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1.
We have studied the properties of the fatty acyl binding sites of the phosphatidylinositol transfer protein (PI-TP) from bovine brain, by measuring the binding and transfer of pyrenylacyl-containing phosphatidylinositol (PyrPI) species and pyrenylacyl-containing phosphatidylcholine (PyrPC) species as a function of the acyl chain length. The PyrPI species carried a pyrene-labeled acyl chain of variable length in the sn-2 position and either palmitic acid [C(16)], palmitoleic acid [C(16:1)], or stearic acid [C(18:1)] in the sn-1 position. Binding and transfer of the PI species increased in the order C(18) less than C(16) less than C(16:1), with a distinct preference for those species that carry a pyrenyloctanoyl [Pyr(8)] or a pyrenyldecanoyl [Pyr(10)] chain. The PyrPC species studied consisted of two sets of positional isomers: one set contained a pyrenylacyl chain of variable length and a C(16) chain, and the other set contained an unlabeled chain of variable length and a Pyr(10) chain. The binding and transfer experiments showed that PI-TP discriminates between positional isomers with a preference for the species with a pyrenylacyl chain in the sn-1 position. This discrimination is interpreted to indicate that separate binding sites exist for the sn-1 and sn-2 acyl chains. From the binding and transfer profiles it is apparent that the binding sites differ in their preference for a particular acyl chain length. The binding and transfer vs chain length profiles were quite similar for C(16)Pyr(x)PC and C(16)Pyr(x)PI species, suggesting that the sn-2 acyl chains of PI and PC share a common binding site in PI-TP.  相似文献   

2.
Phosphatidylinositol transfer protein alpha (PITPalpha) selectively transports and promotes exchange of phosphatidylinositol (PI) and phosphatidylcholine (PC) between lipid bilayers. In higher eukaryotes PITPalpha is required for cellular functions such as phospholipase C-mediated signaling, regulated exocytosis, and secretory vesicle formation. We have determined the crystal structure of human PITPalpha bound to its physiological ligand, PI, at 2.95 A resolution. The structure identifies the critical side chains within the lipid-headgroup binding pocket that define the exquisite specificity for PI. Mutational analysis of the PI binding pocket is in good agreement with the structural data and allows manipulation of functional properties of PITPalpha. Surprisingly, there are no major conformational differences between PI- and PC-loaded PITPalpha, despite previous predictions. In the crystal, PITPalpha-PI is dimeric, with two identical dimers in the asymmetric unit. The dimer interface masks precisely the sequence we identify as contributing to PITPalpha membrane interaction. Our structure represents a soluble, transport-competent form of PI-loaded PITPalpha.  相似文献   

3.
The sn-1-stearoyl-2-arachidonoyl phospholipids of animal cells appear to be formed by special mechanisms. To determine whether monoacylglycerol (MG) incorporation pathways are involved we incubated quiescent Swiss 3T3 cells with [3H]glycerol-labeled sn-2-arachidonoyl MG, then analyzed the radioactive cell lipids that accumulated. We also examined cell homogenates to identify enzyme activities that might promote the incorporation of sn-2-arachidonoyl MG into other cell lipids. The cell incubation experiments demonstrated rapid labeling of several lipids, including diacylglycerol, lysophosphatidic acid, phosphatidic acid, and phosphatidylinositol. They also demonstrated selective labeling of sn-1-stearoyl-2-arachidonoyl species of phosphatidylinositol, phosphatidylethanolamine, and phosphatidylserine. The cell homogenate experiments identified an sn-2-acyl MG acyltransferase activity, an MG kinase activity that phosphorylates sn-2-arachidonoyl MG in preference to sn-2-oleoyl MG, and a stearoyl-specific acyl transferase activity that converts sn-2-arachidonoyl lysophosphatidic acid into sn-1-stearoyl-2-arachidonoyl phosphatidic acid. The results also showed that this stearoyl transferase could act with other enzymes to convert sn-2-arachidonoyl lysophosphatidic acid into sn-1-stearoyl-2-arachidonoyl phosphatidylinositol. The combined results indicate that Swiss 3T3 cells incorporate sn-2-arachidonoyl MG into phospholipids by at least two different pathways, including one that specifically forms sn-1-stearoyl-2-arachidonoyl phosphatidylinositol.  相似文献   

