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1.
A phospholipid transfer protein from yeast (Daum, G. and Paltauf, F. (1984) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 794, 385-391) was 2800-fold enriched by an improved procedure. The specificity of this transfer protein and the influence of membrane properties of acceptor vesicles (lipid composition, charge, fluidity) on the transfer activity were determined in vitro using pyrene-labeled phospholipids. The yeast transfer protein forms a complex with phosphatidylinositol or phosphatidylcholine, respectively, and transfers these two phospholipids between biological and/or artificial membranes. The transfer rate for phosphatidylinositol is 19-fold higher than for phosphatidylcholine as determined with 1:8 mixtures of phosphatidylinositol and phosphatidylcholine in donor and acceptor membrane vesicles. If acceptor membranes consist only of non-transferable phospholipids, e.g., phosphatidylethanolamine, a moderate but significant net transfer of phosphatidylcholine occurs. Phosphatidylcholine transfer is inhibited to a variable extent by negatively charged phospholipids and by fatty acids. Differences in the accessibility of the charged groups of lipids to the transfer protein might account for the different inhibitory effects, which occur in the order phosphatidylserine which is greater than phosphatidylglycerol which is greater than phosphatidylinositol which is greater than cardiolipin which is greater than phosphatidic acid which is greater than fatty acids. Although mitochondrial membranes contain high amounts of negatively charged phospholipids, they serve effectively as acceptor membranes, whereas transfer to vesicles prepared from total mitochondrial lipids is essentially zero. Ergosterol reduces the transfer rate, probably by decreasing membrane fluidity. This notion is supported by data obtained with dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine as acceptor vesicle component; in this case the transfer rate is significantly reduced below the phase transition temperature of the phospholipid.  相似文献   

2.
The rates of [14C]cholesterol transfer from small unilamellar vesicles containing cholesterol dissolved in bilayers of different phospholipids have been determined to examine the influence of phospholipid-cholesterol interactions on the rate of cholesterol desorption from the lipid-water interface. The phospholipids included unsaturated phosphatidylcholines (PC's) (egg PC, dioleoyl-PC, and soybean PC), saturated PC (dimyristoyl-PC and dipalmitoyl-PC), and sphingomyelins (SM's) (egg SM, bovine brain SM, and N-palmitoyl-SM). At 37 degrees C, for vesicles containing 10 mol% cholesterol, the half-times for exchange are about 1, 13, and 80 h, respectively, for unsaturated PC, saturated PC, and SM. In order to probe how differences in molecular packing in the bilayers cause the rate constants for cholesterol desorption to be in the order unsaturated PC greater than saturated PC greater than SM, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and monolayer methods were used to evaluate the cholesterol physical state and interactions with phospholipid. The NMR relaxation parameters for [4-13C]cholesterol reveal no differences in molecular dynamics in the above bilayers. Surface pressure (pi)-molecular area isotherms for mixed monolayers of cholesterol and the above phospholipids reveal that SM lateral packing density is greater than that of the PC with the same acyl chain saturation and length (e.g., at pi = 5 mN/m, where both monolayers are in the same physical state, dipalmitoyl-PC and palmitoyl-SM occupy 87 and 81 A2/molecule, respectively).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
In order to study the individual steps involved in the import of phosphatidylcholine (PC) into rat liver mitochondria, a number of PC analogues were introduced into the outer membrane of isolated mitochondria. Two fluorescent PC species, i.e. 1-palmitoyl-2-(16-bimanylthio)hexadecanoyl-PC (bimane-PC) and 1-palmitoyl-2-(10-pyrene)decanoyl-PC (pyrene-PC), and one radiolabeled PC species, i.e. 1-palmitoyl-2-[1-14C]oleoyl-PC (14C-POPC), were studied. The PC analogues were introduced from small unilamellar vesicles with the use of PC-specific transfer protein. The amount of PC imported was quantified by reisolation of the mitochondria. Import of the fluorescent PC species was monitored by on-line fluorescence spectroscopy. The distribution of the newly inserted PC between the outer and the inner membrane was assessed by separation of the two membranes using digitonin treatment. All analogues tested remained exclusively localized in the outer membrane thereby suggesting that additional (extramitochondrial) factors are required to initiate transfer of PC to the inner membrane.  相似文献   

