首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
The membrane fraction prepared from mouse peritoneal exudate cells was incubated with mycobacteria, staphylococci, or E. coli in acetate buffer of pH 5.6 to follow the fate of viable bacilli. The membrane fraction exhibited bactericidal effect on mycobacteria and staphylococci, but not on E. coli. The activity to kill mycobacteria, as well as the endogenous phospholipase A2 activity, of the membrane fraction was markedly enhanced by melittin, a basic peptide from bee venom, and inhibited by indomethacin and EDTA. The role of the enzyme activity in the bactericidal activity was discussed.  相似文献   

2.
The rotational mobility of band 3, a protein constituent of the human erythrocyte membrane, was measured by observing the flash-induced transient dichroism of the triplet probe eosin maleimide. In the presence of melittin, a pharmacologically active polypeptide from honey bee (Apis mellifera) venom, a dose-dependent loss of rotational mobility was detected. With acetylated melittin, the ability to immobilise is reduced. Succinylated melittin, however, is devoid of immobilising activity.The possible relevance of these findings to the normal mode of action of melittin was examined by comparing the relative abilities of the native, acetylated and succinylated melittins to lyse erythrocytes and synergise with phospholipase A2, another constituent of bee venom. For both these properties, the order of effectiveness is native melittin > acetyl melittin > succinyl melittin = 0, the same as their order of effectiveness in immobilising band 3.A mechanism is proposed in which melittin is anchored in the membrane by its hydrophobic N-terminus, while its cationic C-terminal moiety binds to negatively charged residues on membrane proteins. This leads either directly or indirectly to protein aggregation and hence loss of mobility. From a detailed comparison of the different effects of the melittin derivatives, it is concluded that melittin may function in vivo by aggregating membrane proteins in order to allow phospholipase A2 to gain access to the membrane bilayer and commence catalysis.  相似文献   

3.
Phospholipase A2-induced deacylation of membrane phospholipids is associated with changes in membrane fluidity. The importance of this reaction in the pancreatic amylase secretory process was tested using melittin, a phospholipase A2 stimulating peptide. Phospholipase A2 activity (using [3H]arachidonic acid release as an index) and amylase secretion were both increased in a time- and concentration-dependent manner by melittin. Phospholipids prelabelled with [3H]oleic acid or [14C]linoleic acid also released radioactive free fatty acids in response to melittin. Prostaglandin synthesis was not involved in the melittin response, since inhibitors of arachidonic acid oxidation (indomethacin, 5,8,11,14-eicosatetraynoic acid) did not alter the ability of melittin to release [3H]arachidonic acid or amylase. When melittin was co-applied with carbachol, cholecystokinin octapeptide, or vasoactive intestinal peptide, amylase secretion was additive. The effect of melittin on both fatty acid and amylase release was dependent on extracellular calcium, though melittin's effects were not dependent on the intracellular accumulation of second messengers such as calcium or cAMP. The data suggest that activation of phospholipase A2 by melittin results in the triggering of the secretory process in exocrine pancreas by a different mechanism than that for other pancreatic secretagogues.  相似文献   

4.
Recent pharmacological studies using specific antagonists of phospholipase A(2) (PLA(2)) activity have suggested that the formation of Golgi membrane tubules, 60-80 nm in diameter and up to several microns long, both in vivo and in a cell-free cytosol-dependent reconstitution system, requires the activity of a cytoplasmic Ca(2+)-independent PLA(2). We confirm and extend these studies by demonstrating that the stimulators of PLA(2), melittin and PLA(2) activating protein peptide (PLAPp), enhance cytosol-dependent Golgi membrane tubulation. Starting with preparations of bovine brain cytosol (BBC), or a fraction of BBC that is highly enriched in tubulation activity, called the gel filtration (GF) fraction, that are at subsaturating concentrations for inducing tubulation in vitro, we found that increasing concentrations of melittin or PLAPp produced a linear and saturable stimulation of Golgi membrane tubulation. This stimulation was inhibited by cytosolic PLA(2) antagonists, including the Ca(2+)-independent PLA(2)-specific antagonist, bromoenol lactone. The stimulatory effect of PLAPp, and its inhibition by PLA(2) antagonists, was reproduced using a permeabilized cell system, which reconstitutes both cytosol-dependent Golgi membrane tubulation and retrograde trafficking to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Taken together, these results are consistent with the idea that cytosolic PLA(2) activity is involved in the formation of Golgi membrane tubules, which can serve as trafficking intermediates in Golgi-to-ER retrograde movement.  相似文献   

