating with their increasing fusion percentages. The patching of IMP preceded cell-cell contact, and occurred without direct PEG-protein interaction. The presence of cytoskeletal elements in small vesicles had no significant effect on fusion, nor on the aggregation of intramembranous particle (IMP) upon PEG treatment. Disrupting the membrane by lysolecithin, dimethylsulfoxide, retinol or mild sonication resulted in the fragmentation of ghosts without an increase in fusion percentage. The purity of the commercial PEG used had no apparent effect on fusion. We concluded that the key steps in PEG-induced fusion of cell membrane are the creation of IMP-free zones, and the osmotic swelling of cells after the formation of bilayer contacts during the PEG treatment. Cell cytoskeleton affects PEG-induced fusion only to the extent of affecting IMP patching.  相似文献   

6.
R A Parente  B R Lentz 《Biochemistry》1986,25(21):6678-6688
Poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) of average molecular weight 8000 was used to mediate the fusion of large unilamellar vesicles composed of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine. Fusion was monitored by fluorescence assays of lipid mixing and aqueous contents mixing. The extent of lipid mixing, as monitored by DPHpPC fluorescence lifetime, indicated that large unilamellar vesicles underwent a single fusion cycle when incubated with PEG and subsequently diluted into buffer. The ANTS/DPX assays for contents mixing and leakage indicated that, while addition and dilution of PEG were accompanied by extensive contents leakage, this occurred on a much different time scale as compared to contents mixing. Both the lipid-mixing and contents-mixing assays gave comparable estimates for the number of rounds of fusion that occurred in a given time following PEG addition, although the contents-mixing assay always yielded an estimate 10-15% larger than the lipid-mixing assay. These assays were used to evaluate several factors purported to influence PEG-induced fusion. First, the initial rate of fusion was found to be dependent on PEG concentration in the range of 0-35 wt %, while the extent of fusion was not. In addition, a substantial rate enhancement occurred when vesicles were incubated with greater than 26% PEG. Second, the creation of an osmotic gradient upon dilution of vesicle-PEG mixtures was shown to have no effect on either the extent or the initial rate of fusion. Consistent with this observation, both contents and lipid mixing were found to occur prior to and independent of the dilution of the PEG-vesicle suspension. Third, impurities, either present in our commercially available PEG or added to vesicle-PEG mixtures, also had no effect on the rate or extent of fusion. Fourth, another dehydrating polymer, dextran (average mol wt 9000), was capable of promoting fusion, though at a much lower rate than PEG. These results suggest that even partial bilayer dehydration accompanied by vesicle collapse and close interbilayer contact may be sufficient to induce vesicle fusion.  相似文献   

7.
Thirty years ago, Klaus Arnold and others showed that the action of PEG in promoting cell–cell fusion was not due to such effects as surface absorption, cross-linking, solubilization, etc. Instead PEG acted simply by volume exclusion, resulting in an osmotic force driving membranes into close contact in a dehydrated region. This simple observation, based on a number of physical measurements and the use of PEG-based detergents that insert into membranes, spawned several important areas of research. One such area is the use of PEG to bring membranes into contact so that the role of different lipids and fusion proteins in membrane fusion can be examined in detail. We have summarized here insights into the fusion mechanism that have been obtained by this approach. This evidence indicates that fusion of model membranes (and probably cell membranes) occurs via severely bent lipidic structures formed at the point of sufficiently close contact between membranes of appropriate lipid composition. This line of research has also suggested that fusion proteins seem to catalyze fusion in part by reducing the free energy of hydrophobic interstices inherent to the lipidic fusion intermediate structures. Dedicated to Prof. K. Arnold on the occasion of his 65th birthday.  相似文献   