4.
We have investigated the transfer of [14C]cholesterol from labeled bovine heart mitochondria and Friend erythroleukemic cells to high density lipoprotein (HDL), low density lipoprotein (LDL), and very low density lipoprotein (VLDL) fractions from human and rat plasma. The lipoprotein fractions were obtained by molecular sieve chromatography of plasma on agarose A-5m columns. For either membrane system, the highest rate of [14C]cholesterol transfer was observed with the human and the rat HDL fraction. Since the mitochondria lack the receptors for HDL, one may conclude that the observed preferential transfer is not governed by a receptor-controlled interaction of HDL with the membrane. Under conditions where the pool of free cholesterol in the lipoprotein fractions was the same, HDL was a much more efficient acceptor of [14C]cholesterol from mitochondria than LDL or VLDL. Similarly, transfer of [14C]cholesterol proceeded at a higher rate to HDL than to sonicated egg phosphatidylcholine (PC) vesicles, even under conditions where there was a tenfold excess of the vesicle-PC pool over the HDL phospholipid pool. This preferred transfer of [14C]cholesterol to HDL cannot be explained by a random diffusion of monomer cholesterol molecules. Rather, it shows that HDL has a specific effect on this process in the sense that it most likely enhances the efflux of cholesterol from the membrane. Treatment of HDL with trypsin reduced the rate of [14C]cholesterol transfer by 40-50%, indicating that protein component(s) are involved. One of these components appears to be apoA-I, as this protein was shown to enhance the transfer of [14C]cholesterol from mitochondria to lipid vesicles.  相似文献   

5.
Mono- and dipalmitoylphosphatidylethanolamine derivatives have been synthesized and used to evaluate the role of cross-links between the amino groups of two phospholipid molecules in the rate of cholesterol movement between membranes. Incorporation of the cross-linked phospholipids into small unilamellar vesicles (the donor species) decreased the rate of spontaneous cholesterol exchange with acceptor membranes (small unilamellar vesicles or Mycoplasma gallisepticum cells). These results suggest that the cross-linking of aminophospholipids by reactive intermediates, which may be one of the degenerative transformations associated with peroxidation of unsaturated lipids and cellular aging, can inhibit cholesterol exchangeability in biological membranes. The rates of spontaneous [14C]cholesterol and protein-mediated 14C-labeled phospholipid exchange from diamide-treated mycoplasma and erythrocyte membranes have also been measured. The formation of extensive disulfide bonds in the membrane proteins of M. gallisepticum enhanced the 14C-labeled phospholipid exchange rate but did not affect the rate of [14C]cholesterol exchange. The rates of radiolabeled cholesterol and phospholipid exchange between erythrocyte ghosts and vesicles were both enhanced (but to different extents) when ghosts were treated with diamide. These observations suggest that diamide-induced oxidative cross-linking of sulfhydryl groups in membrane proteins does not lead to random defects in the lipid domain.  相似文献   

6.
The rates of exchange of [4-14C]cholesterol between lipid vesicles prepared with different phospholipids and with different sizes have been measured. The first-order rate constants were higher using vesicles prepared from phosphatidylcholines with highly branched or polyunsaturated fatty acyl chains than with saturated diacyl or di-O-alkyl chains. The rate measurements indicate that the affinity of cholesterol for phospholipid does not vary significantly on change of the type of linkage (ether or ester) in phosphatidylcholine (PC) or of the positions of the fatty acyl chains in 1,2-diacyl-PC bearing one saturated and one unsaturated chain; furthermore, egg phosphatidylglycerol and egg phosphatidylethanolamine appear to have comparable affinities for cholesterol. However, the molecular packing in the bilayer and nearest-neighbor interactions involving cholesterol appear tightened more by N-palmitoylsphingomyelin than by dipalmitoyl-PC; on incorporation of 44 mol % of these phospholipids (which have the same fatty acyl chain composition) into either small or large unilamellar vesicles prepared with egg phosphatidylglycerol, the exchange rates were strikingly slower when the donor species contained sphingomyelin compared with PC. The rate of cholesterol exchange was 100% faster with small unilamellar vesicles than with large unilamellar vesicles as donors, suggesting that the looser packing in the highly curved small vesicles facilitates cholesterol desorption. The cholesterol exchange rate did not vary with the size of the acceptor vesicles, which indicates that desorption is the rate-limiting step in the exchange process in the presence of excess acceptors.  相似文献   

