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1.
The interaction of the major acidic bovine seminal plasma protein, PDC-109, with dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) membranes has been investigated by spin-label electron spin resonance spectroscopy. Studies employing phosphatidylcholine spin labels, bearing the spin labels at different positions along the sn-2 acyl chain indicate that the protein penetrates into the hydrophobic interior of the membrane and interacts with the lipid acyl chains up to the 14th C atom. Binding of PDC-109 at high protein/lipid ratios (PDC-109:DMPC = 1:2, w/w) results in a considerable decrease in the chain segmental mobility of the lipid as seen by spin-label electron spin resonance spectroscopy. A further interesting new observation is that, at high concentrations, PDC-109 is capable of (partially) solubilizing DMPC bilayers. The selectivity of PDC-109 in its interaction with membrane lipids was investigated by using different spin-labeled phospholipid and steroid probes in the DMPC host membrane. These studies indicate that the protein exhibits highest selectivity for the choline phospholipids phosphatidylcholine and sphingomyelin under physiological conditions of pH and ionic strength. The selectivity for different lipids is in the following order: phosphatidylcholine approximately sphingomyelin > or = phosphatidic acid (pH 6.0) > phosphatidylglycerol approximately phosphatidylserine approximately and rostanol > phosphatidylethanolamine > or = N-acyl phosphatidylethanolamine > cholestane. Thus, the lipids bearing the phosphocholine moiety in the headgroup are clearly the lipids most strongly recognized by PDC-109. However, these studies demonstrate that this protein also recognizes other lipids such as phosphatidylglycerol and the sterol androstanol, albeit with somewhat reduced affinity.  相似文献   