8.
Poly (ethylene glycol) (PEG) in the external environment of membrane vesicles creates osmotic imbalance that leads to mechanical stress in membranes and may induce local membrane curvature. To determine the relative importance of membrane stress and curvature in promoting fusion, we monitored contents mixing (CM) and lipid mixing (LM) between different sized vesicles under a variety of osmotic conditions. CM between highly curved vesicles (SUV, 26 nm diameter) was up to 10 times greater than between less curved vesicles (LUV, 120 nm diameter) after 5 min incubation at a low PEG concentration (<10 wt%), whereas LM was only approximately 30% higher. Cryo-electron microscopy showed that PEG at 10 wt% did not create high curvature contacts between membranes in LUV aggregates. A negative osmotic gradient (-300 mOs/kg, hypotonic inside) increased CM two- to threefold for both types of vesicles, but did not affect LM. A positive gradient (+220 mOs/kg, hypertonic inside) nearly eliminated CM and had no effect on LM. Hexadecane added to vesicles had no effect on LM but enhanced CM and reduced the inhibitory effect on CM of a positive osmotic gradient, but had little influence on results obtained under a negative osmotic gradient. We conclude that the ability of closely juxtaposed bilayers to form an initial intermediate ("stalk") as soon as they come into close contact was not influenced by osmotic stress or membrane curvature, although pore formation was critically dependent on these stresses. The results also suggest that hexadecane affects the same part of the fusion process as osmotic stress. We interpret this result to suggest that both a negative osmotic gradient and hexadecane reduce the unfavorable free energy of hydrophobic interstices associated with the intermediates of the fusion process.  相似文献   

9.
Previous studies with mammalian cultured cells have shown that volume regulation in hypotonic medium requires active Na transport. In the present study, determinations of intracellular Na and K content were made in cultured mouse lymphoblasts during the process of swelling and subsequent shrinking (volume regulation) in hypotonic medium. Na and K content were measured in cells in which the shrinking phase was inhibited by the cardiac glycoside, ouabain. In osmotically-shocked cells, an initial permeability increase to K, and not Na, was observed, which allowed K to diffuse out rapidly, down its gradient. Na, meanwhile, rapidly flowed inward with water entry during the swelling process, and was later lost with the same kinetics as the cell shrinkage. This loss of Na was prevented in the presence of ouabain. The results imply that volume regulation is achieved by pumping Na gained during swelling out of the cells, while any K taken up by the pump is rapidly lost through a more permeable membrane. The loss of osmotically active Na, presumably with accompanying anions, allows water to passively diffuse down its osmotic gradient, reducing cell volume subsequent to the initial passive swelling, during which K was rapidly lost.  相似文献   

10.
Cell volume is regulated by a delicate balance between ion distribution across the plasma membrane and the osmotic properties of intra‐ and extracellular components. Using a fluorescent calcein indicator, we analysed the effects of glycosaminoglycans on the cell volume of hyaluronan producing fibroblasts and hyaluronan deficient HEK cells over a time period of 30 h. Exogenous glycosaminoglycans induced cell blebbing after 2 min and swelling of fibroblasts to about 110% of untreated cell volume at low concentrations which decreased at higher concentrations. HEK cells did not show cell blebbing and responded by shrinking to 65% of untreated cell volume. Heparin induced swelling of both fibroblasts and HEK cells. Hyaluronidase treatment or inhibition of hyaluronan export led to cell shrinkage indicating that the hyaluronan coat maintained fibroblasts in a swollen state. These observations were explained by the combined action of the Donnan effect and molecular crowding. J. Cell. Biochem. 113: 340–348, 2012. © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
The supercoiling free energy of pUC19 DNA [2686 base pairs (bp)] was measured in various concentrations of PEG 8000 (polyethylene glycol; molecular weight 8000) by the topoisomer distribution method. The effective twist energy parameter (E(T)) that governs the supercoiling free energy declined linearly by 1.9-fold with increasing w/v % PEG from 0 to 7.5%, which lies below the threshold for intermolecular condensation. In principle, PEG could affect E(T) either via an osmotic exclusion mechanism or by altering the torsion elastic constant, bending rigidity, or self-repulsions of the DNA. Possible alterations of the DNA secondary structure and torsion elastic constant were assessed by CD spectroscopy and time-resolved fluorescence polarization anisotropy of intercalated ethidium. Up to 7.5% PEG, the secondary structure of the DNA remained largely unaltered, as evidenced by (1) the absence of any significant change in the CD spectrum, (2) an extremely small relative decrease (-0.0013) in intrinsic twist, and (3) a negligibly small change in the torsion elastic constant. The observed reduction in E(T) cannot be ascribed primarily to a decrease in torsion elastic constant, and most likely does not stem from a decrease in bending rigidity either. The decrease in medium dielectric constant due to PEG should increase the self-repulsions, and thereby increase E(T), which is opposite to the observed trend. Instead, the observed decline in E(T) is attributed to an osmotic exclusion mechanism. The change in molar volume excluded to the PEG (Delta V(ex)), when the linking difference converts from Delta l = 0 to Delta l = +/-1, was determined from the observed E(T) value and PEG osmotic pressure at each concentration. The experimental Delta V(ex) values agree well with theoretical estimates reckoned for a simple osmotic exclusion model, in which PEG is excluded by hard-core interactions from a concentric cylindrical volume around every duplex segment. The difference in volume excluded to PEG between the Delta l = 0 and the Delta l = +/-1 topoisomers is attributed entirely to the approximately 0.7 additional writhe "crossing" of two duplex strands at roughly 90 degrees, which is known to occur in the latter species. When the separation between the duplex centers at the "crossing" was adjusted so that the theoretical estimate of Delta V(ex) matched the experimental value at each PEG concentration, a value near 5.7 nm was obtained in each case. The invariance and plausible magnitude of this mean separation at the crossing provide strong support for this simple osmotic exclusion model. An alternative model, in which the PEG is excluded from the entire coil envelope of the DNA out to its radius of gyration, perhaps because it decreases the local dielectric constant, was also considered. The estimated difference in excluded volume in that case exceeds the experimental value by a factor of nearly 10(4), and could be ruled out on that basis.  相似文献   

