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1.
Liu F  Chong PL 《Biochemistry》1999,38(13):3867-3873
We have conducted a detailed study of the effect of membrane cholesterol content on the initial hydrolytic activity of Crotalus durissus terrificus venom phospholipase A2 (sPLA2) in large unilamellar vesicles of cholesterol/dimyristoyl-L-alpha-phosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and cholesterol/1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-L-alpha-phosphatidylcholine (POPC) at 37 degrees C. The activity was monitored by using the acrylodan-labeled intestinal fatty acid binding protein and HPLC. In contrast to conventional approaches, we have used small cholesterol concentration increments ( approximately 0.3-1.0 mol %) over a wide concentration range (e.g., 13-54 mol % cholesterol). In both membrane systems examined, the initial hydrolytic activity of sPLA2 is found to change with cholesterol content in an alternating manner. The activity reaches a local minimum when the membrane cholesterol content is at or near the critical cholesterol mole fractions (e.g., 14.3, 15.4, 20.0, 22.2, 25.0, 33.3, 40.0, and 50.0 mol % cholesterol) predicted for cholesterol regularly distributed in either hexagonal or centered rectangular superlattices. According to the sterol regular distribution model [Chong, P. L.-G. (1994) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 91, 10069-10073; Liu et al. (1997) Biophys. J. 72, 2243-2254], the extent of lipid superlattices is maximal at the critical cholesterol mole fractions, at which the membrane free volume is minimal. Thus, our present data can be taken to indicate that the initial hydrolytic activity of sPLA2 is governed by the extent of cholesterol superlattice. These data provide the first functional evidence for the formation of cholesterol superlattices in both saturated (e.g., DMPC) and unsaturated (e.g., POPC) liquid-crystalline phospholipid bilayers. The data also illustrate the functional importance of cholesterol superlattice and demonstrate a new type of regulation of sPLA2. Furthermore, upon binding to cholesterol/POPC large unilamellar vesicles, the intrinsic fluorescence intensity of sPLA2 shows an alternating variation with cholesterol content, exhibiting a minimum at the critical cholesterol mole fractions. This result suggests that either the number of sPLA2 bound to lipid vesicles or the conformation of membrane-bound sPLA2 or both vary with the extent of the cholesterol superlattice in the plane of the membrane.  相似文献   