5.
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS), the major constituent of the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria, is the very first site of interactions with the antimicrobial peptides. In this work, we have determined a solution conformation of melittin, a well-known membrane active amphiphilic peptide from honey bee venom, by transferred nuclear Overhauser effect (Tr-NOE) spectroscopy in its bound state with lipopolysaccharide. The LPS bound conformation of melittin is characterized by a helical structure restricted only to the C-terminus region (residues A15-R24) of the molecule. Saturation transfer difference (STD) NMR studies reveal that several C-terminal residues of melittin including Trp19 are in close proximity with LPS. Isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) data demonstrates that melittin binding to LPS or lipid A is an endothermic process. The interaction between melittin and lipid A is further characterized by an equilibrium association constant (Ka) of 2.85 x 10(6) M(-1) and a stoichiometry of 0.80, melittin/lipid A. The estimated free energy of binding (delta G0), -8.8 kcal mol(-1), obtained from ITC experiments correlates well with a partial helical structure of melittin in complex with LPS. Moreover, a synthetic peptide fragment, residues L13-Q26 or mel-C, derived from the C-terminus of melittin has been found to contain comparable outer membrane permeabilizing activity against Escherichia coli cells. Intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence experiments of melittin and mel-C demonstrate very similar emission maxima and quenching in presence of LPS micelles. The Red Edge Excitation Shift (REES) studies of tryptophan residue indicate that both peptides are located in very similar environment in complex with LPS. Collectively, these results suggest that a helical conformation of melittin, at its C-terminus, could be an important element in recognition of LPS in the outer membrane.  相似文献   

6.
The effect of the neurotoxin melittin on the activation of ion channels of excitable membrane, the plasmalemma of Characeae algae cells, isolated membrane patches of neurons of mollusc L. stagnalis and Vero cells was studied by the method of intracellular perfusion and the patch-clamp technique in inside-out configuration. It was shown that melittin disturbs the conductivity of plasmalemma and modifieds Ca(2+)-channels of plant membrane. The leakage current that appears by the action of melittin can be restored by substituting calmodulin for melittin. Melittin modifies K(+)-channels of animal cell membrane by disrupting the phospholipid matrix and forms conductive structures in the membrane by interacting with channel proteins, which is evidenced by the appearance of additional ion channels.  相似文献   

7.
Melittin addition to rat or hamster adipocytes resulted in inhibition of lipolysis, cyclic AMP accumulation and glucose oxidation. Low concentrations of melittin were not insulin-like with respect to either stimulation of glucose metabolism or inhibition of lipolysis. Higher concentrations of melittin lysed adipocytes. In the presence of melittin, cellular phospholipids were released to the medium and hydrolyzed with little accumulation of lysophospholipids. Only in adipocytes incubated with melittin contaminated with phospholipase A2 was any appreciable accumulation of lysophospholipids seen and this was in the medium. These data suggest that the toxic effects of melittin on adipocytes are not due to the accumulation of lysophospholipids but rather to the loss of membrane phospholipids or alterations in membrane proteins.  相似文献   

8.
The effects of melittin on growth and bacteriostasis of four pathogens were extensively investigated using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The results indicated that the melittin had a marked bacteriostatic effect on the four pathogenic bacteria. Among these, E. cacotowora was influenced most powerfully and quickly, the yeast and F. fulva were the second, and the S. aureus was inhibited by a low concentration but was killed by a high concentration. It was observed in the experiments that melittin killed pathogenic bacteria in three ways. One was by pore formation. After integrating melittin into the plasma membrane, a vacuole was formed then penetrated, resulting in bacterial content leakage. The vacuole also experienced plasmolysis and the growing cavity destroyed the membrane. A third effect was the formation of vacuoles in the cells which induced the pycnosis of the cytoplasm resulting in a cell death. The mechanism of melittin bacteriostasis was the result of integrating melittin with phospholipod double layers of the plasmalemma and the endomembranes.  相似文献   