12.
We have examined the mechanical behaviour of different types of pectin at high concentrations (> 30% w/w), relevant to the behaviour of pectin in the plant cell wall, and as a film-forming agent. Mechanical properties were examined as a function of counterion type (K(+), Ca(2+), Mg(2+)), concentration and extent of hydration. Hydration was controlled in an osmotic stress experiment where pectin films were exposed to concentrated polyethylene glycol [PEG] solutions of known osmotic pressure. We investigated the mechanical behaviour under simple extension. The results show that the swelling and stiffness of the films are strongly dependent on pectin source and ionic environment. At a fixed osmotic stress, both Ca(2+) or Mg(2+) counterions reduce swelling and increase the stiffness of the film.  相似文献   

13.
Water relations of growing segments of maize (Zea mays L.) coleoptiles were investigated with osmotic methods using either mannitol (MAN) or polyethylene glycol 6000 (PEG) as external osmotica. Segments were incubated in MAN or PEG solutions at 0 to - 15 bar water potential (Ψo) and the effects were compared on elongation growth, osmotic shrinkage, cell sap osmolality (OC), and osmotic pressure (πi). The nonpenetrating osmoticum PEG affects πi in agreement with Boyle-Mariotte's law, i.e. the segments behave in principle as ideal osmometers. There is no osmotic adjustment in the Ψo range permitting growth (0 to −5 bar) nor in the Ψo range inducing osmotic shrinkage (−5 to −10 bar). Promoting growth by auxin (IAA) has no effect on the osmotic behavior of the tissue toward PEG. In contrast to PEG, MAN produces an apparent increase in πi accompanied by anomalous effects on segment elongation and shrinkage leading to a lower value for Ψo which establishes a growth rate of zero and to an apparent recovery from osmotic shrinkage after 2 hours of incubation. These effects can be quantitatively attributed to uptake of MAN into the tissue. MAN is taken up into the apoplastic space and the symplast as revealed by a large temperature-dependent component of MAN uptake. It is concluded that MAN, in contrast to PEG, is unsuitable as an extemal osmoticum for the quantitative determination of water relations of growing maize coleoptiles.  相似文献   

14.
The role of osmotic forces and cell swelling in the influenza virus-induced fusion of unsealed or resealed ghosts of human erythrocytes was investigated under isotonic and hypotonic conditions using a recently developed fluorescence assay (Hoekstra, D., De Boer, T., Klappe, K., Wilschut, J. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 5675-5681). The method is based on the relief of fluorescence selfquenching of the fluorescent amphiphile octadecyl rhodamine B chloride (R18) incorporated into the ghost membrane as occurs when labeled membranes fuse with unlabeled membranes. No effect neither of the external osmotic pressure nor of cell swelling on virally mediated ghost fusion was established. Influenza virus fused unsealed ghosts as effectively as resealed ghosts. It is concluded that neither osmotic forces nor osmotic swelling of cells is necessary for virus-induced cell fusion. This is supported by microscopic observations of virus-induced fusion of intact erythrocytes in hypotonic and hypertonic media. A disruption of the spectrin-actin network did not cause an enhanced cell fusion at acidic pH of about 5 or any fusion at pH 7.4.  相似文献   