4.
Both the phosphatidylcholine transfer protein (PC-TP) and the phosphatidylinositol transfer protein (PI-TP) act as carriers of phosphatidylcholine (PC) molecules between membranes. To study the structure of the acyl binding sites of these proteins, the affinity of 32 distinct natural and related PC molecular species was determined by using a previously developed fluorometric competition assay. Marked differences in affinity between species were observed with both proteins. Affinity vs lipid hydrophobicity (determined by reverse-phase HPLC) plots displayed a well-defined maximum indicating that the acyl chain hydrophobicity is an important determinant of binding of a phospholipid molecule by these transfer proteins. However, besides the overall lipid hydrophobicity, steric properties of the individual acyl chains contribute considerably to the affinity, and PC-TP and PI-TP respond differently to modifications of the acyl chain structure. The affinity of PC-TP increased steadily with increasing unsaturation of the sn-2 acyl moiety, resulting in high affinity for species containing four and six double bonds in the sn-2 chain, whereas the affinity of PI-TP first increased up to two to three double bonds and then declined. These data, as well as the distinct effects of sn-2 chain double bond position and bromination, indicate that the sn-2 acyl chain binding sites of the two proteins are structurally quite different. The sn-1 acyl binding sites are dissimilar as well, since variation of the length of saturated sn-1 chain affected the affinity differently. The data are discussed in terms of the structural organization of the sn-1 and sn-2 acyl binding sites of PC-TP and PI-TP.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
S Li  Z Q Wang  H N Lin    C Huang 《Biophysical journal》1993,65(4):1415-1428
Phosphatidylcholines or C(X):C(Y)PC, quantitatively the most abundant lipids in animal cell membranes, are structurally composed of two parts: a headgroup and a diglyceride. The diglyceride moiety consists of the glycerol backbone and two acyl chains. It is the wide diversity of the acyl chains, or the large variations in X and Y in C(X):C(Y)PC, that makes the family of phosphatidylcholines an extremely complex mixture of different molecular species. Since most of the physical properties of phospholipids with the same headgroup depend strongly on the structures of the lipid acyl chains, the energy-minimized structure and steric energy of each diglyceride moiety of a series of 14 molecular species of phosphatidylcholines with molecular weights identical to that of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine without the headgroup are determined in this communication by molecular mechanics (MM) calculations. Results of two types of trans-bilayer dimer for each of the 14 molecular species of phosphatidylcholines are also presented; specifically, the dimeric structures are constructed initially based on the partially interdigitated and mixed interdigitated packing motifs followed subsequently by the energy-minimized refinement with MM calculations. Finally, tetramers with various structures to model the lateral lipid-lipid interactions in a lipid bilayer are considered. Results of laborious MM calculations show that saturated diacyl C(X):C(Y)PC with delta C/CL values greater than 0.41 prefer topologically to assemble into tetramers of the mixed interdigitated motif, and those with delta C/CL values less than 0.41 prefer to assemble into tetramers with a repertoire of the partially interdigitated motif. Here, delta C/CL, a lipid asymmetry parameter, is defined as the normalized acyl chain length difference between the sn-1 and sn-2 acyl chains for a C(X):C(Y)PC molecule; an increase in delta C/CL value is an indication of increasing asymmetry between the two lipid acyl chains. These computational results are in complete accord with the calorimetric data presented previously from this laboratory (H-n. Lin, Z-q. Wang, and C. Huang. 1991. Biochim. Biophys. Acta. 1067:17-28).  相似文献   

6.
The phosphatidylinositol transfer protein isolated from brain, liver, heart and platelets was found to be present in two subforms which could be distinguished on the basis of the isoelectric points. In this study we have demonstrated that the two subforms isolated from bovine brain are due to the presence of either phosphatidylinositol or phosphatidylcholine in the lipid binding site of the protein. The transfer protein accommodates one phosphatidylinositol molecule in the binding site. The binding site for the sn-2 fatty acyl chain was investigated by incorporating in the transfer protein either phosphatidylinositol or phosphatidylcholine carrying a parinaroyl-chain attached at the sn-2 position. Time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy revealed that the sn-2 fatty acyl chains for both phospholipids in the lipid-protein complex were completely immobilized (i.e., rotational correlation times of 17.4 ns for phosphatidylcholine and 16.3 ns for phosphatidylinositol). The similarity in correlation times suggests that the sn-2 fatty acyl chains of both phospholipids are accommodated in the same hydrophobic binding site of the protein.  相似文献   

