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1.
Saturated and unsaturated phosphatidylcholine (PC)-cholesterol membranes have been studied, with a special attention paid to fluid-phase immiscibility in cis-unsaturated phosphatidylcholine (PC)-cholesterol membranes as previously proposed and to the three-dimensional structure of the membrane. The investigation was carried out with dual probes: a membrane-soluble, square-planar copper complex, (3-ethoxy-2-oxobutyraldehyde bis(N4,N4-dimethylthiosemicarbazonato]copper(II) (CuKTSM2), and one of several nitroxide radical lipid-type spin-labels. Bimolecular collision rates between metal ion and spin-label were determined by measuring the nitroxide spin-lattice relaxation times (T1's) in the presence and absence of CuKTSM2 by use of saturation-recovery ESR techniques, and from these measured rates, translational diffusion coefficients of CuKTSM2 were estimated. Profiles of the collision rate across the membrane bilayer were obtained with Tempocholine phosphatidic acid ester, 5-doxylstearic acid, 16-doxylstearic acid, and cholesterol-type spin-labels as a function of cholesterol mole fraction, length and unsaturation of acyl chains, and temperature. In the liquid-crystalline phase of saturated PC membranes, incorporation of cholesterol decreases the collision rate at all depths in the membrane, and the effect of cholesterol is smallest in the middle of the bilayer. In trans-unsaturated PC membranes, a cholesterol-induced decrease of the collision rate was also observed, except in the head-group regions. In cis-unsaturated PC membranes, virtually no effect of cholesterol was observed on the collision rate, either with phospholipid-type spin-labels or with cholesterol-type spin-labels. This result is in clear contrast with our previous observation, in which the effect of cholesterol in cis-unsaturated PC membranes is small on the alkyl-chain motion of phospholipid-type spin-labels but large on the wobbling rotational diffusion of cholesterol-type spin-labels [Pasenkiewicz-Gierula, M., Subczynski, W. K., & Kusumi, A. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 4059-4069]. A model is proposed to explain these results in which the fluid-phase immiscibility is prevalent in cis-unsaturated PC-cholesterol membranes, but where cholesterol-rich (cholesterol oligomeric) domains are small (several lipids) and/or of short lifetime (10(-9) s to less than 10(-7) s). It is suggested that this microimmiscibility arises from the structural nonconformability between the rigid cholesterol ring structure and the rigid bend at the cis double bonds in PC alkyl chains.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
Rotational diffusion of androstane spin-label (ASL), a sterol analogue, in various phosphatidylcholine (PC)-cholesterol membranes was systematically studied by computer simulation of steady-state ESR spectra as a function of the chain length and unsaturation of the alkyl chains, cholesterol mole fraction, and temperature for a better understanding of phospholipid-cholesterol and cholesterol-cholesterol interactions. Special attention was paid to the differences in the cholesterol effects on ASL motion between saturated and unsaturated PC membranes. ASL motion in the membrane was treated as Brownian rotational diffusion of a rigid rod within the confines of a cone imposed by the membrane environment. The wobbling rotational diffusion constant of the long axis, its activation energy, and the cone angle of the confines were obtained for various PC-cholesterol membranes in the liquid-crystalline phase. Cholesterol decreases both the cone angle and the wobbling rotational diffusion constant for ASL in all PC membranes studied in this work. The cholesterol effects are the largest in DMPC membranes. An increase of cholesterol mole fraction from 0 to 30% decreases the rotational diffusion constant by a factor of 9-15 (depending on temperature) and the cone angle by a factor of about 2. In dioleoyl-PC membranes, addition of 30 mol % cholesterol reduces both the rotational diffusion constant and the cone angle of ASL by factors of approximately 2.5 and approximately 1.3, respectively, while it was previously found to cause only modest effects on the motional freedom of phospholipid analogue spin probes [Kusumi, A., Subczynski, W. K., Pasenkiewicz-Gierula, M., Hyde, J. S., & Merkle, H. (1986) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 854, 307-317]. It is proposed that fluid-phase microimmiscibility takes place in dioleoyl-PC-cholesterol membranes at physiological temperatures, which induces cholesterol-rich domains in the membrane, partially due to the steric nonconformability between the rigid fused-ring structure of cholesterol and the 30 degrees bend at the C9-C10 cis double bond of the alkyl chains of dioleoyl-PC. The mechanism by which cholesterol influences the lipid dynamics in the membrane is different between saturated and unsaturated PC membranes.  相似文献   