15.
The mechanism of water permeation across the sarcolemma was characterized by examining the kinetics and temperature dependence of osmotic swelling and shrinkage of rabbit ventricular myocytes. The magnitude of swelling and the kinetics of swelling and shrinkage were temperature dependent, but the magnitude of shrinkage was very similar at 6 degrees, 22 degrees, and 37 degrees C. Membrane hydraulic conductivity, Lp, was approximately 1.2 x 10(-10) liter.N-1.s-1 at 22 degrees C, corresponding to an osmotic permeability coefficient, Pf, of 16 microns.s-1, and was independent of the direction of water flux, the magnitude of the imposed osmotic gradient (35-165 mosm/liter), and the initial cell volume. This value of Lp represents an upper limit because the membrane was assumed to be a smooth surface. Based on capacitive membrane area, Lp was 0.7 to 0.9 x 10(-10) liter.N-1.s-1. Nevertheless, estimates of Lp in ventricle are 15 to 25 times lower than those in human erythrocytes and are in the range of values reported for protein- free lipid bilayers and biological membranes without functioning water channels (aquaporin). Evaluation of the effect of unstirred layers showed that in the worst case they decrease Lp by < or = 2.3%. Analysis of the temperature dependence of Lp indicated that its apparent Arrhenius activation energy, Ea', was 11.7 +/- 0.9 kcal/mol between 6 degrees and 22 degrees C and 9.2 +/- 0.9 kcal/mol between 22 degrees and 37 degrees C. These values are significantly greater than that typically found for water flow through water-filled pores, approximately 4 kcal/mol, and are in the range reported for artificial and natural membranes without functioning water channels. Taken together, these data strongly argue that the vast majority of osmotic water flux in ventricular myocytes penetrates the lipid bilayer itself rather than passing through water-filled pores.  相似文献   

16.
The hydraulic conductivity of the membrane, Lp, of fused plant protoplasts was measured and compared to that for unfused cells, in order to identify possible changes in membrane properties resulting from the fusion process. Fusion was achieved by an electric field pulse which induced breakdown in the membranes of protoplasts in close contact. Close membrane contact was established by dielectrophoresis. In some experiments pronase was added during field application; pronase stabilizes protoplasts against high field pulses and long exposure times to the field. The Lp-values were obtained from the shrinking and swelling kinetics in response to osmotic stress. The Lp-values of fused mesophyll cell protoplasts of Avena sativa L. and of mesophyll and guard cell protoplasts of Vicia faba L. were found to be 1.9±0.9·10-6, 3.2±2.2·10-6, and 0.8±0.7·10-6 cm·bar-1·s-1, respectively. Within the limits of error, no changes in the Lp-values of fused protoplasts could be detected in comparison to unfused protoplasts. The Lp-values are in the range of those reported for walled cells of higher plants, as revealed by the pressure probe.Abbreviations GCP guard cell protoplast - Lp hydraulic conductivity - MCP mesophyll cell protoplast  相似文献   

17.
Cell volume alteration represents an important factor contributing to the pathology of late-onset diseases. Previously, it was reported that protein biosynthesis and degradation are inversely (trans) regulated during cell volume regulation. Upon cell shrinkage, protein biosynthesis was up-regulated and protein degradation down-regulated. Cell swelling showed opposite regulation. Recent evidence suggests a decrease of protein biodegradation activity in many neurodegenerative diseases and even during aging; both also show prominent cell shrinkage. To clarify the effect of cell volume regulation on the overall protein turnover dynamics, we investigated mouse embryonic stem cells under hyper- and hypotonic osmotic conditions using a 2-D gel based proteomics approach. These conditions cause cell swelling and shrinkage, respectively. Our results demonstrate that the adaption to altered osmotic conditions and therefore cell volume alterations affects a broad spectrum of cellular pathways, including stress response, cytoskeleton remodeling and importantly, cellular metabolism and protein degradation. Interestingly, protein synthesis and degradation appears to be cis-regulated (same direction) on a global level. Our findings also support the hypothesis that protein alterations due to osmotic stress contribute to the pathology of neurodegenerative diseases due to a 60% expression overlap with proteins found altered in Alzheimer's, Huntington's, or Parkinson's disease. Eighteen percent of the proteins altered are even shared with all three disorders.  相似文献   