9.
J Voss  W Birmachu  D M Hussey  D D Thomas 《Biochemistry》1991,30(30):7498-7506
We have studied the effect of melittin, a basic membrane-binding peptide, on Ca-ATPase activity and on protein and lipid dynamics in skeletal sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR), using time-resolved phosphorescence and fluorescence spectroscopy. Melittin completely inhibits Ca-ATPase activity, with half-maximal inhibition at 9 +/- 1 mol of melittin bound to the membrane per mole of ATPase (0.1 mol of melittin per mole of lipid). The time-resolved phosphorescence anisotropy (TPA) decay of the Ca-ATPase labeled with erythrosin isothiocyanate (ERITC) shows that melittin restricts microsecond protein rotational motion. At 25 degrees C in the absence of melittin, the TPA is characterized by three decay components, corresponding to a rapid segmental motion (correlation time phi 1 = 2-3 microseconds), the uniaxial rotation of monomers or dimers (phi 2 = 16-22 microseconds), and the uniaxial rotation of larger oligomers (phi 3 = 90-140 microseconds). The effect of melittin is primarily to decrease the fraction of the more mobile monomer/dimer species (A2) while increasing the fractions of the larger oligomer (A3) and very large aggregates (A infinity). Time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy of the lipid-soluble probe diphenylhexatriene (DPH) shows only a slight increase in the lipid hydrocarbon chain effective order parameter, corresponding to an increase in lipid viscosity that is too small to account for the large decrease in protein mobility or inhibition of Ca-ATPase activity. Thus the inhibitory effect of melittin correlates with its capacity to aggregate the Ca-ATPase and is consistent with previously reported inhibition of this enzyme under conditions that increase protein-protein interactions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Transmembrane osmotic gradients applied on large unilamellar 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine vesicles were used to modulate the potency of melittin to induce leakage. Melittin, an amphipathic peptide, changes the permeability of vesicles, as studied using the release of entrapped calcein, a fluorescent marker. A promotion of the ability of melittin to induce leakage was observed when a hyposomotic gradient (i.e., internal salt concentration higher than the external one) was imposed on the vesicles. It is proposed that structural perturbations caused by the osmotic pressure loosen the compactness of the outer leaflet, which facilitates the melittin-induced change in membrane permeability. Additionally, we have shown that this phenomenon is not due to enhanced binding of melittin to the vesicles using intrinsic fluorescence of the melittin tryptophan. Furthermore, we investigated the possibility of using a transmembrane pH gradient to control the lytic activity of melittin. The potency of melittin in inducing release is known to be inhibited by increased negative surface charge density. A transmembrane pH gradient causing an asymmetric distribution of unprotonated palmitic acid in the bilayer is shown to be an efficient way to modulate the lytic activity of melittin, without changing the overall lipid composition of the membrane. We demonstrate that the protective effect of negatively charged lipids is preserved for asymmetric membranes.  相似文献   

11.
We conducted a series of coarse-grained molecular dynamics (CG-MD) simulations to investigate the complicated actions of melittin, which is an antimicrobial peptide (AMP) derived from honey bee venom, on a lipid membrane. To accurately simulate the AMP action, we developed and used a protein CG model as an extension of the pSPICA force field (FF), which was designed to reproduce several thermodynamic quantities and structural properties. At a low peptide-to-lipid (P/L) ratio (1/102), no defect was detected. At P/L = 1/51, toroidal pore formation was observed due to collective insertion of multiple melittin peptides from the N-termini. The pore formation was initiated by a local increase in membrane curvature in the vicinity of the peptide aggregate. At a higher P/L ratio (1/26), two more modes were detected, seemingly not controlled by the P/L ratio but by a local arrangement of melittin peptides: 1. Pore formation accompanied by lipid extraction by melittin peptides:a detergent-like mechanism. 2. A rapidly formed large pore in a significantly curved membrane: bursting. Thus, we observed three pore formation modes (toroidal pore formation, lipid extraction, and bursting) depending on the peptide concentration and local arrangement. These observations were consistent with experimental observations and hypothesized melittin modes. Through this study, we found that the local arrangements and population of melittin peptides and the area expansion rate by membrane deformation were key to the initiation of and competition among the multiple pore formation mechanisms.  相似文献   