3.
W K Subczynski  J S Hyde  A Kusumi 《Biochemistry》1991,30(35):8578-8590
Transport and diffusion of molecular oxygen in phosphatidylcholine (PC)-cholesterol membranes and their molecular mechanism were investigated. A special attention was paid to the molecular interaction involving unsaturated alkyl chains and cholesterol. Oxygen transport was evaluated by monitoring the bimolecular collision rate of molecular oxygen and the lipid-type spin labels, tempocholine phosphatidic acid ester, 5-doxylstearic acid, and 16-doxylstearic acid. The collision rate was determined by measuring the spin-lattice relaxation times (T1's) in the presence and absence of molecular oxygen with long-pulse saturation-recovery ESR techniques. In the absence of cholesterol, incorporation of either a cis or trans double bond at the C9-C10 position of the alkyl chain decreases oxygen transport at all locations in the membrane. The activation energy for the translational diffusion of molecular oxygen in the absence of cholesterol is 3.7-6.5 kcal/mol, which is comparable to the activation energy theoretically estimated for kink migration or C-C bond rotation of alkyl chains [Tr?uble, H. (1971) J. Membr. Biol. 4, 193-208; Pace, R. J., & Chan, S. I. (1982) J. Chem. Phys. 76, 4241-4247]. Intercalation of cholesterol in saturated PC membranes reduces oxygen transport in the headgroup region and the hydrophobic region near the membrane surface but little affects the transport in the central part of the bilayer. In unsaturated PC membranes, intercalation of cholesterol also reduces oxygen transport in and near the headgroup regions. In contrast, it increases oxygen transport in the middle of the bilayer. On the basis of these observations, a model for the mechanism of oxygen transport in the membrane is proposed in which oxygen molecules reside in vacant pockets created by gauche-trans isomerization of alkyl chains and the structural nonconformability of neighboring lipids, unsaturated PC and cholesterol in particular, and oxygen molecules jump from one pocket to the adjacent one or move along with the movement of the pocket itself. The presence of cholesterol decreases oxygen permeability across the membrane in all membranes used in this work in spite of the increase in oxygen transport in the central part of unsaturated PC-cholesterol membranes because cholesterol decreases oxygen transport in and near the headgroup regions, where the major barriers for oxygen permeability are located. Oxygen gradients across the membranes of the cells and the mitochondria are evaluated. Arguments are advanced that oxygen permeation across the protein-rich mitochondrial membranes can be a rate-limiting step for oxygen consumption under hypoxic conditions in vivo.  相似文献   

4.
A short pulse saturation recovery electron spin resonance technique has been used to study the effects of polar carotenoid-lutein and cholesterol on interactions of 14N:15N stearic acid spin-label pairs in fluid-phase phosphatidylcholine (PC) membranes. Bimolecular collisions for pairs consisting of various combinations of [14N]-16-, [14N]-10-, [14N]-7-, or [14N]-5-doxylstearate and [15N]-16-doxylstearate in dimyristoyl-PC (DMPC) or egg yolk PC (EYPC) membranes were measured at 27 degrees C. In the absence and presence of lutein or cholesterol for both lipid systems, the collision rates were ordered as 16:5 < 16:7 < 16:10 < 16:16. For all spin-label pairs studied, interaction frequencies were greater in DMPC than in EYPC. Polar carotenoid-lutein reduces the collision frequency for all spin-label pairs, whereas cholesterol reduces the collision frequency for 16:5 and 16:7 pairs and increases the collision frequency in the membrane center for 16:10 and 16:16 pairs. The presence of unsaturated alkyl chains greatly reduces the effect of lutein but magnifies the effect of cholesterol in the membrane center. The observed differences in the effects of these modifiers on alkyl chain bending result from differences in the structure of cholesterol and polar carotenoid and from their different localization within the lipid bilayer membrane. These studies further confirm the occurrence of vertical fluctuations of alkyl chain ends toward the bilayer surface.  相似文献   

