首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 593 毫秒
1.
There is overwhelming evidence that lipid bilayer regions of animal cell membranes are in a liquid state. Quantitative models of these bilayer regions must then be models of liquids. These liquids are highly non-ideal. For example, it has been known for more than 75 years that mixtures of cholesterol and certain phospholipids undergo an area contraction or condensation in lipid monolayers at the air-water interface. In the past 3 years, a thermodynamic model of "condensed complexes" has been proposed to account for this non-ideal behavior. Here we give an overview of the model, its relation to other models, and to modern views of the properties of animal cell membranes.  相似文献   

2.
Increasing experimental evidence has shown that membrane protein functionality depends on molecular composition of cell membranes. However, the origin of this dependence is not fully understood. It is reasonable to assume that specific lipid-protein interactions are important, yet more generic effects due to mechanical properties of lipid bilayers likely play a significant role too. Previously it has been demonstrated using models for elastic properties of membranes and lateral pressure profiles of lipid bilayers that the mechanical properties of a lipid bilayer can contribute as much as ∼10 kBT to the free energy difference associated with a change in protein conformational state. Here, we extend those previous approaches to a more realistic model for a large mechanosensitive channel (MscL). We use molecular dynamics together with the MARTINI model to simulate the open and closed states of MscL embedded in a DOPC bilayer. We introduce a procedure to calculate the mechanical energy change in the channel gating using a three-dimensional pressure distribution inside a membrane, computed from the molecular dynamics simulations. We decompose the mechanical energy to terms associated with area dilation and shape contribution. Our results highlight that the lateral pressure profile of a lipid bilayer together with the shape change in gating can induce a contribution of ∼30 kBT on the gating energy of MscL. This contribution arises largely from the interfacial tension between hydrophobic and hydrophilic regions in a lipid bilayer.  相似文献   

3.
Interactions between lipid and cholesterol molecules in membranes play an important role in the structural and functional properties of cell membranes. Although structural properties of lipid-cholesterol mixtures have been extensively studied, an understanding of the role of cholesterol in the lateral organization of bilayers has been elusive. In this article, we propose a simple yet powerful model, based on self-consistent mean-field theory and molecular dynamics simulations, for lipid bilayers containing cholesterol. Properties predicted by our model are shown to be in excellent agreement with experimental data. Our model predicts that cholesterol induces structural changes in the bilayer through the formation of regions of ordered lipids surrounding each cholesterol molecule. We find that the "smooth" and "rough" sides of cholesterol play crucial roles in formation and distribution of the ordered regions. Our model is predictive in that input parameters are obtained from independent atomistic molecular dynamics simulations. The model and method are general enough to describe other heterogeneous lipid bilayers, including lipid rafts.  相似文献   

4.
Prior to the 1960s, the model for the molecular structure of cell membranes consisted of a lipid bilayer held in place by a thin film of electrostatically-associated protein stretched over the bilayer surface: (the Danielli–Davson–Robertson “unit membrane” model). Andrew Benson, an expert in the lipids of chloroplast thylakoid membranes, questioned the relevance of the unit membrane model for biological membranes, especially for thylakoid membranes, instead of emphasizing evidence in favour of hydrophobic interactions of membrane lipids within complementary hydrophobic regions of membrane-spanning proteins. With Elliot Weier, Benson postulated a remarkable subunit lipoprotein monolayer model for thylakoids. Following the advent of freeze fracture microscopy and the fluid lipid-protein mosaic model by Singer and Nicolson, the subunits, membrane-spanning integral proteins, span a dynamic lipid bilayer. Now that high resolution X-ray structures of photosystems I and II are being revealed, the seminal contribution of Andrew Benson can be appreciated.  相似文献   

5.
Direct measurement of the partition coefficient of n-hexane into phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylcholine-cholesterol bilayers showed that (a) isotropic liquids are not good models for lipid bilayers and (b), Regular Solution Theory cannot, in general, be applied to lipid bilayer membranes at temperatures above their phase transition. Theoretical and experimental evidence is given.  相似文献   

6.
Low-intensity ultrasound can modulate action potential firing in neurons in vitro and in vivo. It has been suggested that this effect is mediated by mechanical interactions of ultrasound with neural cell membranes. We investigated whether these proposed interactions could be reproduced for further study in a synthetic lipid bilayer system. We measured the response of protein-free model membranes to low-intensity ultrasound using electrophysiology and laser Doppler vibrometry. We find that ultrasonic radiation force causes oscillation and displacement of lipid membranes, resulting in small (<1%) changes in membrane area and capacitance. Under voltage-clamp, the changes in capacitance manifest as capacitive currents with an exponentially decaying sinusoidal time course. The membrane oscillation can be modeled as a fluid dynamic response to a step change in pressure caused by ultrasonic radiation force, which disrupts the balance of forces between bilayer tension and hydrostatic pressure. We also investigated the origin of the radiation force acting on the bilayer. Part of the radiation force results from the reflection of the ultrasound from the solution/air interface above the bilayer (an effect that is specific to our experimental configuration) but part appears to reflect a direct interaction of ultrasound with the bilayer, related to either acoustic streaming or scattering of sound by the bilayer. Based on these results, we conclude that synthetic lipid bilayers can be used to study the effects of ultrasound on cell membranes and membrane proteins.  相似文献   