12.
Incubation of isolated rat islets of Langerhans with melittin resulted in a dose-dependent stimulation of insulin secretion with half the maximal response occurring at 4 micrograms/ml melittin. The effect of melittin on insulin secretion was dependent on extracellular calcium, was inhibited by the phospholipase A2 inhibitor quinacrine and by the lipoxygenase inhibitor nordihydroguaiaretic acid. Stimulation of insulin secretion by melittin was associated with a calcium-dependent loss of [3H]arachidonic acid from phospholipids in islet cells prelabelled with [3H]arachidonic acid. Analysis of the islet phospholipids involved in this response revealed that the [3H]arachidonic acid was released predominantly from phosphatidylcholine. These results suggest that melittin may stimulate insulin secretion by activating phospholipase A2 in islet cells, causing the release of arachidonic acid from membrane phospholipid. The results are consistent with suggestions that the subsequent metabolism of arachidonic acid via the lipoxygenase pathway may be involved in regulating the insulin secretory response.  相似文献   

13.
Summary This paper describes experiments designed to explore interactions between human red blood cell membranes and melittin, the main component of bee venom. We found that melittin binds to human red cell membranes suspended in isotonic NaCl at room temperature, with an apparent dissociation constant of 3×10–8 m and maximum binding capacity of 1.8×107 molecules/cell. When about 1% of the melittin binding sites are occupied, cell lysis can be observed, and progressive, further increases in the fraction of the total sites occupied lead to progressively greater lysis in a graded manner. 50% lysis occurs when there are about 2×106 molecules bound to the cell membrane. For any particular extent of melittin binding, lysis proceeds rapidly during the first few minutes but then slows and stops so that no further lysis occurs after one hour of exposure of cells to melittin. The graded lysis of erythrocytes by melittin is due to complete lysis of some of the cells, since both the density and the hemoglobin content of surviving, intact cells in a suspension that has undergone graded melittin lysis are similar to the values observed in the same cells prior to the addition of melittin. The cells surviving graded melittin lysis have an increased Na and reduced K, proportional to the extent of occupation of the melittin binding sites. Like lysis, Na accumulation and K loss proceed rapidly during the first few minutes of exposure to melittin but then stops so that Na, K and hemoglobin content of the cells remain constant after the first hour. These kinetic characteristics of both lysis and cation movements suggest that melittin modifies the permeability of the red cell membrane only for the first few minutes after the start of the interaction. Direct observation of cells by Nomarsky optics revealed that they crenate, become swollen and lyse within 10 to 30 sec after these changes in morphology are first seen. Taken together, these results are consistent with the idea that melittin produces lysis of human red cells at room temperature by a colloid osmotic mechanism.  相似文献   

14.
Although cell lysis by the hemolytic peptide, melittin, has been extensively studied, the role of specific lipids of the erythrocyte membrane on melittin-induced hemolysis remains unexplored. In this report, we have explored the modulatory role of cholesterol on the hemolytic activity of melittin by specifically depleting cholesterol from rat erythrocytes using methyl-beta-cyclodextrin (MbetaCD). Our results show that the hemolytic activity of melittin is increased by approximately 3-fold upon depletion of erythrocyte membrane cholesterol by approximately 55% without any appreciable loss of phospholipids. This result constitutes the first report demonstrating that the presence of cholesterol inhibits the lytic activity of melittin in its natural target membrane, i.e., the erythrocyte membrane. These results are relevant in understanding the role of cholesterol in the mechanism of action of melittin in the erythrocyte membrane.  相似文献   