5.
Dynamic properties of phosphatidylcholine-cholesterol membranes in the fluid phase and water accessibility to the membranes have been studied as a function of phospholipid alkyl chain length, saturation, mole fraction of cholesterol, and temperature by using spin and fluorescence labelling methods. The results are the following: (1) The effect of cholesterol on motional freedom of 5-doxyl stearic acid spin label (5-SASL) and 16-doxyl stearic acid spin label (16-SASL) in saturated phosphatidylcholine membrane is significantly larger than the effects of alkyl chain length and introduction of unsaturation in the alkyl chain. (2) Variation of alkyl chain length of saturated phospholipids does not alter the effects of cholesterol except in the case of dilauroylphosphatidylcholine, which possesses the shortest alkyl chains (12 carbons) used in this work. (3) Unsaturation of the alkyl chains greatly reduces the ordering effect of cholesterol at C-5 and C-16 positions although unsaturation alone gives only minor fluidizing effects. (4) Introduction of 30 mol% cholesterol to dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine membranes decreases the lateral diffusion constants of lipids by a factor of four, while it causes only a slight decrease of lateral diffusion in dioleoylphosphatidylcholine membranes. (5) If compared at the same temperature, 5-SASL mobilities plotted as a function of mole fraction of cholesterol in the fluid phases of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine-, dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine- and distearoylphosphatidylcholine-cholesterol membranes are similar in wide ranges of temperature (45-82 degrees C) and cholesterol mole fraction (0-50%). (6) In isothermal experiments with saturated phosphatidylcholine membranes, 5-SASL is maximally immobilized at the phase boundary between Regions I and III reported by other workers (Recktenwald, D.J. and McConnell, H.M. (1981) Biochemistry 20, 4505-4510) and becomes more mobile away from the boundary in Regions I and III. (7) 5-SASL in unsaturated phosphatidylcholine membranes showed a gradual monotonic immobilization with increase of cholesterol mole fraction without showing any maximum in the range of cholesterol fractions studied. (8) By rigorously determining rigid-limit magnetic parameters of cholestane spin labels in membranes from Q-band second-derivative ESR spectra to monitor the dielectric environment around the nitroxide radical, it is concluded that cholesterol incorporation increases water accessibility in the hydrophilic loci of the membrane. In contrast, 12-(9-anthroyloxy)stearic acid fluorescence showed that water accessibility is decreased in the hydrophobic loci of the membrane.  相似文献   