18.
The osmotic behavior of bovine blastocysts produced in vitro was filmed during exposure to and dilution of cryoprotectant solutions used for vitrification. The relationship between the changes in the diameter of embryos and their subsequent survival was assessed. Embryos collected on Day 6 and Day 7 postinsemination were exposed to 10% glycerol (GLY) for 5 min, 10% GLY + 20% ethylene glycol (EG) for 5 min, and 25% Gly + 25% EG for 30 s, before dilution in 0.85 M galactose and finally in embryo transfer freezing medium (ETF). Embryos that had a higher probability of survival behaved as perfect osmometers, shrinking, reexpanding, or swelling according to an identical pattern, whereas embryos that deviated from this standard usually did not survive. The initial embryo diameter, duration of shrinkage and expansion in 10% glycerol, duration of reexpansion in ETF, and final embryo diameter were clearly predictive of the ability to hatch after culture in vitro. On a given day postinsemination, larger blastocysts were more likely than smaller blastocysts to survive and hatch after exposure to cryoprotectants with or without vitrification.  相似文献   

19.
Fusion of multilamellar phospholipid vesicles with planar phospholipid bilayer membranes was monitored by the rate of appearance in the planar membrane of an intrinsic membrane protein present in the vesicle membranes. An essential requirement for fusion is an osmotic gradient across the planar membrane, with the cis side (the side containing the vesicles) hyperosmotic to the opposite (trans) side; for substantial fusion rates, divalent cation must also be present on the cis side. Thus, the low fusion rates obtained with 100 mM excess glucose in the cis compartment are enhanced orders of magnitude by the addition of 5-10 mM CaCl2 to the cis compartment. Conversely, the rapid fusion rates induced by 40 mM CaCl2 in the cis compartment are completely suppressed when the osmotic gradient (created by the 40 mM CaCl2) is abolished by addition of an equivalent amount of either CaCl2, NaCl, urea, or glucose to the trans compartment. We propose that fusion occurs by the osmotic swelling of vesicles in contact with the planar membrane, with subsequent rupture of the vesicular and planar membranes in the region of contact. Divalent cations catalyze this process by increasing the frequency and duration of vesicle-planar membrane contact. We argue that essentially this same osmotic mechanism drives biological fusion processes, such as exocytosis. Our fusion procedure provides a general method for incorporating and reconstituting transport proteins into planar phospholipid bilayer membranes.  相似文献   

20.
1. The ability of a number of carboxylic acids, their esters, retinol and alpha-tocopherol to induce fusion of hen erythrocytes in vitro was investigated. 2. Some 30 different fat-soluble substances (100mug/ml) were found to cause the formation of multinucleated erythrocytes with a suspension of 3x10(8) erythrocytes/ml. The most effective agents induced fusion within 5-10min at 37 degrees C; some substances required about 1h. 3. Inclusion of Dextran 60C in the test medium minimized colloid osmotic lysis caused by exogenous lipids that induce cell fusion. 4. Cell swelling, followed by cell adhesion, was then seen to precede cell fusion. 5. Fusion occurred with C(10)-C(14) saturated carboxylic acids, with unsaturated, longer-chain carboxylic acids and their mono-esters; retinol, and to a lesser extent alpha-tocopherol, also caused cell fusion. 6. C(6)-C(9), C(15), C(16) and C(18) saturated carboxylic acids did not induce fusion within 4h; glyceryl dioleate was only weakly active, and glyceryl trioleate was inactive in the test system. 7. Fusion was facilitated by a high ratio of chemical agents to cell number and by incubation between pH5 and 6. It was inhibited by EDTA and by serum albumin. 8. Glyceryl mono-oleate caused both a similar fusion of several species of mammalian erythrocyte and the interspecific fusion of human and chicken erythrocytes. 9. The term ;fusogenic' is proposed to describe chemical, viral and physical agents that cause membranes to fuse. 10. The biochemical mechanisms involved and the possible biological significance of membrane fusion by fusogenic lipids are discussed.  相似文献   

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