2.
M B Sankaram  P J Brophy  D Marsh 《Biochemistry》1989,28(25):9699-9707
The selectivity of interaction between bovine spinal cord myelin basic protein (MBP) and eight different spin-labeled lipid species in complexes with dimyristoylphosphatidylglycerol (DMPG) and between spin-labeled phosphatidylglycerol and spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine in complexes of MBP with various mixtures of DMPG and dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) has been studied by electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy. In DMPC/DMPG mixtures, the protein binding gradually decreased with increasing mole fraction of DMPC in a nonlinear fashion. The lipid-protein binding assays indicated a preferential binding of the protein to phosphatidylglycerol relative to phosphatidylcholine without complete phase separation of the two lipids. The outer hyperfine splittings (2Amax) of both phosphatidylglycerol and phosphatidylcholine labeled at C-5 of the sn-2 chain (5-PGSL and 5-PCSL, respectively) were monitored in the lipid-protein complexes as a function of the mole fraction of DMPC. The increases in the value of Amax induced on binding of the protein were larger for 5-PGSL than for 5-PCSL, up to 0.25 mole fraction of DMPC. Beyond this mole fraction the spectral perturbations induced by the protein were similar for both lipid labels. The ESR spectra of phosphatidylglycerol and phosphatidylcholine labeled at C-12 of the sn-2 chain were two component in nature, indicating indicating a direct interaction of the protein with the lipid chains, at mole fractions of DMPC up to 0.25. Quantitation of the motionally restricted spin-label population by spectral subtraction again indicated a preferential interaction of the protein with phosphatidylglycerol relative to phosphatidylcholine. Up to DMPC mode fractions of 0.25, the microenvironment of the protein was enriched in DMPG.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
M B Sankaram  P J Brophy  D Marsh 《Biochemistry》1989,28(25):9685-9691
Electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy and chemical binding assays were used to study the interaction of bovine spinal cord myelin basic protein (MBP) with dimyristoylphosphatidylglycerol (DMPG) membranes. Increasing binding of MBP to DMPG bilayers resulted in an increasing motional restriction of PG spin-labeled at the C-5 atom position in the acyl chain, up to a maximum degree of association of 1 MBP molecule per 36 lipid molecules. ESR spectra of PG spin-labels labeled at other positions in the sn-2 chain showed a similar motional restriction, while still preserving the chain flexibility gradient characteristic of fluid lipid bilayers. In addition, labels at the C-12 and C-14 atom positions gave two-component spectra, suggesting a partial hydrophobic penetration of the MBP into the bilayer. Spectral subtractions were used to quantitate the membrane penetration in terms of the stoichiometry of the lipid-protein complexes. Approximately 50% of the spin-labeled lipid chains were directly affected at saturation protein binding. The salt and pH dependence of the ESR spectra and of the protein binding demonstrated that electrostatic interaction of the basic residues of the MBP with the PG headgroups is necessary for an effective association of the MBP with phospholipid bilayers. Binding of the protein, and concomitant perturbation of the lipid chain mobility, was reduced as the ionic strength increased, until at salt concentrations above 1 M NaCl the protein was no longer bound. The binding and ESR spectral perturbation also decreased as the protein charge was reduced by pH titration to above the pI of the protein at approximately pH 10.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
Interaction of cholesterol with various glycerophospholipids and sphingomyelin   总被引:20,自引:0,他引:20  
M B Sankaram  T E Thompson 《Biochemistry》1990,29(47):10670-10675
The influence of cholesterol on the phase behavior of glycerophospholipids and sphingomyelins was investigated by spin-label electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy. 4-(4,4-Dimethyl-3-oxy-2-tridecyl-2-oxazolidinyl)butanoic acid (5-SASL) and 1-stearoyl-2-[4-(4,4-dimethyl-3-oxy-2-tridecyl-2-oxazolidinyl)butanoy l]-sn- glycero-3-phosphocholine (5-PCSL) spin-labels were employed for this purpose. The outer hyperfine splitting constants, Amax, measured from the spin-label ESR spectra as a function of temperature were taken as empirical indicators of cholesterol-induced changes in the acyl chain motions in the fluid state. The Amax values of 5-PCSL exhibit a triphasic dependence on the concentration of cholesterol for phosphatidylcholines and bovine brain sphingomyelin. We interpret this dependence as reflecting the existence of liquid-disordered, ld, liquid-ordered, lo, and coexistence regions, ld + lo. The phase boundary between the ld and the two-phase region and the boundary between the lo and the two-phase region in the phosphatidylcholine-cholesterol systems coalesce at temperatures 25-33 degrees C above the main-chain melting transition temperature of the cholesterol-free phosphatidylcholine bilayers. In the case of bovine brain sphingomyelin, the ld-lo phase coalescence occurs about 47 degrees C above the melting temperature of the pure sphingomyelin. The selectivity of interaction of cholesterol with glycerophospholipids of varying headgroup charge was studied by comparing the cholesterol-induced changes in the Amax values of derivatives of phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidic acid, phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylglycerol, and phosphatidylserine spin-labeled at the fifth position of the sn-2 chain.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
Stearic acid, phosphatidylcholine, and phosphatidylglycerol nitroxide spin-labels were used to probe the effect of 1-hexanol, urethane, diethyl ether, and ethanol on lipid-protein interactions in nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAcChoR) rich membranes from Torpedo nobiliana. For stearic acid spin-labeled at the C-14 position of the sn-1 acyl chain, 1-hexanol induced little change (over a wide concentration range, 0-16.7 mM) in either the ESR line shape or the proportion of motionally restricted spectral component from labels probing the protein interface. The main effect of 1-hexanol was limited to an increase in the mobility of stearic acid spin-labels probing the non-protein-associated environment. In contrast, for C-14 phosphatidylcholine spin-label, 1-hexanol decreased the fraction of spin-labels motionally restricted at the protein interface from 0.33 without 1-hexanol to 0.20 with 16.7 mM 1-hexanol, with no change in the line shape of the spectral component of these labels. The ESR spectral line shape of the fluid component due to phosphatidylcholine labels in sites away from the protein interface displayed a gradual decrease in spectral anisotropy on addition of increasing amounts of 1-hexanol. At a concentration of 1-hexanol that desensitizes half the receptors, the fraction of motionally restricted phosphatidylcholine spin-label is reduced by approximately 15%. The effect of 1-hexanol on phosphatidylglycerol spin-labels was intermediate between these two cases. Similar effects were measured with other general anesthetics, including urethane, diethyl ether, and ethanol.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
We have used ESR and NMR linewidth broadening by spin-labels to determine the overall orientation of spin-labeled analogues of cholesterol and androstanol in egg lecithin bilayers. While the cholesterol analogues were found to have a single orientation in each monolayer, with the acyl chain pointing towards the center of the bilayer, the androstanol analogue appeared, at least in sonicated vesicles, to experience two opposite orientations in the same monolayer, very likely with a rapid reorientation. The possibility of rapid vertical fluctuations of the sterol molecules within the phospholipid bilayer is also discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Ramakrishnan M  Jensen PH  Marsh D 《Biochemistry》2003,42(44):12919-12926
Alpha-synuclein is a small presynaptic protein, which is linked to the development of Parkinson's disease. Alpha-synuclein partitions between cytosolic and vesicle-bound states, where membrane binding is accompanied by the formation of an amphipathic helix in the N-terminal section of the otherwise unstructured protein. The impact on alpha-synuclein of binding to vesicle-like liposomes has been studied extensively, but far less is known about the impact of alpha-synuclein on the membrane. The interactions of alpha-synuclein with phosphatidylglycerol membranes are studied here by using spin-labeled lipid species and electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy to allow a detailed analysis of the effect on the membrane lipids. Membrane association of alpha-synuclein perturbs the ESR spectra of spin-labeled lipids in bilayers of phosphatidylglycerol but not of phosphatidylcholine. The interaction is inhibited at high ionic strength. The segmental motion is hindered at all positions of spin labeling in the phosphatidylglycerol sn-2 chain, while still preserving the chain flexibility gradient characteristic of fluid phospholipid membranes. Direct motional restriction of the lipid chains, resulting from penetration of the protein into the hydrophobic interior of the membrane, is not observed. Saturation occurs at a protein/lipid ratio corresponding to approximately 36 lipids/protein added. Alpha-synuclein exhibits a selectivity of interaction with different phospholipid spin labels when bound to phosphatidylglycerol membranes in the following order: stearic acid > cardiolipin > phosphatidylcholine > phosphatidylglycerol approximately phosphatidylethanolamine > phosphatidic acid approximately phosphatidylserine > N-acyl phosphatidylethanolamine > diglyceride. Accordingly, membrane-bound alpha-synuclein associates at the interfacial region of the bilayer where it may favor a local concentration of certain phospholipids.  相似文献   