6.
The basic concept of the fluid-mosaic model of Singer and Nicolson, an essential point of which is that the membrane proteins are floating in a sea of excess lipid molecules organized in the lipid bilayer, may be misleading in understanding the movement of membrane components in biological membranes that show distinct domain structure. It seems that the lipid bilayer is an active factor in forming the membrane structure, and the lipid composition is responsible for the presence of domains in the membrane. The main role in the process of domain formation is played by cholesterol and sphingolipids. The results presented here show that in a binary mixture of cholesterol and unsaturated phospholipids, cholesterol is segregated out from the bulk unsaturated liquid-crystalline phase. This forms cholesterol-enriched domains or clustered cholesterol domains due to the lateral nonconformability between the rigid planar ring structure of cholesterol and the rigid bend of the unsaturated alkyl chain at double bond position. These cholesterol-enriched domains may be stabilized by the presence of saturated alkyl chains of sphingomyelin or glycosphingolipids, and also by specific proteins which selectively locate in these domains and stabilize them as a result of protein-protein interaction. Such lipid domains are called "rafts" and have been shown to be responsible both for signal transduction to and from the cell and for protein sorting. We also looked at whether polar carotenoids, compounds showing some similarities to cholesterol and affecting membrane properties in a similar way, would also promote domain formation and locate preferentially in one of the lipid phases. Our preliminary data show that in the presence of cholesterol, lutein (a polar carotenoid) may segregate out from saturated lipid regions (liquid-ordered phase) and accumulate in the regions rich in unsaturated phospholipids forming carotenoid-rich domains there. Conventional and pulse EPR (electron paramagnetic resonance) spin labeling techniques were employed to assess the molecular organization and dynamics of the raft-constituent molecules and of the raft itself in the membrane.  相似文献   

7.
Lipid rafts in the plasma membrane, domains rich in cholesterol and sphingolipids, have been implicated in a number of important membrane functions. Detergent insolubility has been used to define membrane “rafts” biochemically. However, such an approach does not directly contribute to the understanding of the size and the lifetime of rafts, dynamics of the raft-constituent molecules, and the function of rafts in the membrane in situ. To address these issues, we have developed pulse EPR spin labeling and single molecule tracking optical techniques for studies of rafts in both artificial and cell membranes. In this review, we summarize our results and perspectives obtained by using these methods. We emphasize the importance of clearly distinguishing small/unstable rafts (lifetime shorter than a millisecond) in unstimulated cells and stabilized rafts induced by liganded and oligomerized (GPI-anchored) receptor molecules (core receptor rafts, lifetime over a few minutes). We propose that these stabilized rafts further induce temporal, greater rafts (signaling rafts, lifetime on the order of a second) for signaling by coalescing other small/unstable rafts, including those in the inner leaflet of the membrane, each containing perhaps one molecule of the downstream effector molecules. At variance with the general view, we emphasize the importance of cholesterol segregation from the liquid-crystalline unsaturated bulk-phase membrane for formation of the rafts, rather than the affinity of cholesterol and saturated alkyl chains. In the binary mixture of cholesterol and an unsaturated phospholipid, cholesterol is segregated out from the bulk unsaturated liquid-crystalline phase, forming cholesterol-enriched domains or clustered cholesterol domains, probably due to the lateral nonconformability between the rigid planar transfused ring structure of cholesterol and the rigid bend of the unsaturated alkyl chain at C9-C10. However, such cholesterol-rich domains are small, perhaps consisting of only several cholesterol molecules, and are short-lived, on the order of 1-100 ns. We speculate that these cholesterol-enriched domains may be stabilized by the presence of saturated alkyl chains of sphingomyelin or glycosphingolipids, and also by clustered raft proteins. In the influenza viral membrane, one of the simplest forms of a biological membrane, the lifetime of a protein and cholesterol-rich domain was evaluated to be on the order of 100 μs, again showing the short lifetime of rafts in an unstimulated state. Finally, we propose a thermal Lego model for rafts as the basic building blocks for signaling pathways in the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