2.
We have examined the effect of 1-palmitoyl-2-(10-pyrenyl)decanoyl-sn-glycerol-3-phosphatidylcholine (Pyr-PC) concentration on the ratio of excimer fluorescence to monomer fluorescence (E/M) in L-alpha-dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) multilamellar vesicles at 30 degrees C, with special attention focussed on the smoothness of the curve. We observed a series of dips, in addition to kinks, in the plot of E/M versus the mole fraction of Pyr-PC (XPyrPC). The observation of dips is a new finding, perhaps unique for Pyr-PC in DMPC since only kinks were observed for Pyr-PC in L-alpha-dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and in egg yolk phosphatidylcholine (egg-PC) (Somerharju et al., 1985. Biochemistry. 24: 2773-2781). The dips/kinks observed here are distributed according to a well defined pattern reflecting a lateral order in the membrane, and distributed symmetrically with respect to 50 mol% Pyr-PC. Some of the dips appear at specific concentrations (YPyrPC) according to the hexagonal super-lattice model proposed by Virtanen et al. (1988. J. Mol. Electr. 4: 233-236). However, the observations of dips at XPyrPC > 66.7 mol% and the kink at 33.3 mol% cannot be interpreted by the model of Virtanen et al. (1988). These surprising results can be understood by virtue of an extended hexagonal super-lattice model, in which we have proposed that if the pyrene-containing acyl chains are regularly distributed as a hexagonal super-lattice in the DMPC matrix at a specific concentration YPyrPC, then the acyl chains of DMPC can form a regularly distributed hexagonal super-lattice in the membrane at a critical concentration (1-YPyrPC).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
In a previous study, we observed a series of dips in the plot of E/M (the ratio of excimer to monomer fluorescence intensity) versus the mole fraction of 1-palmitoyl-2-(10-pyrenyl)decanoyl-sn-glycerol-3-phosphatidylcholine (Pyr-PC) in Pyr-PC/DMPC binary mixtures at 30 degrees C. In the present study, we have characterized the physical nature of E/M dips in Pyr-PC/DMPC binary mixtures by varying pressure, temperature, and vesicle diameter. The E/M dips at 66.7 and at 71.4 mol% PyrPC in DMPC multilamellar vesicles remain discernible at 30-43 degrees C. At higher temperatures (e.g., 53 degrees C), the depth of the dip abruptly becomes smaller. This result agrees with the idea that E/M dips appear as a result of regular distribution of pyrene-labeled acyl chains into hexagonal super-lattices at critical mole fractions. Regular distribution is a self-ordering phenomenon. Usually, in self-ordered systems, the number of structural defects increases with increasing temperature, and thermal fluctuations eventually result in an order-to-disorder transition. The effect of vesicle diameter on the E/M dip at 66.7 mol% Pyr-PC in DMPC has been studied at 37.5 degrees C by using unilamellar vesicles of varying sizes. The E/M dip is observable in large unilamellar vesicles; however, the depth of the E/M dip decreases when the vesicle diameter is reduced. When the vesicle diameter is reduced to about 64 nm, the dip becomes shallow and split. This result suggests that the curvature-induced increase in the separation of lipids in the outer monolayer decreases the tendency of regular distribution for pyrene-labeled acyl chains. Regular distribution is believed to arise from the long-range repulsive interaction between Pyr-PC molecules due to the elastic deformation of the lipid matrix around the bulky pyrene moiety. When the radius of curvature becomes small, outer monolayer lipids are more separated. Therefore, pyrene-containing acyl chains fit better into the membrane matrix, which alleviates the deformation of the lattice and diminishes the long-range repulsive interactions between pyrene-containing acyl chains. Furthermore, we have shown a striking difference in the pressure dependence of E/M at critical Pyr-PC mole fractions and at noncritical mole fractions. In the pressure range between 0.001 and 0.7 kbar at 30 degrees C, E/M decreases steadily with increasing pressure at noncritical mole fractions; in contrast, E/M changes little with pressure at critical mole fractions (e.g., 33.3 and 50.0 mol% Pyr-PC).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
Olsher M  Yoon SI  Chong PL 《Biochemistry》2005,44(6):2080-2087
We developed a new fluorescence assay for sterol oxidation and used it to study the relationship between free radical-induced sterol oxidation and membrane sterol lateral organization. This assay used dehydroergosterol (DHE) as both a membrane probe and a membrane component. Sterol oxidation was induced by a free radical generator, AAPH (2,2'-azobis(2-amidinopropane)dihydrochloride). Using this new assay, we found that, in unilamellar vesicles composed of DHE and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-l-alpha-phosphatidylcholine (POPC), the initial rate of DHE oxidation induced by AAPH changed with membrane sterol content in an alternating manner, exhibiting a local maximum at 20.3, 22.2, 25.0, 32.3, and 40.0 mol % DHE. These mole fractions correspond to the critical sterol mole fractions C(r) predicted for maximal sterol superlattice formation. In three-component bilayers composed of POPC, cholesterol, and DHE (fixed at 1 and 5 mol %), the initial rate of AAPH-induced DHE oxidation exhibited a biphasic change whenever the total sterol mole fraction, irrespective of the DHE content, was near C(r), indicating that the correlation between sterol oxidation and sterol superlattice formation revealed in this study is not an artifact due to the use of the fluorescent cholesterol analogue DHE. The alternating variation of AAPH-induced sterol oxidation with sterol content also appeared in multicomponent unilamellar vesicles containing bovine brain sphingomyelins (bbSPM), POPC, and DHE. The present work and our previous study on cholesterol oxidase-induced sterol oxidation [Wang et al. (2004) Biochemistry 43, 2159-2166] suggest that sterol oxidation in general, either by reactive oxygen species or by enzymes, may be regulated by the extent of sterol superlattice in the membrane and thus regulated by the membrane sterol content in a fine-tuning manner.  相似文献   