8.
Veiga MP  Goñi FM  Alonso A  Marsh D 《Biochemistry》2000,39(32):9876-9883
The temperature dependences of the ESR spectra from different positional isomers of sphingomyelin and of phosphatidylcholine spin-labeled in their acyl chain have been compared in mixed membranes composed of sphingolipids and glycerolipids. The purpose of the study was to identify the possible formation of sphingolipid-rich in-plane membrane domains. The principal mixtures that were studied contained sphingomyelin and the corresponding glycerolipid phosphatidylcholine, both from egg yolk. Other sphingolipids that were investigated were brain cerebrosides and brain gangliosides, in addition to sphingomyelins from brain and milk. The outer hyperfine splittings in the ESR spectra of sphingomyelin and of phosphatidylcholine spin-labeled on C-5 of the acyl chain were consistent with mixing of the sphingolipid and glycerolipid components, in fluid-phase membranes. In the gel phase of egg sphingomyelin and its mixtures with phosphatidylcholine, the outer hyperfine splittings of sphingomyelin spin-labeled at C-14 of the acyl chain of sphingomyelin are smaller than those of the corresponding sn-2 chain spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine. This is in contrast to the situation with sphingomyelin and phosphatidylcholine spin-labeled at C-5, for which the outer hyperfine splitting is always greater for the spin-labeled sphingomyelin. The behavior of the C-14 spin-labels is attributed to a different geometry of the acyl chain attachments of the sphingolipids and glycerolipids that is consistent with their respective crystal structures. The two-component ESR spectra of sphingomyelin and phosphatidylcholine spin-labeled at C-14 of the acyl chain directly demonstrate a broad two-phase region with coexisting gel and fluid domains in sphingolipid mixtures with phosphatidylcholine. Domain formation in membranes composed of sphingolipids and glycerolipids alone is related primarily to the higher chain-melting transition temperature of the sphingolipid component.  相似文献   