8.
Lipid rafts in the plasma membrane, domains rich in cholesterol and sphingolipids, have been implicated in a number of important membrane functions. Detergent insolubility has been used to define membrane "rafts" biochemically. However, such an approach does not directly contribute to the understanding of the size and the lifetime of rafts, dynamics of the raft-constituent molecules, and the function of rafts in the membrane in situ. To address these issues, we have developed pulse EPR spin labeling and single molecule tracking optical techniques for studies of rafts in both artificial and cell membranes. In this review, we summarize our results and perspectives obtained by using these methods. We emphasize the importance of clearly distinguishing small/unstable rafts (lifetime shorter than a millisecond) in unstimulated cells and stabilized rafts induced by liganded and oligomerized (GPI-anchored) receptor molecules (core receptor rafts, lifetime over a few minutes). We propose that these stabilized rafts further induce temporal, greater rafts (signaling rafts, lifetime on the order of a second) for signaling by coalescing other small/unstable rafts, including those in the inner leaflet of the membrane, each containing perhaps one molecule of the downstream effector molecules. At variance with the general view, we emphasize the importance of cholesterol segregation from the liquid-crystalline unsaturated bulk-phase membrane for formation of the rafts, rather than the affinity of cholesterol and saturated alkyl chains. In the binary mixture of cholesterol and an unsaturated phospholipid, cholesterol is segregated out from the bulk unsaturated liquid-crystalline phase, forming cholesterol-enriched domains or clustered cholesterol domains, probably due to the lateral nonconformability between the rigid planar transfused ring structure of cholesterol and the rigid bend of the unsaturated alkyl chain at C9-C10. However, such cholesterol-rich domains are small, perhaps consisting of only several cholesterol molecules, and are short-lived, on the order of 1-100 ns. We speculate that these cholesterol-enriched domains may be stabilized by the presence of saturated alkyl chains of sphingomyelin or glycosphingolipids, and also by clustered raft proteins. In the influenza viral membrane, one of the simplest forms of a biological membrane, the lifetime of a protein and cholesterol-rich domain was evaluated to be on the order of 100 micro, again showing the short lifetime of rafts in an unstimulated state. Finally, we propose a thermal Lego model for rafts as the basic building blocks for signaling pathways in the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

9.
The effects of tricylic antidepressant clomipramine (CLO) on the membrane properties of saturated dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine and dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine as well as on unsaturated egg yolk phosphatidylcholine liposomes were investigated by the electron paramagnetic resonance spin-labeling technique, in combination with the simulation of the spectra, taking into account that the membrane is heterogeneous and composed of the regions with different fluidity characteristics. Different spin labels, monitoring membrane properties in the upper and inner parts of the membrane, were used. In general, two spectral components, having different motional characteristics, were detected in all liposomes investigated. In liposomes with saturated chains, CLO decreased the phase-transition temperature, disordered the membrane, and increased polarity in the upper part of the membrane. However, less impact was observed in liposomes with unsaturated chains. In dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine liposomes, it also induced molecular rearrangements near the pretransition temperature. The presence of 30 mol% cholesterol increased the fluidizing effect of CLO and modified the lateral diffusion of nitroxide in the inner part of the membrane. A unique anomalous increase in diffusion of nitroxide, dependent on CLO concentration, was detected in the temperature region where the phosphatidylcholine membrane without cholesterol experiences the phase transitions. Since the changes in the central part of the membrane were even more pronounced than in the upper part of the membrane, it could be concluded that CLO incorporates into the membrane with its hydrophobic ring parallel to the phospholipid chains.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
The oxygen diffusion-concentration product was determined in phosphatidylcholine (PC) bilayers from oxygen broadening of the spin label EPR spectra. The use of fatty acid spin labels makes it possible to do structural and oximetric measurements with the same sample. We find that polar carotenoids, zeaxanthin and violaxanthin, increase ordering of hydrocarbon chains in saturated (dimyristoyl-PC) and unsaturated (egg yolk PC) membranes and also significantly decrease the oxygen diffusion-concentration product in the hydrocarbon region of these membranes. At 25 degrees C in the presence of 10 mol% of carotenoids, the product is about 30% smaller than in pure PC membranes. Intercalation of carotenoids decreases the oxygen diffusion-concentration product in the central part of the bilayer and has little effect on the product in the polar head group region. In contrast, cholesterol molecules significantly reduce the product on and near the membrane surface, and do not change it (saturated PC) or increase it (unsaturated PC) in the middle of the bilayer (Subczynski, W.K., Hyde, J.S. and Kusumi, A. (1989) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 86, 4474-4478). The decrease of oxygen diffusion-concentration product may be a mechanism of carotenoid protective activity, which should be effective in plant and animal cells in the light as well as in the dark.  相似文献   