7.
The enhanced permeability of lipid bilayer membranes at their gel-to-liquid phase transition has been explained using a “bilayer lipid heterogeneity” model, postulating leaky interfacial regions between still solid and melting liquid phases. The addition of lysolipid to dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine bilayers dramatically enhances the amount of, and speed at which, encapsulated markers or drugs are released at this, already leaky, phase transition through these interfacial regions. To characterize and attempt to determine the mechanism behind lysolipid-generated permeability enhancement, dithionite permeability and doxorubicin release were measured for lysolipid and non-lysolipid, containing membranes. Rapid release of contents from lysolipid-containing membranes appears to occur through lysolipid-stabilized pores rather than a simple enhancement due to increased drug solubility in the bilayer. A dramatic enhancement in the permeability rate constant begins about two degrees below the calorimetric peak of the thermal transition, and extends several degrees past it. The maximum permeability rate constant coincides exactly with this calorimetric peak. Although some lysolipid desorption from liquid state membranes cannot be dismissed, dialyzation above Tm and mass spectrometry analysis indicate lysolipid must, and can, remain in the membrane for the permeability enhancement, presumably as lysolipid stabilized pores in the grain boundary regions of the partially melted solid phase.  相似文献   

8.
9.
The activity of antimicrobial peptides has been shown to depend on the composition of the target cell membrane. The bacterial selectivity of most antimicrobial peptides has been attributed to the presence of abundant acidic phospholipids and the absence of cholesterol in bacterial membranes. The high amount of cholesterol present in eukaryotic cell membranes is thought to prevent peptide-induced membrane disruption by increasing the cohesion and stiffness of the lipid bilayer membrane. While the role of cholesterol on an antimicrobial peptide-induced membrane disrupting activity has been reported for simple, homogeneous lipid bilayer systems, it is not well understood for complex, heterogeneous lipid bilayers exhibiting phase separation (or "lipid rafts"). In this study, we show that cholesterol does not inhibit the disruption of raft-containing 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine:1,2-dipalmitoyol-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine model membranes by four different cationic antimicrobial peptides, MSI-78, MSI-594, MSI-367 and MSI-843 which permeabilize membranes. Conversely, the presence of cholesterol effectively inhibits the disruption of non-raft containing 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine or 1,2-dipalmitoyol-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine lipid bilayers, even for antimicrobial peptides that do not show a clear preference between the ordered gel and disordered liquid-crystalline phases. Our results show that the peptide selectivity is not only dependent on the lipid phase but also on the presence of phase separation in heterogeneous lipid systems.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Core peptide (CP) is a unique peptide derived from the transmembrane sequence of T cell antigen receptor (TCR)-alpha chain and is capable of inhibiting the immune response both invitro and in animal models of T cell mediated inflammation. The structure of CP, with sequence GLRILLLKV, is similar to the amphipathic region of many peptides. Unlike antimicrobial peptides, however, which damage cell membranes, electron microscopy and propidium iodide exclusion assays on cell membranes suggest that CP does not create pores and may act by interfering with signal transduction at the membrane level. To investigate this effect further we report the results of31P and2H solid-state NMR spectroscopy of CP on model membranes. As predicted, even at high concentrations of CP, the structure of model membranes was not significantly perturbed. Only at the very high peptide-to-lipid molar ratio of 1∶10 significant effects on the model membranes were observed. We conclude that CP does not destroy the integrity of the lipid bilayer.  相似文献   

11.
Lipid bilayers provide a solute-proof barrier that is widely used in living systems. It has long been recognized that the structural changes of lipids during the phase transition from bilayer to non-bilayer have striking similarities with those accompanying membrane fusion processes. In spite of this resemblance, the numerous quantitative studies on pure lipid bilayers are difficult to apply to real membranes. One reason is that in living matter, instead of pure lipids, lipid mixtures are involved and there is currently no model that establishes the connection between pure lipids and lipid mixtures. Here, we make this connection by showing how to obtain (i) the short-range repulsion between bilayers made of lipid mixtures and, (ii) the pressure at which transition from bilayer phase to non-bilayer phases occur. We validated our models by fitting the experimental data of several lipid mixtures to the theoretical data calculated based on our model. These results provide a useful tool to quantitatively predict the behavior of complex membranes at low hydration.  相似文献   

12.
Understanding the phase behavior of biological membranes is helped by the study of more simple systems. Model membranes that have as few as 3 components exhibit complex phase behavior that can be well described, providing insight for biological membranes. A number of different studies are in agreement on general findings for some compositional phase diagrams, in particular, those that model the outer leaflet of animal cell plasma membranes. These model mixtures include cholesterol, together with one high-melting lipid and one low-melting lipid. An interesting finding is of two categories of such 3-component mixtures, leading to what we term Type I and Type II compositional phase diagrams. The latter have phase regions of macroscopic coexisting domains of {Lα + Lβ + Lo} and of {Lα + Lo}, with domains resolved under the light microscope. Type I mixtures have the same phase coexistence regions, but the domains seem to be nanoscopic. Type I mixtures are likely to be better models for biological membranes.  相似文献   