9.
The dynamics and environment of sphingomyelin spin-labelled at different positions in the N-acyl chain have been studied in dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine bilayer membranes by using electron spin resonance spectroscopy. Comparison was made with phosphatidylcholine spin-labelled on the sn-2 acyl chain in the same host membrane. Spin-labelled sphingomyelin was found to mix well with the host phosphatidylcholine lipids in both gel and fluid phase membranes. At 1 mol%, mutual spin-spin interactions are no greater than for spin-labelled phosphatidylcholine. In the fluid membrane phase, the effective chain order parameters and polarity-sensitive isotropic hyperfine coupling constants of spin-labelled sphingomyelin display a similar dependence on the position of labelling to those of spin-labelled phosphatidylcholine. The values of both parameters are, however, generally larger for sphingomyelin than for phosphatidylcholine at equivalent positions of acyl chain labelling. This difference is attributed to the different chain linkage of sphingo- and glycero-lipids, combined with an offset of approximately one C-atom in transbilayer register between the respective N-acyl and O-acyl chains. In the gel phase, differences in chain configuration between sphingomyelin and phosphatidylcholine are indicated by differences in spin label spectral anisotropy between the two lipids, which appears to reverse towards the terminal methyl chain end.  相似文献   

10.
The conformation of phosphatidylcholine in liquid-crystalline bilayers was studied with a novel, high-resolution method employing phosphatidylcholine species containing pyrenyl moieties in both acyl chains of variable length. Analysis of the intramolecular pyrene-pyrene collision data obtained for 30 such species in terms of a simple geometrical model showed that the sn-1 acyl chain penetrates, on the average, 0.84 +/- 0.11 methylene units (0.8 A) deeper into the bilayer than the sn-2 chain at 22 degrees C. A similar value was obtained at 37 degrees C. Since the penetration difference of the sn-1 and sn-2 acyl chains is inherently coupled to the conformation of the glycerol moiety, these data mean that the glycerol moiety of phosphatidylcholine is, on the average, only moderately tilted with respect to the bilayer plane in the liquid-crystalline state. This contrasts the perpendicular orientation observed previously for phosphatidylcholine crystals [Pearson, R. H., & Pascher, I. (1979) Nature 281, 499-501]. Importantly, addition of 50 mol % cholesterol, which is known to reduce dramatically the interactions between phosphatidylcholine molecules in bilayers, had only a small effect on the penetration difference of the acyl chains, strongly suggesting that the conformation of phosphatidylcholine in the liquid-crystalline state is determined largely by intramolecular, rather than intermolecular, interactions.  相似文献   

11.
The miscibility and phase behavior of hydrated binary mixtures of two N-acylethanolamines (NAEs), N-myristoylethanolamine (NMEA), and N-palmitoylethanolamine (NPEA), with the corresponding diacyl phosphatidylethanolamines (PEs), dimyristoylphosphatidylethanolamine (DMPE), and dipalmitoylphosphatidylethanolamine (DPPE), respectively, have been investigated by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), spin-label electron spin resonance (ESR), and (31)P-NMR spectroscopy. Temperature-composition phase diagrams for both NMEA/DMPE and NPEA/DPPE binary systems were established from high sensitivity DSC. The structures of the phases involved were determined by (31)P-NMR spectroscopy. For both systems, complete miscibility in the fluid and gel phases is indicated by DSC and ESR, up to 35 mol % of NMEA in DMPE and 40 mol % of NPEA in DPPE. At higher contents of the NAEs, extensive solid-fluid phase separation and solid-solid immiscibility occur depending on the temperature. Characterization of the structures of the mixtures formed with (31)P-NMR spectroscopy shows that up to 75 mol % of NAE, both DMPE and DPPE form lamellar structures in the gel phase as well as up to at least 65 degrees C in the fluid phase. ESR spectra of phosphatidylcholine spin labeled at the C-5 position in the sn-2 acyl chain present at a probe concentration of 1 mol % exhibit strong spin-spin broadening in the low-temperature region for both systems, suggesting that the acyl chains pack very tightly and exclude the spin label. However, spectra recorded in the fluid phase do not exhibit any spin-spin broadening and indicate complete miscibility of the two components. The miscibility of NAE and diacyl PE of matched chainlengths is significantly less than that found earlier for NPEA and dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine, an observation that is consistent with the notion that the NAEs are most likely stored as their precursor lipids (N-acyl PEs) and are generated only when the system is subjected to membrane stress.  相似文献   