5.
Uptake of external sterols in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is a multistep process limited to anaerobiosis or heme deficiency. It includes crossing the cell wall, insertion of sterol molecules into plasma membrane and their internalization and integration into intracellular membranes. We applied the fluorescent ergosterol analog dehydroergosterol (DHE) to monitor the initial steps of sterol uptake by three independent approaches: fluorescence spectroscopy, fluorescence microscopy and sterol quantification by HPLC. Using specific fluorescence characteristics of DHE we showed that the entry of sterol molecules into plasma membrane is not spontaneous but requires assistance of two ABC (ATP-binding cassette) pumps – Aus1p or Pdr11p. DHE taken up by uptake-competent hem1ΔAUS1PDR11 cells could be directly visualized by UV-sensitive wide field fluorescence microscopy. HPLC analysis of sterols revealed significant amounts of exogenous ergosterol and DHE (but not cholesterol) associated with uptake-deficient hem1Δaus1Δpdr11Δ cells. Fluorescent sterol associated with these cells did not show the characteristic emission spectrum of membrane-integrated DHE. The amount of cell-associated DHE was significantly reduced after enzymatic removal of the cell wall. Our results demonstrate that the yeast cell wall is actively involved in binding and uptake of ergosterol-like sterols.  相似文献   

6.
Filipin, a macrolide polyene antibiotic, is known to interact selectively with ergosterol, a constituent of fungi membranes. In this work, the fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) between a fluorescent analog of ergosterol, dehydroergosterol (DHE), and filipin was measured in small unilamellar vesicles of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine at 25°C. The time-resolved FRET results were rationalized in the framework of the mean concentration model, and were complemented with steady-state fluorescence intensity, anisotropy and absorption measurements. The results point to the formation of both DHE–filipin aggregates (evidence from static quenching of DHE fluorescence by filipin) and filipin–filipin aggregates (evidence from: (i) the FRET acceptor concentration distributions; (ii) spectral changes of filipin absorption in the vesicles, the excitonic interaction suggesting a stack arrangement; (iii) filipin fluorescence self-quenching), even in presence of DHE and low antibiotic mole fractions (<1 mol%). These results point out that apparently contradictory biochemical models for the action of filipin (some based on the presence of sterols, others not) can be equally valid. Moreover, since results (ii) and (iii) are also observed when a sterol is present, both models of action can actually coexist in membranes with a low sterol content.  相似文献   

7.
Cholesterol/dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) multilamellar vesicles were studied by steady-state fluorescence using diphenylhexatriene (DPH) as a probe. A series of dips were found in the plot of DPH fluorescence intensity versus cholesterol concentration at certain specific cholesterol concentrations. This observation indicates that there are dominant domains in which cholesterol molecules are regularly distributed on a hexagonal superlattice in the acyl chain matrix of DMPC at critical cholesterol concentrations. These concentrations can be predicted by an equation or a mathematical series, except the one at 33 mol %. These dips of DPH fluorescence intensity are temperature dependent. The excellent agreement between experimental data and calculated values as well as similar previous findings of dips and/or kinks in the excimer-over-monomer fluorescence in pyrenephosphatidylcholine/phospholipid mixtures confirm our conclusion about lateral organizations of cholesterol and acyl lipid chains in cholesterol/phospholipid multilamellar vesicles. The regular distribution model at critical concentration is consistent with the phase diagram of cholesterol/DMPC. Using the model of regular distribution, the physical origin of the liquid-disordered (Ld) phase, liquid-ordered phase (Lo), and coexistence of liquid-disordered phase and Lo phase (Lo + Ld) is discussed on the molecular level.  相似文献   