7.
Protein-mediated transfer of phosphatidylcholine (PC) by bovine liver phosphatidylcholine transfer protein (PC-TP) was examined using a vesicle-vesicle assay system. Donor and acceptor membranes were prepared from Escherichia coli phospholipids and limiting amounts of egg yolk PC. PC transfer between vesicles of E. coli lipid/egg PC was markedly higher than transfer of PC from vesicles of E. coli lipid/egg PC to vesicles of E. coli lipid. Kinetic parameters of the interaction between PC-TP and E. coli lipid vesicles with or without PC was investigated. The apparent dissociation constants of the complex formed between PC-TP and these vesicles were determined kinetically and from double-reciprocal plots of intrinsic PC-TP fluorescence intensity increase versus vesicle concentration. The magnitude of the dissociation constant decreased as the PC content of the vesicles increased from 0 to 5 mol%. In addition, kinetic analysis revealed that the presence of PC in acceptor vesicles increased both the association and dissociation of PC-TP from vesicles. The effect of membrane PC molecules on transfer rates was examined using bis-phosphatidylcholine, a dimeric PC molecule which is not transferred by PC-TP. Rates of PC transfer to acceptor vesicles comprised of E. coli lipid/bis-PC were virtually identical to rates observed with acceptors vesicles prepared from E. coli lipid. The results suggest that transfer of PC by PC-TP is enhanced only when insertion of protein-bound PC occurs concurrently with the extraction of a molecule of membrane PC, i.e., a concerted, one-step catalytic mechanism for phospholipid exchange.  相似文献   

8.
Brush border membrane vesicles prepared from rabbit small intestine are essentially free of basolateral membranes and nuclear, mitochondrial, microsomal and cytosolic contaminants. The resulting brush border membrane is unstable due to intrinsic lipases and proteinases. The PC transfer between small unilamellar lipid vesicles or mixed lipid micelles as the donor and the brush border membrane vesicles as the acceptor is protein-mediated. After proteolytic treatment of brush border membrane with papain or proteinase K the PC transfer activity is lost and the kinetics of PC uptake are similar to those measured with erythrocytes under comparable conditions. Evidence is presented to show that the PC transfer activity resides in the apical membrane of the enterocyte and not in the basolateral part of the plasma membrane. Furthermore, the activity is localized on the external surface of the brush border membrane exposed to the aqueous medium with its active centre probably not in direct contact with the lipid bilayer of the membrane. Proteins released from brush border membrane by proteolytic treatment catalyze PC exchange between different populations of small unilamellar vesicles. Furthermore, these protein(s) bind(s) PC forming a PC-protein complex.  相似文献   

9.
A phosphatidylcholine (PC) exchange protein from bovine liver was used to exchange endogenous synaptosomal membrane PC's with PC's of defined fatty-acid composition from phospholipid vesicles. Up to 50% of the total synaptosomal PC could be exchanged during a 3 h incubation with PC's which were in the liquid-crystalline state at the temperature of incubation (dimyristoyl-, dioleoyl- and dielaidoyl-PC). The biphasic kinetics of the exchange of 14C-labeled 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-PC into isolated synaptic plasma membrane vesicles indicated that the half-time for transbilayer equilibrium of PC in these membranes was about 10 h. Hence, the observed 50% exchange of total synaptosomal PC probably represented nearly complete exchange of PC in the outer face of the synaptosomal plasma membrane. This extensive exchange was accomplished without apparent loss of synaptosomal function, including membrane potential and high-affinity uptake of choline and gamma-aminobutyric acid. PC's in the gel state (dipalmitoyl- and distearoyl-PC) could not be exchanged extensively into the synaptosomal membranes. However, from within gel-state distearoyl-PC liposomes, a trace amount of fluid 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-PC (Tm less than 10 degrees C) could be preferentially exchanged into the synaptosomes at 32 degrees C with little transfer of the saturated PC.  相似文献   