7.
Phosphatidylcholine transfer protein (PC-TP) containing different molecular species of PC and phosphatidylinositol transfer protein alpha (PI-TPalpha) containing either a PI, PC, or PG molecule were identified as intact complexes by nano-electrospray ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry. The stability of these complexes in the gas phase was determined by elevating the cone voltage (cv) resulting in the appearance of the protein void of lipid. PC-TP containing a PC species carrying an sn-1 palmitoyl chain was less stable than PC-TP containing a PC species carrying an sn-1 stearoyl chain given that these complexes were dissociated for 50% at a cv of roughly 30 and 45 V, respectively. Different acyl chains on the sn-2 position did not lead to significant changes in stability of the complex. In the case of PI-TPalpha, the complexes containing PI and PG were dissociated for 50% at a cv of 100 V as compared to a cv of 40 V for the complex containing PC. We propose that this difference in stability is due to hydrogen bonds between the polar headgroup of PI and PG and the lipid-binding site of PI-TPalpha. This may explain why PI-TPalpha preferentially binds PI from a membrane interface.  相似文献   

8.
Lipid rafts are functional microdomains enriched with sphingolipids and cholesterol. The fatty acyl chain composition of sphingolipids is a critical factor in the localization of lipids in lipid rafts. The recent studies suggest that lipid rafts are more heterogeneous than previously thought. In addition, our discovery of a new glycolipid, phosphatidylglucoside (PtdGlc), also supports the notion of raft heterogeneity. The complete structural characterization of PtdGlc shows that it consists solely of saturated fatty acyl chains: C18:0 at the sn-1 and C20:0 at the sn-2 positions of the glycerol backbone. This unique fatty acyl composition comprising a single molecular species rarely occurs in known mammalian lipids. Although the structure of PtdGlc is similar to that of phosphatidylinositol, PtdGlc localizes to the outer leaflet of the plasma membrane and is possibly involved in cell-cell interaction signaling in the central nervous system.  相似文献   

9.
The phosphatidylinositol transfer protein from bovine brain has a remarkable specificity pattern with a distinct preference for phosphatidylinositol (PI) and a low affinity for phosphatidylcholine (PC). In this study we have determined the affinity of PI-transfer protein for PI relative to that for PC by measuring the binding of the fluorescent pyrene-labeled analogs of these phospholipids. From competition binding experiments it was estimated that the transfer protein has a 16-fold higher affinity for PI than for PC. This relative affinity together with the relative abundance of PI and PC, determines what proportion of the protein contains PI (e.g. 65% of the PI-transfer protein in the case of bovine brain). From measuring lipid transfer between donor vesicles consisting of equimolar amounts of PC and PI, and an excess of acceptor vesicles consisting of various ratios of PC and PI, we have observed that the relative rates of the PI-transfer protein-mediated transfer of PI and PC varies between 5 and 20. Kinetic analysis has indicated that PI-transfer protein carrying a PI molecule has different kinetic properties than the PI-transfer protein carrying a PC molecule. It will be discussed that because of the dual specificity, PI-transfer protein is ideally suited for maintaining PI levels in intracellular membranes.  相似文献   

10.
Phosphatidylinositol transfer protein alpha (PITPalpha) participates in the supply of phosphatidylinositol (PI) required for many cellular events including phospholipase C (PLC) beta and gamma signaling by G-protein-coupled receptors and receptor-tyrosine kinases, respectively. Protein kinase C has been known to modulate PLC signaling by G-protein-coupled receptors and receptor-tyrosine kinases, although the molecular target has not been identified in most instances. In each case phorbol myristate acetate pretreatment of HL60, HeLa, and COS-7 cells abrogated PLC stimulation by the agonists formyl-Met-Leu-Phe, ATP, and epidermal growth factor, respectively. Here we show that phosphorylation of PITPalpha at Ser166 resulted in inhibition of receptor-stimulated PLC activity. Ser166 is localized in a small pocket between the 165-172 loop and the rest of the protein and was not solvent-accessible in either the PI- or phosphatidylcholine-loaded structures of PITPalpha. To allow phosphorylation at Ser166, a distinct structural form is postulated, and mutation of Thr59 to alanine shifted the equilibrium to this form, which could be resolved on native PAGE. The elution profile observed by size exclusion chromatography of phosphorylated PITPalpha from rat brain or in vitro phosphorylated PITPalpha demonstrated that phosphorylated PITPalpha is structurally distinct from the non-phosphorylated form. Phosphorylated PITPalpha was unable to deliver its PI cargo, although it could deliver phosphatidylcholine. We conclude that the PITPalpha structure has to relax to allow access to the Ser166 site, and this may occur at the membrane surface where PI delivery is required for receptor-mediated PLC signaling.  相似文献   