8.
Wang MM  Olsher M  Sugár IP  Chong PL 《Biochemistry》2004,43(8):2159-2166
Here, the interplay between membrane cholesterol lateral organization and the activity of membrane surface-acting enzymes was addressed using soil bacteria cholesterol oxidase (COD) as a model. Specifically, the effect of the membrane cholesterol mole fraction on the initial rate of cholesterol oxidation catalyzed by COD was investigated at 37 degrees C using cholesterol/1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-l-alpha-phosphatidylcholine (POPC) large unilamellar vesicles (LUVs, approximately 800 nm in diameter). In the three concentration ranges examined (18.8-21.2, 23.6-26.3, and 32.2-34.5 mol % cholesterol), the initial activity of COD changed with cholesterol mole fraction in a biphasic manner, exhibiting a local maximum at 19.7, 25.0, and 33.4 mol %. Within the experimental errors, these mole fractions agree with the critical cholesterol mole fractions (C(r)) (20.0, 25.0, and 33.3) theoretically predicted for maximal superlattice formation. The activity variation with cholesterol content was correlated well with the area of regular distribution (A(reg)) in the plane of the membrane as determined by nystatin fluorescence. A similar biphasic change in COD activity was detected at the critical sterol mole fraction 20 mol % in dehydroergosterol (DHE)/POPC LUVs (approximately 168 nm in diameter). These results indicate that the activity of COD is regulated by the extent of sterol superlattice for both sterols (DHE and cholesterol) and for a wide range of vesicle sizes (approximately 168-800 nm). The present work on COD and the previous study on phospholipase A(2) (sPLA(2)) [Liu and Chong (1999) Biochemistry 38, 3867-3873] suggest that the activities of some surface-acting enzymes may be regulated by the extent of sterol superlattice in the membrane in a substrate-dependent manner. When the substrate is a sterol, as it is with COD, the enzyme activity reaches a local maximum at C(r). When phospholipid is the substrate, the minimum activity is at C(r), as is the case with sPLA(2). Both phenomena are in accordance with the sterol superlattice model and manifest the functional importance of membrane cholesterol content.  相似文献   

9.
Filipin, a macrolide polyene antibiotic, is known to interact selectively with ergosterol, a constituent of fungi membranes. In this work, the fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) between a fluorescent analog of ergosterol, dehydroergosterol (DHE), and filipin was measured in small unilamellar vesicles of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine at 25 degrees C. The time-resolved FRET results were rationalized in the framework of the mean concentration model, and were complemented with steady-state fluorescence intensity, anisotropy and absorption measurements. The results point to the formation of both DHE--filipin aggregates (evidence from static quenching of DHE fluorescence by filipin) and filipin--filipin aggregates (evidence from: (i) the FRET acceptor concentration distributions; (ii) spectral changes of filipin absorption in the vesicles, the excitonic interaction suggesting a stack arrangement; (iii) filipin fluorescence self-quenching), even in presence of DHE and low antibiotic mole fractions (<1 mol%). These results point out that apparently contradictory biochemical models for the action of filipin (some based on the presence of sterols, others not) can be equally valid. Moreover, since results (ii) and (iii) are also observed when a sterol is present, both models of action can actually coexist in membranes with a low sterol content.  相似文献   