15.
蜂毒肽的溶血作用与红细胞膜上两种酶活性变化的关系   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
从蜂毒肽作用于红细胞膜上的Na-K-ATPase和葡萄糖-6-磷酸脱氢酶(G-6-PD)活性变化的角度,利用分光光度法测定酶活性,研究蜂毒肽与红细胞及膜作用过程中可能的靶点,讨论了蜂毒肽溶血过程与RBC膜上2种酶活性的变化.结果发现,蜂毒肽抑制RBC膜上酶活性的主要模式为附着/插入质膜与游离态并存模式,附着/插入质膜中的作用大于游离态的作用.Na-K-ATPase的K+结合位点是蜂毒肽的1个作用靶点.蜂毒肽插膜过程与其对此酶的作用随时间延长同步发生.蜂毒肽通过作用于葡萄糖-6-磷酸和NADP使G-6-PD的催化受到缓慢抑制,蜂毒肽形成四聚体的程度与酶活性密切相关.EDTA抑制蜂毒肽聚集,干扰蜂毒肽作用于G-6-P,蜂毒肽作用于底物G-6-P及辅酶NADP的生化机理相似,蜂毒肽抑制作用与G-6-PD的结构无关.  相似文献   

16.
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS), the major constituent of the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria, is the very first site of interactions with the antimicrobial peptides. In this work, we have determined a solution conformation of melittin, a well-known membrane active amphiphilic peptide from honey bee venom, by transferred nuclear Overhauser effect (Tr-NOE) spectroscopy in its bound state with lipopolysaccharide. The LPS bound conformation of melittin is characterized by a helical structure restricted only to the C-terminus region (residues A15-R24) of the molecule. Saturation transfer difference (STD) NMR studies reveal that several C-terminal residues of melittin including Trp19 are in close proximity with LPS. Isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) data demonstrates that melittin binding to LPS or lipid A is an endothermic process. The interaction between melittin and lipid A is further characterized by an equilibrium association constant (Ka) of 2.85 × 106 M− 1 and a stoichiometry of 0.80, melittin/lipid A. The estimated free energy of binding (ΔG0), − 8.8 kcal mol− 1, obtained from ITC experiments correlates well with a partial helical structure of melittin in complex with LPS. Moreover, a synthetic peptide fragment, residues L13-Q26 or mel-C, derived from the C-terminus of melittin has been found to contain comparable outer membrane permeabilizing activity against Escherichia coli cells. Intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence experiments of melittin and mel-C demonstrate very similar emission maxima and quenching in presence of LPS micelles. The Red Edge Excitation Shift (REES) studies of tryptophan residue indicate that both peptides are located in very similar environment in complex with LPS. Collectively, these results suggest that a helical conformation of melittin, at its C-terminus, could be an important element in recognition of LPS in the outer membrane.  相似文献   

17.
The interaction of bee venom melittin with erythrocyte membrane ghosts has been investigated by means of fluorescence quenching of membrane tryptophan residues, fluorescence polarization and ESR spectroscopy. It has been revealed that melittin induces the disorders in lipid-protein matrix both in the hydrophobic core of bilayer and at the polar/non-polar interface of melittin complexed with erythrocyte membranes. The peptide has been found to act most efficiently at the concentration of the order of 10(-10) mol/mg membrane protein. The apparent distance separating the membrane tryptophan and bound 1-anilino-8-naphthalenesulphonate (ANS) molecules is decreased upon melittin binding, which results in a significant increase of the maximum energy transfer efficiency. Significant changes in the fluorescence anisotropy of both 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene and 1-anilino-8-naphthalenesulphonate bound to erythrocyte ghosts, which have been observed in the presence of melittin and crude venom, indicate membrane lipid bilayer rigidization. The effect of crude honey bee venom has been found to be of similar magnitude as the effect of pure melittin at the concentration of 10(-10) mol/mg membrane protein. Using two lipophilic spin labels, methyl 5-doxylpalmitate and 16-doxylstearic acid, we found that melittin at its increasing concentrations induces a well marked rigidization in the deeper regions of lipid bilayer, whereas the effect of rigidization near the membrane surface maximizes at the melittin concentration of 10(-10) mol/mg (10(-4) mol melittin per mole of membrane phospholipid). The decrease in the ratio hw/hs of maleimide and the rise in relative rotational correlation time (tau c) of iodacetamid spin label, indicate that melittin effectively immobilizes membrane proteins in the plane of the lipid bilayer. We conclude that melittin-induced rigidization of the lipid bilayer may induce a reorganization of lipid assemblies as well as the rearrangements in membrane protein pattern and consequently the alterations in lipid-protein interactions. Thus, the interaction of melittin with erythrocyte membranes is supposed to produce local conformational changes in membranes, which are discussed in the connection with their significance during the synergistic action of melittin and phospholipase of bee venom on red blood cells.  相似文献   