12.
Selectively deuterated N-palmitoyl sphingomyelins were studied by deuterium nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy ((2)H-NMR) to elucidate the backbone conformation as well as the interaction of the sphingolipids with glycerophospholipids. Macroscopic alignment of the lipid bilayers provided good spectral resolution and permitted the convenient control of bilayer hydration. Selective deuteration at the acyl chain carbons C(2) and C(3) revealed that the N-acyl chain performs a bend, similar to the sn-2 chain of the phosphatidylcholines. Profiles of C-D bond order parameters were derived from the segmental quadrupolar splittings for sphingomyelin alone and for sphingomyelin-phosphatidycholine mixtures. In the liquid-crystalline state, the N-acyl chain of sphingomyelin alone revealed significantly more configurational order than the chains of homologous disaturated or monounsaturated phosphatidylcholines. The average chain order parameters and the relative width of the order parameter distribution were correlated over a range of bilayer compositions. The temperature dependence of the (2)H-NMR spectra revealed phase separation in bilayers composed of sphingomyelin and monounsaturated phosphatidylcholine, in broad agreement with existing phase diagrams.  相似文献   

13.
A multiple equilibrium binding model is used to examine phospholipid and cholesterol binding with the transmembranous protein Ca2+-ATPase (calcium pump). The protein was reconstituted in egg phosphatidylcholine bilayers by lipid substitution of rabbit muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum. Electron spin resonance spectra of a phosphatidylcholine spin-label and a recently developed cholesterol spin-label show two major spectral contributions, a motionally restricted component consistent with interactions between the label and the protein surface and another component characteristic of motion of the label in a fluid lipid bilayer. The number of lipid binding (or contact) sites at the hydrophobic surface of the protein is calculated to be N = 22 +/- 2. Experiments with intact sarcoplasmic reticulum membranes give approximately the same value for N. The relative binding constants are Kav approximately 1 for the phosphatidylcholine label and Kav approximately 0.65 for the cholesterol spin-label. Thus, cholesterol does contact the surface of the protein, but with a somewhat lower probability than phosphatidylcholine. This is confirmed by competition experiments where unlabeled cholesterol and the phospholipid spin-label are both present in the bilayer. Evidently the flexible acyl chains of the phospholipid molecules accommodate more readily to the irregular surface of the protein than does the rigid steroid structure of cholesterol.  相似文献   

14.
Recently, developments in time-resolved spin-label electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy have contributed considerably to the study of biomembranes. Two different applications of electron spin echo spectroscopy of spin-labelled phospholipids are reviewed here: (1) the use of partially relaxed echo-detected ESR spectra to study the librational lipid-chain motions in the low-temperature phases of phospholipid bilayers; (2) the use of electron spin echo envelope modulation spectroscopy to determine the penetration of water into phospholipid membranes. Results are described for phosphatidylcholine bilayer membranes, with and without equimolar cholesterol, that are obtained with phosphatidylcholine spin probes site-specifically labelled throughout the sn-2 chain.  相似文献   