10.
Our previous fluorescence study has provided indirect evidence that lipid headgroup components tend to adopt regular, superlattice-like lateral distribution in fluid phosphatidylethanolamine/phosphatidylcholine (PE/PC) bilayers (, Biophys. J. 73:1967-1976). Here we have further studied this intriguing phenomenon by making use of the fluorescence properties of a sterol probe, dehydroergosterol (DHE). Fluorescence emission spectra, fluorescence anisotropy (r), and time-resolved fluorescence intensity decays of DHE in 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-PC (POPC)/1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-PE (POPE) mixtures were measured as a function of POPE mole fraction (X(PE)) at 23 degrees C. Deviations, including dips or kinks, in the ratio of fluorescence peak intensity at 375 nm/fluorescence peak intensity at 390 nm (I(375)/I(390)), fluorescence decay lifetime (tau), or rotational correlation time (rho) of DHE versus PE composition plots were found at X(PE) approximately 0.10, 0.25, 0.33, 0.65, 0.75, and 0.88. The critical values at X(PE) approximately 0.33 and 0.65 were consistently observed for all measured parameters. In addition, the locations, but not the depth, of the dips for X(PE) < 0.50 did not vary significantly over 10 days of annealing at 23 degrees C. The observed critical values of X(PE) coincide (within +/-0.03) with some of the critical mole fractions predicted by a headgroup superlattice model proposing that the PE and PC headgroups tend to be regularly distributed in the plane of the bilayer. These results agree favorably with those obtained in our previous fluorescence study using dipyrenylPC and Laurdan probes and thus support the proposition that 1) regular arrangement within a domain exists in fluid PE/PC bilayers, and 2) superlattice formation may play a significant role in controlling the lipid composition of cellular membranes (, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 95:4964-4969). The present data provide new information on the physical properties of such superlattice domains, i.e., the dielectric environment and rotational motion of membrane sterols appear to change abruptly as the lipid headgroups exhibit regular superlattice-like distributions in fluid bilayers.  相似文献   

11.
Transbilayer lipid asymmetry is a fundamental characteristic of the eukaryotic cell plasma membrane (PM). While PM phospholipid asymmetry is well documented, the transbilayer distribution of PM sterols such as mammalian cholesterol and yeast ergosterol is not reliably known. We now report that sterols are asymmetrically distributed across the yeast PM, with the majority (~80%) located in the cytoplasmic leaflet. By exploiting the sterol‐auxotrophic hem1Δ yeast strain we obtained cells in which endogenous ergosterol was quantitatively replaced with dehydroergosterol (DHE), a closely related fluorescent sterol that functionally and accurately substitutes for ergosterol in vivo. Using fluorescence spectrophotometry and microscopy we found that <20% of DHE fluorescence was quenched when the DHE‐containing cells were exposed to membrane‐impermeant collisional quenchers (spin‐labeled phosphatidylcholine and trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid). Efficient quenching was seen only after the cells were disrupted by glass‐bead lysis or repeated freeze‐thaw to allow quenchers access to the cell interior. The extent of quenching was unaffected by treatments that deplete cellular ATP levels, collapse the PM electrochemical gradient or affect the actin cytoskeleton. However, alterations in PM phospholipid asymmetry in cells lacking phospholipid flippases resulted in a more symmetric transbilayer distribution of sterol. Similarly, an increase in the quenchable pool of DHE was observed when PM sphingolipid levels were reduced by treating cells with myriocin. We deduce that sterols comprise up to ~45% of all inner leaflet lipids in the PM, a result that necessitates revision of current models of the architecture of the PM lipid bilayer.   相似文献   