12.
Rotational diffusion of cholestane spin-label (CSL), a sterol analogue, in various phosphatidylcholine (PC)-cholesterol membranes was systematically studied by computer simulation of steady-state ESR spectra as a function of chain length and unsaturation of alkyl chains, cholesterol mole fraction, and temperature for better understanding of phospholipid-cholesterol and cholesterol-cholesterol interactions. CSL motion in the membrane was treated as Brownian rotational diffusion of a rigid rod within the confines of a cone imposed by the membrane environment. The wobbling rotational diffusion constant of the long axis, its activation energy, and the cone angle of the confines are obtained for various membranes in the liquid-crystalline phase. The wobbling diffusion constant decreases in the order dilauroyl-PC greater than dimyristoyl-PC greater than dioleoyl-PC approximately dipalmitoyl-PC greater than distearoyl-PC greater than dioleoyl-PC/cholesterol = 3/1 greater than dioleoyl-PC/cholesterol = 1/1 membranes. Activation energy for the wobbling diffusion of the long axis of CSL is strongly dependent on alkyl chain length, unsaturation, and cholesterol mole fraction. It decreases with decrease in alkyl chain length and by introduction of unsaturation in the alkyl chains. In dioleoylphosphatidylcholine membranes, activation energy decreases by a factor of approximately 3 in the presence of 50 mol % cholesterol. Activation energy for wobbling diffusion of CSL in phosphatidylcholine membranes is smaller than the activation energy for translational diffusion of a phospholipid. The former is more dependent on alkyl chain length and unsaturation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
Over the last 25 years one of us (WKS) has been investigating physical properties of lipid bilayer membranes. In 1991 a group led by WKS was organized into the Laboratory of Structure and Dynamics of Biological Membranes, the effective member of which is AW. Using mainly the electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spin-labeling method, we obtained unexpected results, which are significant for the better understanding of the functioning of biological membranes. We have developed a new pulse EPR spin-labeling method for the detection of membrane domains and evaluation of lipid exchange rates. This review will be focused on our main results which can be summarized as follows: (1) Unsaturation of alkyl chains greatly reduces the ordering and rigidifying effects of cholesterol although the unsaturation alone gives only minor fluidizing effects, as observed by order and reorientational motion, and rather significant rigidifying effects, as observed by translational motion of probe molecules; (2) Fluid-phase model membranes and cell plasma membranes are not barriers to oxygen and nitric oxide transport; (3) Polar carotenoids can regulate membrane fluidity in a way similar to cholesterol; (4) Formation of effective hydrophobic barriers to the permeation of small polar molecules across membranes requires alkyl chain unsaturation and/or the presence of cholesterol; (5) Fluid-phase micro-immiscibility takes place in cis-unsaturated phosphatidylcholine-cholesterol membranes and induces the formation of cholesterol-rich domains; (6) In membranes containing high concentrations of transmembrane proteins a new lipid domain is formed, with lipids trapped within aggregates of proteins, in which the lipid dynamics is diminished to the level of gel-phase.  相似文献   