11.
Phosphatidylinositol transfer protein (PITP) is a ubiquitous eukaryotic protein that preferentially binds either phosphatidylinositol or phosphatidylcholine and catalyzes the exchange of these lipids between membranes. Mammalian cytosolic PITPs include the ubiquitously expressed PITPalpha and PITPbeta isoforms (269-270 residues). The crystal structure of rat PITPbeta complexed to dioleoylphosphatidylcholine was determined to 2.18 A resolution with molecular replacement using rat PITPalpha (77% sequence identify) as the phasing model. A structure comparison of the alpha and beta isoforms reveals minimal differences in protein conformation, differences in acyl conformation in the two isoforms, and remarkable conservation of solvent structure around the bound lipid. A comparison of transfer activity by human and rat PITPs, using small unilamellar vesicles with carefully controlled phospholipid composition, indicates that the beta isoforms have minimal differences in transfer preference between PtdIns and PtdCho when donor vesicles contain predominantly PtdCho. When PtdCho and PtdIns are present in equivalent concentrations in donor vesicles, PtdIns transfer occurs at approximately 3-fold the rate of PtdCho. The rat PITPbeta isoform clearly has the most diminished transfer rate of the four proteins studied. With the two rat isoforms, site-directed mutations of two locations within the lipid binding cavity that possess differing biochemical properties were characterized: I84alpha/F83beta and F225alpha/L224beta. The 225/224 locus is more critical in determining substrate specificity. Following the mutation of this locus to the other amino acid, the PtdCho transfer specific activity became PITPalpha (F225L) approximately PITPbeta and PITPbeta (L224F) approximately PITPalpha. The 225alpha/224beta locus plays a modest role in the specificity of both isoforms toward CerPCho.  相似文献   

12.
We identified a CoA-dependent stearoyl transacylase activity in bovine testis membranes, then examined the enzyme's specificity in mixed micelle systems containing the neutral detergent Triton X-100. The enzyme transferred stearoyl groups from a variety of phospholipids to sn-2-arachidonoyl lysophosphatidic acid (lysoPA), but showed very little palmitoyl transacylase activity. Its ability to transfer stearoyl groups was both donor- and acceptor-dependent. For example, it used weakly acidic phospholipids, such as sn-1-stearoyl-2-acyl species of phosphatidylinositol (PI), as donors, but did not use phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate or sn-1-stearoyl-2-arachidonoyl phosphatidylcholine. Moreover, it used sn-2-acyl species of lysoPA and sn-2-arachidonoyl lysoPI as acceptors but did not use sn-2-arachidonoyl species of lysophosphatidylserine, lysophosphatidylethanolamine, or lysophosphatidylcholine. When taken together, our results raise the possibility that sn-1-stearoyl-2-acyl species of PI may be the primary acyl donors in the transacylase reaction in vivo, while sn-2-acyl species of lysoPA may be the primary acyl acceptors. Available evidence suggests that the PA that is formed may subsequently be converted into PI, but the metabolic fate of the other reaction product, sn-2-acyl lysoPI, remains to be determined.  相似文献   

13.
Phospholipids are major building blocks for biological membranes. In addition, metabolites derived from their degradation are important signals in major cellular events, such as proliferation and apoptosis. The concept of lipid signaling in cells is derived mainly from the measurement of change in the concentration of lipid molecules. However, these changes in concentration are only a small part of the underlying metabolic change induced by a perturbation in the cell. In contrast, metabolic kinetic studies documenting product-precursor relationships and turnover rates are useful in elucidating the responsible mechanisms. Historically, metabolic studies of phospholipids in cells have been carried out with pulse or pulse-chase methods using radioactive isotopes. While these studies provide valuable information, their scope is restricted by inherent limitations. In this paper we describe a method using [1,2,3,4-13C(4)]palmitate as the tracer for studying the metabolic kinetics of the molecular species of diacylglycerol, ceramide, phosphatidylcholine, and sphingomyelin. After growing cells in the presence of labeled palmitate complexed to serum albumin, the lipids are extracted and separated into lipid classes. After enzymatic hydrolysis, diacylglyerols and ceramides as bis-trimethylsilyl derivatives are determined quantitatively with capillary column gas chromatography. Internal standards for each lipid class are used in the procedure. In addition, the isotopic enrichments of the lipid molecular species are determined with gas chromatograph-mass spectrometry. We applied this method to the study of HL60 cells. Different turnover rates were found for various molecular species. In addition, the sn-1 and sn-2 acyl groups appear to be synthesized at different rates for different molecular species. Other information, such as chain elongation and desaturation, might also be derived through the use of this method.  相似文献   