12.
Giant vesicles formed of 1,2-dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and sterols (cholesterol or ergosterol) in water and water/ethanol solutions have been used to examine the effect of sterol composition and ethanol concentration on the area compressibility modulus (K(a)), overall mechanical behavior, vesicle morphology, and induction of lipid alkyl chain interdigitation. Our results from micropipette aspiration suggest that cholesterol and ergosterol impact the order and microstructure of the gel (L(beta)') phase DPPC membrane. At low concentration (10-15 mol%) these sterols disrupt the long-range lateral order and fluidize the membrane (K(a) approximately 300 mN/m). Then at 18 mol%, these sterols participate in the formation of a continuous cohesive liquid-ordered (L(o)) phase with a sterol-dependent membrane density (K(a) approximately 750 for DPPC/ergosterol and K(a) approximately 1100 mN/m for DPPC/cholesterol). Finally at approximately 40 mol% both cholesterol and ergosterol impart similar condensation to the membrane (K(a) approximately 1200 mN/m). Introduction of ethanol (5-25 vol%) results in drops in the magnitude of K(a), which can be substantial, and sometimes individual vesicles with lowered K(a) reveal two slopes of tension versus apparent area strain. We postulate that this behavior represents disruption of lipid-sterol intermolecular interactions and therefore the membrane becomes interdigitation prone. We find that for DPPC vesicles with sterol concentrations of 20-25 mol%, significantly more ethanol is required to induce interdigitation compared to pure DPPC vesicles; approximately 7 vol% more for ergosterol and approximately 10 vol% more for cholesterol. For lower sterol concentrations (10-15 mol%), interdigitation is offset, but by <5 vol%. These data support the idea that ergosterol and cholesterol do enhance survivability for cells exposed to high concentrations of ethanol and provide evidence that the appearance of the interdigitated (L(beta)I) phase bilayer is a major factor in the disruption of cellular activity, which typically occurs between approximately 12 and approximately 16 vol% ethanol in yeast fermentations. We summarize our findings by producing, for the first time, "elasticity/phase diagrams" over a wide range of sterol (cholesterol and ergosterol) and ethanol concentrations.  相似文献   

13.
This article reviews the use of fluorescent lipids and free probes in the studies of lipid regular distribution in model membranes. The first part of this article summarizes the evidence and physical properties for lipid regular distribution in pyrene-labeled phosphatidylcholine (PC)/unlabeled PC binary mixtures as revealed by the fluorescence of pyrene-labeled PC. The original and the extended hexagonal superlattice model are discussed. The second part focuses on the fluorescence studies of sterol regular distributions in membranes. The experimental evidence for sterol superlattice formation obtained from the fluorescent sterol (i.e. dehydroergosterol) and non-sterol fluorescent probes (e.g. DPH and Laurdan) are evaluated. Prospects and concerns are given with regard to the sterol regular distribution. The third part deals briefly with the evidence for polar headgroup superlattices. The emphasis of this article is placed on the new concept that membrane properties and activities, including the activities of surface acting enzymes, drug partitioning, and membrane free volume, are fine-tuned by minute changes in the concentration of bulky lipids (e.g. sterols and pyrene-containing acyl chains) in the vicinities of the critical mole fractions for superlattice formation.  相似文献   

14.
Small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) measurements are performed on pure dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine (DMPC) unilamellar vesicles (ULV) and those containing either 20 or 47 mol% cholesterol, ergosterol or lanosterol. From the SANS data, we were able to determine the influence of these sterols on ULV bilayer thickness and vesicle area expansion coefficients. While these parameters have been determined previously for membranes containing cholesterol, to the best of our knowledge, this is the first time such results have been presented for membranes containing the structurally related sterols, ergosterol and lanosterol. At both molar concentrations and at temperatures ranging from 10 to 45 degrees C, the addition of the different sterols leads to increases in bilayer thickness, relative to pure DMPC. We observe large differences in the influence of these sterols on the membrane thermal area expansion coefficient. All three sterols, however, produce very similar changes to membrane thickness.  相似文献   

15.
The well-known reduction in the permeability properties of liposomes of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) by sterols has also been demonstrated for its sulfonium analog (DMPSC) in which the N+(CH3)3 group of choline is replaced by S+(CH3)2. We have now compared the effects of 25 mol% 24-methylenecholesterol and cholesterol on the initial rates of urea permeation into dipalmitoyl-PC (DPPC) and dipalmitoyl-PSC (DPPSC) liposomes above the gel-to-liquid-crystalline phase transition temperature and found a greater reduction with 24-methylenecholesterol/DPPSC than with cholesterol/DPPSC liposomes but little difference between the two sterols in DPPC liposomes. Fluorescence polarization studies, using diphenylhexatriene as a probe, show that polarization (P) values are considerably higher in DMPSC liposomes containing 20 and 30 mol% 24-methylenecholesterol than in DMPC liposomes containing 20 and 30 mol% cholesterol. Higher P values were also obtained in DMPSC liposomes containing other 24-alkyl-substituted sterols (beta-sitosterol, ergosterol and campesterol) than in DMPC liposomes containing the same sterols. Reduced permeability rates in PSC liposomes containing 24-alkyl-substituted sterols are correlated with higher polarization values, reflecting an increased degree of order and/or motion in these liposomes compared with liposomes from the corresponding PC. These results suggest that alkyl substitution at C-24 of the sterol molecule results in tighter interactions with the sulfonium analog of PC than with PC.  相似文献   