14.
Interaction of nitroxide spin labels with chloroplasts   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Chloroplasts isolated from oats eliminated the electron spin resonance (ESR) signals from spin labels in white light and partially restored them in far-red light. Only the white light-mediated reaction was blocked by 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU). In contrast, oat (Avena sativa L. cv. Garry and Park) leaf mesophyll protoplasts oxidized the spin labels in both white and far-red light, with and without DCMU. Light had no obvious effect on spin label motion within chloroplast membranes. The results suggest that, in isolated chloroplasts, nitroxide spin labels may be reduced by photosystem I within the thylakoid bilayer resulting in loss of the ESR signals. The reduced forms may be reoxidized by an element of the photosynthetic electron transport chain which operates between the DCMU block and the photosystem I reaction center. In addition, a light-mediated destruction of the spin labels occurs in both chloroplasts and protoplasts. The reduced form of the nitroxide (i.e. the hydroxylamine) may be resistant to this destruction.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of up to 20 mol% incorporation of alpha-tocopherol on acyl chain order and dynamics in liquid crystalline phosphatidylcholine (PC) membranes was studied as a function of acyl chain unsaturation by electron spin resonance (ESR) of 5-, 7-, 12- and 16-doxyl spin labelled stearic acids intercalated into the membrane. Order parameters S in the upper portion of the chain (positions 5 and 7) and correlation times tau C in the lower portion (positions 12 and 16) determined from the ESR spectra indicate that in general alpha-tocopherol restricts acyl chain motion within the membrane. The magnitude of the increases in order appears to be dependent upon phospholipid molecular area, being the greatest (up to 15%) in saturated dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (14:0-14:0 PC) which possesses a relatively small area per molecule as opposed to much smaller increases (less than 3%) in unsaturated PC membranes of larger molecular area. This behavior is interpreted as incompatible with the hypothesis of Lucy and coworkers (A.T. Diplock and J.A. Lucy (1973) FEBS Lett. 29, 205-210), who proposed that membranes are structurally stabilized by interactions between the phytyl side chain of alpha-tocopherol and the polyunsaturated chains of phospholipids.  相似文献   

16.
B J Wisnieski  K K Iwata 《Biochemistry》1977,16(7):1321-1326
Two electron spin resonance (ESR) spin labels were used to monitor the physical state of bacterial and animal cell membranes: 5N10, a nitroxide derivative of decane, and 12NS-GA, a glucosamine derivative of 12-nitroxide stearic acid. Spectra were recorded at 1 degrees C intervals from approximately 5 to 45 degrees C. Arrhenius plots of log hH/hP vs. 1/K were obtained by measuring the amplitudes of the hydrocarbon and water signals, hH and hP, respectively. Two discontinuities in the Arrhenius plot (at characteristic temperatures t1 and th) were observed with bacterial cell membranes independent of the spin label employed. Analysis of sealed animal cell membrane samples revealed four characteristic temperatures when the hydrophobic spin lable 5N10 was used, but only two when the amphiphilic spin label 12NS-GA was used. The specific set of characteristic temperatures revealed with 12NS-GA depended on whether the membrane preparation was inside out (ISO) or right side out (RSO). Analysis of Newcastle disease virus, a source of RSO plasma membrane derived from host, revealed two characteristic temperatures at approximately 14 and 33 degrees C. Analysis of phagosomes, a source of ISO plasma membrane derived from LM cells, revealed two characteristic temperatures at approximately 23 and 38 degrees C. When unsealed or disrupted membrane preparations were spin labeled with 12NS-GA, both sets (RSO and ISO) of characteristic temperatures were revealed. The results indicate that the inner and outer monolayers of animal cell membranes are physically distinct and that the glycosylated spin label, 12NS-GA, is apparently restricted in its ability to flip across the membrane bilayer. In this study, characteristic temperatures were pinpointed by computer analysis of the ESR spectral data.  相似文献   

17.
Dansyl lysine (DL) is a fluorescent compound that has significantly higher solubility in synthetic phosphatidylcholine (PC) membranes with a low cholesterol content than it does in water or in membranes having a high cholesterol content. Its fluorescence intensity is enhanced at least 50-fold when dissolved in PC membranes. Therefore, membranes with mole fractions of cholesterol (Xch) less than or equal to 0.5-0.3 are stained by aqueous solutions of DL: those with a higher cholesterol content, 0.3-0.4 less than or equal to Xch less than or equal to 0.5, are not. It is proposed that DL selects for a structural feature of membranes: cholesterol-free domains. The phenomenon has provided evidence for long-lived compositional heterogeneity in large multilamellar PC-cholesterol liposomes having Xch less than or equal to 0.2. This is not consistent with a model in which the homogeneous state is thermodynamically favored and both intermembrane transfer and transmembrane transfer (flip-flop) of cholesterol are fast. These studies are of potential importance for understanding cell membrane structure, in particular lipid-phase equilibria and the maintenance of compositional heterogeneity between the different membranes of cells.  相似文献   