15.
Apocytochrome c derived from horse heart cytochrome c was spin-labeled on the cysteine residue at position 14 or 17 in the N-terminal region of the primary sequence, and cytochrome c from yeast was spin-labeled on the single cysteine residue at sequence position 102 in the C-terminal region. The spin-labeled apocytochrome c and cytochrome c were bound to fluid bilayers composed of different negatively charged phospholipids that also contained phospholipid probes that were spin-labeled either in the headgroup or at different positions in the sn-2 acyl chain. The location of the spin-labeled cysteine residues on the lipid-bound proteins was determined relative to the spin-label positions in the different spin-labeled phospholipids by the influence of spin-spin interactions on the microwave saturation properties of the spin-label electron spin resonance spectra. The enhanced spin relaxation observed in the doubly labeled systems arises from Heisenberg spin exchange, which is determined by the accessibility of the spin-label group on the protein to that on the lipid. It is found that the labeled cysteine groups in horse heart apocytochrome c are located closest to the 14-C atom of the lipid acyl chain when the protein is bound to dimyristoyl- or dioleoyl-phosphatidylglycerol, and to that of the 5-C atom when the protein is bound to a dimyristoylphosphatidylglycerol/dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (15:85 mol/mol mixture. On binding to dioleoylphosphatidylglycerol, the labeled cysteine residue in yeast cytochrome c is located closest to the phospholipid headgroups but possibly between the polar group region and the 5-C atom of the acyl chains. These data determine the extent to which the different regions of the proteins are able to penetrate negatively charged phospholipid bilayers.  相似文献   

16.
The energetically preferred structures of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC)-cholesterol bilayers were determined at a 1:1 mole ratio. Crystallographic symmetry operations were used to generate planar bilayers of cholesterol and DMPC. Energy minimization was carried out with respect to bond rotations, rigid body motions, and the two-dimensional lattice constants. The lowest energy structures had a hydrogen bond between the cholesterol hydroxyl and the carbonyl oxygen of the sn-2 acyl chain, but the largest contribution to the intermolecular energy was from the nonbonded interactions between the flat alpha surface of cholesterol and the acyl chains of DMPC. Two modes of packing in the bilayer were found; in structure A (the global minimum), unlike molecules are nearest neighbors, whereas in structure B (second lowest energy) like-like intermolecular interactions predominate. Crystallographic close packing of the molecules in the bilayer was achieved, as judged from the molecular areas and the bilayer thickness. These energy-minimized structures are consistent with the available experimental data on mixed bilayers of lecithin and cholesterol, and may be used as starting points for molecular dynamics or other calculations on bilayers.  相似文献   

17.
M Auger  H C Jarrell  I C Smith 《Biochemistry》1988,27(13):4660-4667
The interactions of the local anesthetic tetracaine with multilamellar dispersions of 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DMPC) and cholesterol have been investigated by deuterium nuclear magnetic resonance of specifically deuteriated tetracaines, DMPC and cholesterol. Experiments were performed at pH 5.5, when the anesthetic is primarily charged, and at pH 9.5, when it is primarily uncharged. The partition coefficients of the anesthetic in the membrane have been measured at both pH values for phosphatidylcholine bilayers with and without cholesterol. The higher partition coefficients obtained at pH 9.5 reflect the hydrophobic interactions between the uncharged form of the anesthetic and the hydrocarbon region of the bilayer. The lower partition coefficients for the DMPC/cholesterol system at both pH values suggest that cholesterol, which increases the order of the lipid chains, decreases the solubility of tetracaine into the bilayer. For phosphatidylcholine bilayers, it has been proposed [Boulanger, Y., Schreier, S., & Smith, I. C. P. (1981) Biochemistry 20, 6824-6830] that the charged tetracaine at low pH is located mostly at the phospholipid headgroup level while the uncharged tetracaine intercalates more deeply into the bilayer. The present study suggests that the location of tetracaine in the cholesterol-containing system is different from that in pure phosphatidylcholine bilayers: the anesthetic sits higher in the membrane. An increase in temperature results in a deeper penetration of the anesthetic into the bilayer. Moreover, the incorporation of the anesthetic into DMPC bilayers with or without cholesterol results in a reduction of the lipid order parameters both in the plateau and in the tail regions of the acyl chains, this effect being greater with the charged form of the anesthetic.  相似文献   