16.
Sterol transport between the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and plasma membrane (PM) occurs by an ATP-dependent, non-vesicular mechanism that is presumed to require sterol transport proteins (STPs). In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, homologs of the mammalian oxysterol-binding protein (Osh1-7) have been proposed to function as STPs. To evaluate this proposal we took two approaches. First we used dehydroergosterol (DHE) to visualize sterol movement in living cells by fluorescence microscopy. DHE was introduced into the PM under hypoxic conditions and observed to redistribute to lipid droplets on growing the cells aerobically. Redistribution required ATP and the sterol acyltransferase Are2, but did not require PM-derived transport vesicles. DHE redistribution occurred robustly in a conditional yeast mutant (oshΔ osh4-1(ts)) that lacks all functional Osh proteins at 37°C. In a second approach we used a pulse-chase protocol to analyze the movement of metabolically radiolabeled ergosterol from the ER to the PM. Arrival of radiolabeled ergosterol at the PM was assessed in isolated PM-enriched fractions as well as by extracting sterols from intact cells with methyl-β-cyclodextrin. These experiments revealed that whereas ergosterol is transported effectively from the ER to the PM in Osh-deficient cells, the rate at which it moves within the PM to equilibrate with the methyl-β-cyclodextrin extractable sterol pool is slowed. We conclude (i) that the role of Osh proteins in non-vesicular sterol transport between the PM, ER and lipid droplets is either minimal, or subsumed by other mechanisms and (ii) that Osh proteins regulate the organization of sterols at the PM.  相似文献   

17.
The behavior of dehydroergosterol in -α-dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) unsonicated multilamellar liposomes was characterized by absorption spectroscopy and fluorescence measurements. Dehydroergosterol exhibited a lowered absorption coefficient in multilamellar liposomes whiel the steady-state fluorescence anisotropy of dehydroergosterol in these membranes decreased significantly with increasing dehydroergosterol concentration, suggesting membrane sterol-sterol interactions. The comparative steady-state anisotropy of 0.9 mole percent dehydroergosterol in multilamellar liposomes was lower than in small unilamellar vesicles suggesting different sterol environments for dehydroergosterol. Dehydroergosterol fluorescence lifetime was relatively independent of membrane sterol content and yielded similar values in sonicated and unsonicated model membranes. In multilamellar liposomes containing 5 mole percent cholesterol, the gel-to-liqui crystalline phase transition of DMPC detected by 0.9 mole percent dehydroergosterol was significantly broadened when compared to the phase transition detected by dehydroergosterol in the absence of membrane cholesterol (Smutzer, G. et al. (1986) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 862, 361–371). In multilamellar liposomes containing 10 mole percent cholesterol, the major fluorescence lifetime of dehydroergosterol did not detect the gel-to-liquid crystalline phase transition of DMPC. Time-correlated fluorescence anisotropy decays of dehydroergosterol in DMPC multilamellar liposomes in the absence and presence of 5 mole percent cholesterol exhibited a single rotational correlation time near one nanosecond that was relatively independent of temperature and low concentrations of membrane cholesterol. The limiting anisotropy of 0.9 mole percent dehydroergosterol decreased above the gel-to-liquid crystalline phase transition in membranes without cholesterol and was not significantly affected by the phase transition in membranes containing 5 mole percent cholesterol. These results suggested hindered rotational diffusion of dehydroergosterol in multilamellar liposomes. Lifetime and time-correlated fluorescence measurements of 0.9 mole percent dehydroergosterol in multilamellar liposomes further suggested this fluorophore was detecting physical properties of the bulk membrane phospholipids in membranes devoid of cholesterol and was detecting sterol-rich regions in membranes of low sterol concentration.  相似文献   