14.
S Li  H N Lin  Z Q Wang    C Huang 《Biophysical journal》1994,66(6):2005-2018
As a cis carbon-carbon double bond (delta) is introduced into the middle of an isolated all-trans hydrocarbon chain, it can be shown by molecular graphics that this delta-bond makes a bend of 130 degrees in the chain axis, thus producing a boomerang-like conformation. Such a bent structure, indeed, has been detected experimentally for oleic acid by x-ray crystallography (Abrahamson and Ryderstedt-Nahringbaur, 1962). Membrane diacyl phospholipids are largely mixed-chain lipids containing a saturated sn-1 acyl chain and an unsaturated sn-2 acyl chain. 1-Palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine (POPC), the most abundant phospholipid in animal cell membranes, is a typical example in which the sn-2 acyl chain is the acyl chain of an oleic acid. However, this sn-2 acyl chain of POPC is unlikely to adopt a boomerang-like configuration in the gel-state lipid bilayer due to the steric hindrance imposed by neighboring chains. Instead, it has been suggested that the oleate chain in POPC is kinked in the shape of a crankshaft in the gel-state bilayer (Huang, 1977; Lagaly et al., 1977), because POPC with such a kinked sn-2 acyl chain, which is denoted here as the secondary structural element or motif, can pack efficiently against other neighboring phospholipids. In this communication, 16 different types of secondary structural elements or motifs are derived for POPC at T < Tm based on a single protocol guided by two-dimensional steric contour maps and computer-based molecular graphics. After subjecting these derived molecular species to energy minimization using the molecular mechanics method, the number of the secondary structural motifs is reduced to 13 as a result of conformational degeneracy. The structure and steric energy of each of the energy-minimized lipid rotomers are presented in this communication. Furthermore, these rotomers packed in small clusters are also simulated to mimic the lipid bilayer structure of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholines at T < Tm.  相似文献   

15.
Initial incorporation and subsequent remodeling of 16 phosphoglyceride molecular species containing arachidonate in the human neutrophil have been studied. Neutrophils were pulse-labeled with [3H]arachidonic acid (AA) for 5 min, then phospholipids were analyzed either at this time point or after a subsequent 120-min incubation. [3H]AA was found to be incorporated into phosphoglycerides phosphatidylinositol (PI) greater than phosphatidylcholine (PC) greater than phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) by 5 min. Incorporation of [3H]AA was not related to pool size, but reflected an increase in phosphoglyceride turnover. Following the 120-min incubation, only PE gained a significant amount of labeled arachidonate. Specific activity analysis revealed that PI contained the highest labeled/unlabeled ratio at both 5 min and 120 min. After the initial 5-min pulse, the majority of [3H]arachidonate was incorporated into 1-acyl-2-[3H]arachidonoyl-sn-glycero-3-PC, -PE, and -PI showing no preference for fatty acyl chains at the sn-1 position. However, [3H]AA was remodeled into 1-alkyl-acyl-and 1-alk-1-enyl-acyl-sn-glycero-3-PC and -PE molecular species in those neutrophils incubated for the additional 120 min. Specific activities of [3H]AA within all diacyl molecular species were initially higher relative to those alkyl-acyl and alk-1-enyl-acyl molecular species, but for PC and PE became more uniform as label shifted into ether and plasmalogen pools during the additional 120-min incubation. In contrast, the specific activity of 1-stearoyl-2-arachidonoyl-sn-glycero-3-PI remained constant throughout the 120-min incubation.  相似文献   