10.
The ability of human plasma phospholipid transfer protein to transfer L-alpha-[14C]dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) from donor vesicles to acceptor high-density lipoproteins (HDL) was examined, using vesicles of different compositions and sizes, and native or chemically modified HDL. Phosphatidylcholine (PC) transfer was inhibited by both cholesterol and sphingomyelin incorporation into egg-PC vesicles. On a molar basis, cholesterol inhibited transfer about 5-fold more than sphingomyelin; however, the effects of both lipids on the fluidity of the vesicle membrane (measured by fluorescence polarization of diphenylhexatriene), were closely correlated with their effects on PC transfer activity. Increase in vesicle size, and decrease in bilayer curvature, also reduced transfer: the largest vesicles had no transfer activity at all. Addition of phosphatidic acid up to 17 mol% had no effect on PC transfer. HDL apolipoprotein lysyl residues were chemically modified by reductive methylation, citraconylation, or acetoacetylation. The effects of modification on the apolipoprotein structure and on the HDL particle were assessed by intrinsic fluorescence measurements, SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis patterns, and gel chromatography. Only acetoacetylation significantly affected any of these parameters. The ability of HDL to accept PC in the absence of phospholipid transfer protein decreased with an increase in apolipoprotein negative charge while, in the presence of phospholipid transfer protein, the acceptor ability of HDL increased up to 1.7-fold with an initial increase in negative charge and then decreased, ultimately to zero, upon extensive modification.  相似文献   

11.
The mammalian glycolipid transfer protein, GLTP, catalyzes the transfer in vitro of glycolipids between membranes. In this study we have examined on one hand the effect of the variations in the donor vesicle composition and on the other hand the effects of variations in the acceptor vesicle composition on the GLTP-catalyzed transfer kinetics of galactosylceramide between bilayer vesicles. For this purpose a resonance energy transfer assay was used, the energy donor being anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide and the energy acceptor DiO-C16. First, we show that the transfer of anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide from palmitoyl-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine donor vesicles was faster than from dipalmitoyl-phosphatidylcholine vesicles, and that there is no transfer from palmitoyl-sphingomyelin vesicles regardless of the cholesterol amount. In this setup the acceptor vesicles were always 100% palmitoyl-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine. We also showed that the transfer in general is faster from small highly curved vesicles compared to that from larger vesicles. Secondly, by varying the acceptor vesicle composition we showed that the transfer is faster to mixtures of sphingomyelin and cholesterol compared to mixtures of phosphatidylcholines and cholesterol. Based on these experiments we conclude that the GLTP mediated transfer of anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide is sensitive to the matrix lipid composition and membrane bending. We postulate that a tightly packed membrane environment is most effective in preventing GLTP from accessing its substrates, and cholesterol is not required to protect the glycosphingolipid in the membrane from being transferred by GLTP. On the other hand GLTP can more easily transfer glycolipids to 'lipid raft' like membranes, suggesting that the protein could be involved in raft assembly.  相似文献   

12.
Cholesterol transfer from small and large unilamellar vesicles   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The rates of transfer of [14C]cholesterol from small and large unilamellar cholesterol/egg yolk phosphatidylcholine vesicles to a common vesicle acceptor were compared at 37 degrees C. The rate of exchange of cholesterol between vesicles of identical cholesterol concentrations (20 mol%) did not differ from the rate of transfer from donor vesicles containing 20 mol% cholesterol to egg yolk PC vesicles. Further, the rate of transfer of [14C]cholesterol from vesicles containing 15 mol% dicetyl phosphate (to confer a negative charge) was not different from the rate of transfer from neutral vesicles. However, the half-time for transfer of [14C]cholesterol from large unilamellar donor vesicles was about 5-times greater (10.2 h, 80 nm diameter) than from small unilamellar vesicles (2.3 h, 23 nm diameter). These data suggest that increased curvature in small unilamellar vesicles reduces cholesterol-nearest neighbor interactions to allow a more rapid transfer of cholesterol into the aqueous phase.  相似文献   