18.
Cholesterol is an important constituent of cellular membranes playing a fundamental role in many biological processes. This sterol affects membrane permeability, lateral lipid organization, signal transduction and membrane trafficking. Intracellular sterol transport modes and pathways as well as the regulation of sterol metabolism and disposition in various tissues are areas of intense research. Progress is intimately linked to development and use of appropriate analogs, which closely mimic the properties of cholesterol while allowing to be detected by spectroscopic or microscopic methods. This review provides an overview of various fluorescent sterols used in membrane biophysics and cell biology including analogs of cholesterol and cholesteryl esters. Attention is paid to the natural fluorescent sterol dehydroergosterol (DHE). A survey of the many applications of DHE in biological research is presented. Special emphasis is on recent developments in fluorescence microscopy instrumentation to visualize DHE as an intrinsically fluorescent analog of cholesterol in living cells.  相似文献   

19.
The interaction of an amphiphilic, 40-amino acid β-amyloid (Aβ) peptide with liposomal membranes as a function of sterol mole fraction (Xsterol) was studied based on the fluorescence anisotropy of a site-specific membrane sterol probe, dehydroergosterol (DHE), and fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) from the native Tyr-10 residue of Aβ to DHE. Without Aβ, peaks or kinks in the DHE anisotropy versus Xsterol plot were detected at Xsterol ≈ 0.25, 0.33, and 0.53. Monomeric Aβ preserved these peaks/kinks, but oligomeric Aβ suppressed them and created a new DHE anisotropy peak at Xsterol ≈ 0.38. The above critical Xsterol values coincide favorably with the superlattice compositions predicted by the cholesterol superlattice model, suggesting that membrane cholesterol tends to adopt a regular lateral arrangement, or domain formation, in the lipid bilayers. For FRET, a peak was also detected at Xsterol ≈ 0.38 for both monomeric and oligomeric Aβ, implying increased penetration of Aβ into the lipid bilayer at this sterol mole fraction. We conclude that the interaction of Aβ with membranes is affected by the lateral organization of cholesterol, and hypothesize that the formation of an oligomeric Aβ/cholesterol domain complex may be linked to the toxicity of Aβ in neuronal membranes.  相似文献   

20.
Binary mixtures of cholesterol, ergosterol, and lanosterol with phosphatidylcholines differing in the length of the saturated acyl chains, viz 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC) and 1-palmitoyl-2-myristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DMPC), were analyzed using a Langmuir balance for recording force-area (pi-A) and surface potential-area (psi-A) isotherms. A progressive disappearance of the liquid expanded-liquid condensed transition was observed in mixed monolayers with DPPC after the increase in the content of all three sterols. For fluid DMPC matrix, no modulation of the monolayer phase behavior due to the sterols was evident with the exception of lanosterol, for which a pronounced discontinuity between mole fractions of X = 0.3 and X = 0.75 was discernible in the compression isotherms. Condensing and expanding effects in force-area (pi-A) isotherms due to varying X(sterols) and differences in the monolayer physical state were assessed from the values for the interfacial compression moduli. Surface potential measurements support the notion that cholesterol and ergosterol, but not lanosterol, reduce the penetration of water into the lipid monolayers. Examination of the excess free energy of mixing revealed an enhanced stability of binary monolayers containing cholesterol compared to those with ergosterol or lanosterol; the differences are emphasized in the range of surface pressure values found in natural membranes.  相似文献   

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