18.
Spin-label electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy and spectrophotometry at fixed wavelength are used to study fully hydrated aqueous dispersions of phosphatidylcholines (PCs) with poly(ethylene glycol:2000)-phosphatidylethanolamines (PEG:2000-PEs). PEG:2000-PE is a micelle-forming polymer-lipid that is extensively used for increasing the lifetime of PC liposomes in the blood circulation through a steric stabilisation effect. The PC lipids and the PEG:2000-PE polymer-lipids have the same acyl chain length of either dimiristoyl (DM) or distearoyl (DS) chains. DMPC/PEG:2000-DMPE and DSPC/PEG:2000-DSPE mixtures were investigated over the entire range of relative compositions (0-100 mol%). In both dispersions, the low-temperature conventional spin label ESR spectra and the temperature dependence of the absorbance at 400 nm give an indication of the conversion from lamellae to micelles with increasing PEG:2000-PEs content. The physical state of the lipid assemblies, lamellar or micellar, is dependent not only on PEG:2000-PEs content, but also on the length of hydrocarbon chain of the lipid matrix. Micellisation is attained more readily in dispersions with longer hydrocarbon chains (i.e. in DSPC/PEG:2000-DSPE mixtures) than in those with shorter acyl chains (i.e. in DMPC/PEG:2000-DMPE mixtures). Saturation transfer ESR (ST-ESR) and absorbance measurements reflect the disaggregation of the bilayers and a reduction in the size of the lipid aggregates by PEG:2000-PEs at low content.  相似文献   

19.
We used differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy to investigate the interactions of Losartan, a potent, orally active Angiotensin II AT(1) receptor antagonist with phospholipid membranes. DSC results showed that Losartan sensitively affected the chain-melting behavior of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) bilayer membranes. ESR spectroscopy showed that phosphatidylcholines spin-labeled at the 5-position of the sn-2 acyl chain (n-PCSL with n=5), incorporated either in DMPC or DPPC bilayers containing Losartan, were restricted in motion both in the gel and in the liquid-crystalline membrane phases, indicating a location of the antagonist close to the interfacial region of the phosphatidylcholine bilayer. At high drug concentrations (mole fraction >/= x=0.60), the decrease in chain mobility registered by 5-PCSL in fluid-phase membranes is smaller than that found at lower concentrations, whereas that registered by 14-PCSL is further increased. This indicates a different mode of interaction with Losartan at high concentrations, possibly arising from a location deeper within the bilayer. Additionally, Losartan reduced the spin-spin broadening of 12-PCSL spin labels in the gel-phase of DMPC and DPPC bilayers. As a conclusion, our study has shown that Losartan interacts with phospholipid membranes by affecting both their thermotropic behavior and molecular mobility.  相似文献   

20.
J J Yin  J B Feix    J S Hyde 《Biophysical journal》1987,52(6):1031-1038
Electron-electron double resonance (ELDOR) and saturation-recovery spectroscopy employing 14N:15N stearic acid spin-label pairs have been used to study the effects of cholesterol on lateral diffusion and vertical fluctuations in lipid bilayers. The 14N:15N continuous wave electron-electron double resonance (CW ELDOR) theory has been developed using rate equations based on the relaxation model. The collision frequency between 14N-16 doxyl stearate and 15N-16 doxyl stearate, WHex (16:16), is indicative of lateral diffusion of the spin probes, while the collision frequency between 14N-16 doxyl stearate and 15N-5 doxyl stearate, WHex (16:5), provides information on vertical fluctuations of the 14N-16 doxyl stearate spin probe toward the membrane surface. Our results show that: (a) cholesterol decreases the electron spin-lattice relaxation time Tle of 14N-16 doxyl stearate spin label in dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and egg yolk phosphatidylcholine (egg PC). (b) Cholesterol increases the biomolecular collision frequency WHex (16:16) and decreases WHex (16:5), suggesting that incorporation of cholesterol significantly orders the part of the bilayer that it occupies and disorders the interior region of the bilayer. (c) Alkyl chain unsaturation of the host lipid moderates the effect of cholesterol on both vertical fluctuations and lateral diffusion of 14N-16 doxyl stearate. And (d), there are marked differences in the effects of cholesterol on lateral diffusion and vertical fluctuations between 0-30 mol% and 30-50 mol% of cholesterol that suggest an inhomogeneous distribution of cholesterol in the membrane.  相似文献   

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