18.
Rigid-limit 250-GHz electron spin resonance (FIR-ESR) spectra have been studied for a series of phosphatidylcholine spin labels (n-PC, where n = 5, 7, 10, 12, 16) in pure lipid dispersions of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine (POPC), as well as dispersions of DPPC containing the peptide gramicidin A (GA) in a 1:1 molar ratio. The enhanced g-tensor resolution of 250-GHz ESR for these spin labels permitted a careful study of the nitroxide g-tensor as a function of spin probe location and membrane composition. In particular, as the spin label is displaced from the polar head group, Azz decreases and gxx increases as they assume values typical of a nonpolar environment, appropriate for the hydrophobic alkyl chains in the case of pure lipid dispersions. The field shifts of spectral features due to changes in gxx are an order of magnitude larger than those from changes in Azz. The magnetic tensor parameters measured in the presence of GA were characteristic of a polar environment and showed only a very weak dependence of Azz and gxx on label position. These results demonstrate the significant influence of GA on the local polarity along the lipid molecule, and may reflect increased penetration of water into the alkyl chain region of the lipid in the presence of GA. The spectra from the pure lipid dispersions also exhibit a broad background signal that is most significant for 7-, 10-, and 12-PC, and is more pronounced in DPPC than in POPC. It is attributed to spin probe aggregation yielding spin exchange narrowing.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
The electron spin resonance (ESR) spectrum of a nitroxide spin probe intercalated in a membrane is influenced by the amplitude of anisotropic motion of the nitroxide group and by the geometry of the oxazolidine ring of the nitroxide. In the analysis of the ESR spectra of nitroxide-labelled fatty acid probes, it is generally assumed that the five-membered oxazolidine ring system is oriented rigidly perpendicular to the long molecular axis of the probe. This assumption is tested in the present study, using 2H-NMR of specifically deuterium-labelled nitroxide spin probes. Evidence is presented that the nitroxide does not display the assumed geometry in membranes. The departure from this geometry depends on the position of the nitroxide label on the acyl chain, with a more pronounced departure for position 5 relative to position 12. These and previous data provide an explanation for the discrepancies between spin-probe ESR and 2H-NMR order parameters in membranes.  相似文献   

20.
An investigation was made of the influence of mitochondrial unsaturated fatty acid composition on the following mitochondrial parameters: oscillation period, spin label motion (ESR), permeability, and oxidative phosphorylation. Liver mitochondria from rats fed diets deficient in or supplemented with essential fatty acids showed approximately the same total number of unsaturated fatty acids but changed unsaturation levels. Electron microscopy showed that the morphology of the inner membrane compartment was unchanged.

Two differences were correlated with unsaturated fatty acid composition: (1) a slower frequency (or time period) of the oscillatory state of energy-dependent ion transport and (2) a reduction in the motional freedom of each of three spin labels (12NS, 5N10 and 7N14). The increase in oscillation period could arise from a number of rate-limiting processes, including permeability of mitochondria to various anions, cations, and substrate metabolites. However, when the permeability of mitochondria to such substances was tested, no changes were observed in passive or active uptake of these substances or in the efficiency of oxidative phosphorylation under steady-state conditions.

Thus, the two parameters, oscillation period and freedom of spin label motion, which are dependent upon large domains of the mitochondrial membranes, are significantly influenced by the change in unsaturated fatty acid composition in essential fatty acid-depleted mitochondria, even though processes such as permeability of ionic materials and oxidative phosphorylation were not measurably affected by these changes in unsaturated fatty acid composition.  相似文献   


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