16.
This work set out to optimize the detection and separation of several phospholipid molecular species on a reversed-phase column with the use of an electrospray ionization/mass spectrometry-compatible counter-ion. An application of this technique concerned a qualitative and quantitative analysis of bacterial membrane phospholipids extracted from Corynebacterium species strain 8. The phospholipid classes of strain 8 were identified as phosphatidylglycerol, phosphatidylinositol, diphosphatidylglycerol, and a peculiar lipid compound, acyl phosphatidylglycerol. Most of the molecular species structures were elucidated, and regarding phosphatidylglycerol, the fatty acid positions were clearly determined with the calculation of the sn-2/sn-1 intensity ratio of the fatty acyl chain fragments.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Alveolar type II cells produce and secrete a complex mixture of lipids and proteins called pulmonary surfactant of which phospholipids are the major components. Surfactant proteins (SP) A, B, and C interact with phospholipids and are believed to play important roles in alveolar spaces. However, whether surfactant protein D (SP-D) interacts with phospholipids is unknown. In the present study, we examined whether SP-D binds to phospholipids and investigated phospholipid specificities of SP-D binding and the structural requirements of phospholipids for that binding using 125I-SP-D as a probe. 125I-SP-D bound exclusively to phosphatidylinositol (PI) in various phospholipids or a fraction containing phospholipids extracted from surfactant, which were developed on thin layer chromatography. 125I-SP-D also bound to PI coated on microtiter wells in a manner dependent upon the SP-D concentration. Unlabeled SP-D competed well with 125I-SP-D for PI binding and the antibody against SP-D abolished 125I-SP-D binding to PI. PI liposome also attenuated 125I-SP-D binding to the solid phase PI. Ca2+ is absolutely required for the binding of SP-D to PI. SP-D failed to bind to lyso-PI, fatty acids derived from PI digested with phospholipase A2, or diacylglycerol obtained after phospholipase C treatment of PI. SP-D bound to neither phosphatidylinositol 4-monophosphate nor phosphatidylinositol 4,5-diphosphate. We conclude that SP-D specifically binds to PI. This is the first report that demonstrates that SP-D interacts with surfactant phospholipids.  相似文献   

19.
We analyzed the molecular species composition of the glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor of Torpedo marmorata acetylcholinesterase (AChE) and compared it to that of the membrane phosphatidylinositol (PI) as well as the other major phospholipid classes of T. marmorata electrocytes. Purified amphiphilic AChE was treated with PI-specific phospholipase C in order to release the diradylglycerol moiety from the membrane anchoring domain. Subsequently, the diradylglycerols were derivatized into their diradylglycer-obenzoates and separated into subclasses (diacyl, alkylacyl, and alk-1-enylacyl types). The molecular species within each subclass were separated and quantitated by high performance liquid chromatography and UV detection and directly introduced through the thermospray interface into a mass spectrometer for identification. The PI moiety of the GPI anchor of AChE consisted exclusively of diacyl molecular species. Over 85% of the molecular species were composed of palmitoyl (16:0), stearoyl (18:0), and oleoyl (18:1) fatty acyl chains in the sn-1 and sn-2 positions. Less than 5% of the molecular species of the GPI anchor contained polyunsaturated fatty acyl chains, as compared to more than 70% of the diacyl molecular species of the PI from electrocyte membranes. Since the GPI anchors of AChE from both human and bovine erythrocytes contain alkylacyl molecular species of PI (Roberts, W. L., Myher, J. J., Kuksis, A., Low, M. G., and Rosenberry, T. L. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 18766-18775), our results on AChE from Torpedo demonstrate that the composition of the PI moiety of the GPI anchor of a protein is not characteristic for that protein but may vary between species.  相似文献   

20.
The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that lipid fluidity regulates lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) activity. Phosphatidylcholine (PC) species were synthesized that varied in fluidity by changing the number, type (cis vs. trans), or position of the double bonds in 18 or 20 carbon sn-2 fatty acyl chains and recombined with [(3)H]cholesterol and apolipoprotein A-I to form recombinant high density lipoprotein (rHDL) substrate particles. The activity of purified human plasma LCAT decreased with PC sn-2 fatty acyl chains containing trans versus cis double bonds and as double bonds were moved towards the methyl terminus of the sn-2 fatty acyl chain. The decrease in LCAT activity was significantly correlated with a decrease in rHDL fluidity (measured by diphenylhexatriene fluorescence polarization) for PC species containing 18 carbon (r(2) = 0.61, n = 18) and 20 carbon (r(2) = 0.93, n = 5) sn-2 fatty acyl chains. rHDL were also made containing 10% of the 18 carbon sn-2 fatty acyl chain PC species and 90% of an inert PC ether matrix (sn-1 18:1, sn-2 16:0 PC ether) to normalize rHDL fluidity. Even though fluidity was similar among the PC ether-containing rHDL, the order of PC reactivity with LCAT was significantly correlated (r(2) = 0.71) with that of 100% PC rHDL containing the same 18 carbon sn-2 fatty acyl chain species, suggesting that PC structure in the active site of LCAT determines reactivity in the absence of measurable differences in bilayer fluidity. We conclude that PC fluidity and structure are major regulators of LCAT activity when fatty acyl chain length is constant.  相似文献   

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