13.
The mammalian glycolipid transfer protein, GLTP, catalyzes the transfer in vitro of glycolipids between membranes. In this study we have examined on one hand the effect of the variations in the donor vesicle composition and on the other hand the effects of variations in the acceptor vesicle composition on the GLTP-catalyzed transfer kinetics of galactosylceramide between bilayer vesicles. For this purpose a resonance energy transfer assay was used, the energy donor being anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide and the energy acceptor DiO-C16. First, we show that the transfer of anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide from palmitoyl-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine donor vesicles was faster than from dipalmitoyl-phosphatidylcholine vesicles, and that there is no transfer from palmitoyl-sphingomyelin vesicles regardless of the cholesterol amount. In this setup the acceptor vesicles were always 100% palmitoyl-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine. We also showed that the transfer in general is faster from small highly curved vesicles compared to that from larger vesicles. Secondly, by varying the acceptor vesicle composition we showed that the transfer is faster to mixtures of sphingomyelin and cholesterol compared to mixtures of phosphatidylcholines and cholesterol. Based on these experiments we conclude that the GLTP mediated transfer of anthrylvinyl-galactosylceramide is sensitive to the matrix lipid composition and membrane bending. We postulate that a tightly packed membrane environment is most effective in preventing GLTP from accessing its substrates, and cholesterol is not required to protect the glycosphingolipid in the membrane from being transferred by GLTP. On the other hand GLTP can more easily transfer glycolipids to ‘lipid raft’ like membranes, suggesting that the protein could be involved in raft assembly.  相似文献   

14.
Trace amounts of four different, well-defined species of phosphatidyl[N-methyl-14C]choline ([14C]PC), differing in their fatty acyl constituents, were introduced exclusively into the outer membrane leaflet of the intact erythrocyte by using a PC-specific phospholipid transfer protein. The rate of transbilayer equilibration of these probe molecules was calculated from the time-dependent decay in specific radioactivity of the PC pool in the outer monolayer, which was discriminated from that in the inner leaflet by treating the intact cells with phospholipase A2 in the presence of sphingomyelinase C. At 37 degrees C, 1,2-dipalmitoyl-, 1,2-dioleoyl-, 1-palmitoyl-2-linoleoyl- and 1-palmitoyl-2-arachidonoyl-PC revealed halftime values for the rate of their transbilayer equilibration of 26.3 +/- 4.4, 14.4 +/- 3.5, 2.9 +/- 1.7 and 9.7 +/- 1.6 h, respectively.  相似文献   

15.
The transfer of 14C-labeled, reduced and carboxymethylated human apolipoprotein A-II (RCM-AII) between small unilamellar vesicles (SUV) has been investigated. Ion-exchange chromatography was used for rapid separation of negatively charged egg phosphatidylcholine (PC)/dicetyl phosphate donor SUV containing bound 14C-labeled RCM-AII from neutral egg PC acceptor SUV present in 10-fold molar excess. The kinetics of 14C-labeled RCM-AII transfer in incubations of up to 12 h at 37 degrees C are consistent with the existence of fast, slow, and apparently "nontransferrable" pools of SUV-associated apolipoprotein; the transfers from these pools occur on the time scales of seconds or less, hours, and days/weeks, respectively. For donor SUV (0.15 mg of phospholipid/mL reaction mixture) containing about 15 RCM-AII molecules per vesicle, the sizes of the fast, slow, and nontransferrable pools are 13, 69, and 18%, respectively. The transfer of RCM-AII from the slow kinetic pool follows first-order kinetics, and the half-time (t 1/2) is about 3 h. The different kinetic pools of SUV-associated RCM-AII probably reflect apoprotein in different conformations of the SUV surface. Increasing the number of RCM-AII per donor SUV enlarges the size of the fast pool and increases the t 1/2 of transfer from the slow pool. In contrast, raising the incubation temperature reduces the t 1/2 of slow transfer. The t 1/2 of RCM-AII transfer from the slow kinetic pool is inversely proportional to the acceptor/donor SUV ratio which suggests that the transfer of apoprotein molecules in this kinetic pool is mediated by SUV collisions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
TEMPO-phosphatidylcholine (PC) spin probes which have homologous saturated acyl chains of 10, 12, 14 and 16 carbon atoms, were synthesized as analogues of PC. Transfer of TEMPO-PCs from liposomal membrane to the ghost membrane of human erythrocyte and transverse diffusion of TEMPO-PCs within the membrane of intact erythrocytes were determined by measurement of spontaneous increase and decrease in signal amplitude of an anisotropic triplet spectrum, due to dilution of the label by natural phospholipid of the membrane and reduction of the label by the cytoplasmic content of the erythrocyte, respectively. TEMPO-PC molecules in TEMPO-PC liposomes, except dipalmitoyl TEMPO-PC, were rapidly incorporated into the ghost membrane by incubation at 37 degrees C; the PC having shorter acyl chains was transferred faster. The cytoplasmic content of the erythrocyte rapidly reduced the nitroxide radical of the spin probe. The central peak height of ESR signal was once increased by incorporation of TEMPO-PC into the erythrocyte membrane and then was spontaneously decreased during further incubation at 37 degrees C. This decrease indicates that PC molecules traverse from the outer to the inner layer of the membrane lipid bilayer. The decrease of signal amplitude was faster with PC of shorter acyl chain. These findings suggest that both transfer between membranes and transverse diffusion in the membrane may be favored to the PC species with shorter acyl chains.  相似文献   