18.
The structure of melittin in membranes.   总被引:10,自引:8,他引:10       下载免费PDF全文
The conformation of the polypeptide melittin in lipid membranes as determined by Raman spectroscopy is a bent alpha-helix formed by the mainly hydrophobic residues 1-21, and a nonhelical COOH-terminal segment of the hydrophilic residues 22-26. Fluorescence quenching experiments on residue Trp19 reveal that all COOH-termini are located on that side of a vesicular membrane to which melittin was added. By means of fluorescence energy transfer between unmodified and modified Trp19 residues, melittin is shown to aggregate in membranes predominantly in the form of tetramers. These and previous results on the location and orientation of melittin permit the development of a model for the structure of melittin tetramers in membranes. The hydrophilic sides of four bilayer-spanning helices face each other to form a hydrophilic pore through the membrane.  相似文献   

19.
Melittin is a cationic hemolytic peptide isolated from the European honey bee, Apis mellifera. The organization of membrane-bound melittin has earlier been shown to be dependent on the physical state and composition of membranes. In this study, we covalently labeled the N-terminal (Gly-1) and Lys-7 of melittin with an environment-sensitive fluorescent probe, the NBD group, to monitor the influence of negatively charged lipids and cholesterol on the organization and dynamics of membrane-bound melittin. Our results show that the NBD group of melittin labeled at its N-terminal end does not exhibit red edge excitation shift in DOPC and DOPC/DOPG membranes, whereas the NBD group of melittin labeled at Lys-7 exhibits REES of approximately 8 nm. This could be attributed to difference in membrane microenvironment experienced by the NBD groups in these analogs. Interestingly, the membrane environment of the NBD groups is sensitive to the presence of cholesterol, which is supported by time-resolved fluorescence measurements. Importantly, the orientation of melittin is found to be parallel to the membrane surface as determined by membrane penetration depth analysis using the parallax method in all cases. Our results constitute the first report to our knowledge describing the orientation of melittin in cholesterol-containing membranes. These results assume significance in the overall context of the role of membrane lipids in the orientation and function of membrane proteins and peptides.  相似文献   

20.
To investigate the physical mechanism by which melittin inhibits Ca-adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) activity in sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) membranes, we have used electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy to probe the effect of melittin on lipid-protein interactions in SR. Previous studies have shown that melittin substantially restricts the rotational mobility of the Ca-ATPase but only slightly decreases the average lipid hydrocarbon chain fluidity in SR. Therefore, in the present study, we ask whether melittin has a preferential effect on Ca-ATPase boundary lipids, i.e., the annular shell of motionally restricted lipid that surrounds the protein. Paramagnetic derivatives of stearic acid and phosphatidylcholine, spin-labeled at C-14, were incorporated into SR membranes. The electronic paramagnetic resonance spectra of these probes contained two components, corresponding to motionally restricted and motionally fluid lipids, that were analyzed by spectral subtraction. The addition of increasing amounts of melittin, to the level of 10 mol melittin/mol Ca-ATPase, progressively increased the fraction of restricted lipids and increased the hyperfine splitting of both components in the composite spectra, indicating that melittin decreases the hydrocarbon chain rotational mobility for both the fluid and restricted populations of lipids. No further effects were observed above a level of 10 mol melittin/mol Ca-ATPase. In the spectra from control and melittin-containing samples, the fraction of restricted lipids decreased significantly with increasing temperature. The effect of melittin was similar to that of decreased temperature, i.e., each spectrum obtained in the presence of melittin (10:1) was nearly identical to the spectrum obtained without melittin at a temperature approximately 5 degrees C lower. The results suggest that the principal effect of melittin on SR membranes is to induce protein aggregation and this in turn, augmented by direct binding of melittin to the lipid, is responsible for the observed decreases in lipid mobility. Protein aggregation is concluded to be the main cause of inactivation of the Ca-ATPase by melittin, with possible modulation also by the decrease in mobility of the boundary layer lipids.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号