17.
The properties of the phosphatidylcholine (PC) transfer reaction catalyzed by the yeast phospholipid transfer protein (TP-I) were examined in vitro. Donor and acceptor membranes consisted of unilamellar (ULV) and multilamellar (MLV) vesicles, respectively. The phospholipid composition of the membranes participating in the transfer reaction, and in particular that of the MLV acceptors, have a tremendous effect upon the rate of PC-catalyzed transfer. Phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) is an essential component of the acceptor membrane, but it alone is not sufficient to sustain appreciable transfer rates. If combined in an equimolar ratio with PC, there is only a modest increase in transfer rates. On the other hand, when combined with alternate substrates such as phosphatidylinositol (PI) or phosphatidylserine (PS), very high rates of PC transfer occur. The measurement of transfer rates is not affected by the molecular species of PC used as the radioactive tracer. Evidence is also presented to indicate that the two forms of the transfer protein (TP-I and TP-II) are not identical in terms of their interactions with a membrane surface: differences occur in the levels of transfer of PC, PE, PI, and PS at equilibrium. Finally, by kinetic analysis, the mechanism of the protein-catalyzed transfer of PC is shown to conform to a ping-pong bibi model with excess substrate inhibition, analogous to ordinary two-substrate enzyme-catalyzed reactions. Both the rates of desorption and adsorption of the protein from the surface of the ULV are much greater than those describing the similar interactions of the protein with MLV.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
The transbilayer distribution of exogenous phospholipids incorporated into human erythrocytes is monitored through cell morphology changes and by the extraction of incorporated 14C-labeled lipids. Dilauroylphosphatidylserine (DLPS) and dilauroylphosphatidylcholine (DLPC) transfer spontaneously from sonicated unilamellar vesicles to erythrocytes, inducing a discocyte-to-echinocyte shape change within 5 min. DLPC-induced echinocytes revert slowly (t1/2 approximately 8 h) to discocytes, but DLPS-treated cells revert rapidly (10-20 min) to discocytes and then become invaginate stomatocytes. The second phase of the phosphatidylserine (PS)-induced shape change, conversion of echinocytes to stomatocytes, can be inhibited by blocking cell protein sulfhydryl groups or by depleting intracellular ATP or magnesium (Daleke, D. L., and W. H. Huestis. 1985. Biochemistry. 24:5406-5416). These cell shape changes are consistent with incorporation of phosphatidylcholine (PC) and PS into the membrane outer monolayer followed by selective and energy-dependent translocation of PS to the membrane inner monolayer. This hypothesis is explored by correlating cell shape with the fraction of the exogenous lipid accessible to extraction into phospholipid vesicles. Upon exposure to recipient vesicles, DLPC-induced echinocytes revert to discoid forms within 5 min, concomitant with the removal of most (88%) of the radiolabeled lipid. On further incubation, 97% of the foreign PC transfers to recipient vesicles. Treatment of DLPS-induced stomatocytes with acceptor vesicles extracts foreign PS only partially (22%) and does not affect cell shape significantly. Cell treated with inhibitors of aminophospholipid translocation (sulfhydryl blockers or intracellular magnesium depletion) and then incubated with either DLPS or DLPC become echinocytic and do not revert to discocytic or stomatocytic shape for many hours. On treatment with recipient vesicles, these echinocytes revert to discocytes in both cases, with concomitant extraction of 88-99% of radiolabeled PC and 86-97% of radiolabeled PS. The accessibility of exogenous lipids to extraction is uniformly consistent with the transbilayer lipid distribution inferred from cell shape changes, indicating that red cell morphology is an accurate and sensitive reporter of the transbilayer partitioning of incorporated exogenous phospholipids.  相似文献   

19.
We determined whether the membrane defect in hereditary pyropoikilocytosis (HPP) is associated with thermally induced changes in the lipid bilayer, the stability of which was probed by the rate of translocation of phosphatidylcholine (PC) over the two leaflets. [14C]PC was incorporated into the outer leaflet of the lipid bilayer of the intact erythrocytes using a PC-specific phospholipid exchange protein. The transbilayer equilibration of this PC was determined by measuring the time-dependent changes in its accessibility to exogenous phospholipase A2. The rate of transbilayer equilibration of PC was increased in HPP cells at 37 degrees C when compared to normal erythrocytes (rate constants, 0.07 +/- 0.02 and 0.03 +/- 0.01 h-1, respectively). A further dramatic increase in PC transbilayer equilibration was noted in HPP cells incubated at 44 degrees C (rate constant, 0.15 +/- 0.02 h-1). A similar marked acceleration in transbilayer movement of PC was also seen in normal erythrocytes when incubated at 46 degrees C (rate constant, 0.13 +/- 0.03 h-1). Despite the enhanced transbilayer mobility of PC in HPP cells when compared to normal erythrocytes, no major alteration in the asymmetric distribution could be observed when probed with phospholipase A2. Since changes in transbilayer mobility of PC and cell morphology occur in HPP cells at lower temperature than in normal red cells, it may be concluded that the enhanced thermal sensitivity of spectrin is the major factor responsible for these changes. Our results therefore support the view that the structural integrity of the skeletal network is essential for stabilization of the lipid bilayer of the red cell membrane.  相似文献   

20.
The phospholipid composition and the distribution of phospholipids over the two leaflets of the membrane have been investigated for rabbit and horse erythrocyte membranes. Phosphatidylcholine (PC) comprises 39.4% and 41.3% of the total phospholipid complement of the rabbit and horse erythrocytes, respectively. In both membranes the distribution of this phospholipid is asymmetric: 70% of the PC is present in the outer layer of the rabbit membrane and 60% in that of the horse. The major species of this phospholipid class are the (1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl)- and the (1-palmitoyl-2-linoleoyl)PC. The disaturated species, (1,2-dipalmitoyl)PC, is present in limited amounts only. Partial replacement of the native PC from intact erythrocytes was accomplished with a purified PC specific transfer protein from bovine liver. Replacement of the native PC species with (1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl)PC up to 40% of the total PC complement had no effect on the osmotic fragility, the shape and the in vivo survival time of both erythrocyte species. Replacement of the native PC in both rabbit and horse erythrocytes with (1,2-dipalmitoyl)PC up to 20% gave rise to an increased osmotic fragility, a shape change from discocytic to echinocytic and a significant reduction in survival time measured after reinjection of the modified cells. At 30% replacement with (1,2-dipalmitoyl)PC the resulting spheroechinocytes appeared to be cleared from the circulation within 24 h after reinjection. The conclusion can be drawn that the repair mechanisms which may exist in vivo are insufficient to cope with the drastic changes in properties of the erythrocyte membrane which are induced by replacing more than 15% of the native PC by the dipalmitoyl species.  相似文献   

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