13.
Electron paramagnetic resonance observations were made on nitroxide spin-labeled molecules which were bound to the TC-83 vaccine strain of Venezuelan equine encephalomyelitis virus. Paramagnetic resonance parameters derived from the observations and their dependence on sample temperature were similar but not identical to those which have been reported for these labels dissolved in lipid bilayer membranes of mammalian and bacterial origin. The data are consistent with the existence of a bilayer lipid structure in the virion envelope which has a mechanical rigidity substantially greater than that of bilayers in cellular membranes. A model is presented which assumes the location of the lipid bilayer outside the nucleoprotein capsid and inside a spherical layer of envelope proteins. The model is in accord with Harrison's X-ray diffraction results for Sindbis virus. The model is discussed in terms of its implications with respect to the role played by lipid in viral maturation and infectivity.  相似文献   

14.
Many prokaryotic organisms (archaea and bacteria) are covered by a regularly ordered surface layer (S-layer) as the outermost cell wall component. S-layers are built up of a single protein or glycoprotein species and represent the simplest biological membrane developed during evolution. Pores in S-layers are of regular size and morphology, and functional groups on the protein lattice are aligned in well-defined positions and orientations. Due to the high degree of structural regularity S-layers represent unique systems for studying the structure, morphogenesis, and function of layered supramolecular assemblies. Isolated S-layer subunits of numerous organisms are able to assemble into monomolecular arrays either in suspension, at air/water interfaces, on planar mono- and bilayer lipid films, on liposomes and on solid supports (e.g. silicon wafers). Detailed studies on composite S-layer/lipid structures have been performed with Langmuir films, freestanding bilayer lipid membranes, solid supported lipid membranes, and liposomes. Lipid molecules in planar films and liposomes interact via their head groups with defined domains on the S-layer lattice. Electrostatic interactions are the most prevalent forces. The hydrophobic chains of the lipid monolayers are almost unaffected by the attachment of the S-layer and no impact on the hydrophobic thickness of the membranes has been observed. Upon crystallization of a coherent S-layer lattice on planar and vesicular lipid membranes, an increase in molecular order is observed, which is reflected in a decrease of the membrane tension and an enhanced mobility of probe molecules within an S-layer-supported bilayer. Thus, the terminology 'semifluid membrane' has been introduced for describing S-layer-supported lipid membranes. The most important feature of composite S-layer/lipid membranes is an enhanced stability in comparison to unsupported membranes.  相似文献   

15.
The enhanced permeability of lipid bilayer membranes at their gel-to-liquid phase transition has been explained using a "bilayer lipid heterogeneity" model, postulating leaky interfacial regions between still solid and melting liquid phases. The addition of lysolipid to dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine bilayers dramatically enhances the amount of, and speed at which, encapsulated markers or drugs are released at this, already leaky, phase transition through these interfacial regions. To characterize and attempt to determine the mechanism behind lysolipid-generated permeability enhancement, dithionite permeability and doxorubicin release were measured for lysolipid and non-lysolipid, containing membranes. Rapid release of contents from lysolipid-containing membranes appears to occur through lysolipid-stabilized pores rather than a simple enhancement due to increased drug solubility in the bilayer. A dramatic enhancement in the permeability rate constant begins about two degrees below the calorimetric peak of the thermal transition, and extends several degrees past it. The maximum permeability rate constant coincides exactly with this calorimetric peak. Although some lysolipid desorption from liquid state membranes cannot be dismissed, dialyzation above T(m) and mass spectrometry analysis indicate lysolipid must, and can, remain in the membrane for the permeability enhancement, presumably as lysolipid stabilized pores in the grain boundary regions of the partially melted solid phase.  相似文献   

16.
Intracellular uptake of nanoparticles (NPs) may induce phase transitions, restructuring, stretching, or even complete disruption of the cell membrane. Therefore, NP cytotoxicity assessment requires a thorough understanding of the mechanisms by which these engineered nanostructures interact with the cell membrane. In this study, extensive Coarse-Grained Molecular Dynamics (MD) simulations are performed to investigate the partitioning of an anionic, ligand-decorated NP in model membranes containing dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) phospholipids and different concentrations of cholesterol. Spontaneous fusion and translocation of the anionic NP is not observed in any of the 10-µs unbiased MD simulations, indicating that longer timescales may be required for such phenomena to occur. This picture is supported by the free energy analysis, revealing a considerable free energy barrier for NP translocation across the lipid bilayer. 5-µs unbiased MD simulations with the NP inserted in the bilayer core reveal that the hydrophobic and hydrophilic ligands of the NP surface rearrange to form optimal contacts with the lipid bilayer, leading to the so-called snorkeling effect. Inside cholesterol-containing bilayers, the NP induces rearrangement of the structure of the lipid bilayer in its vicinity from the liquid-ordered to the liquid phase spanning a distance almost twice its core radius (8–10 nm). Based on the physical insights obtained in this study, we propose a mechanism of cellular anionic NPpartitioning, which requires structural rearrangements of both the NP and the bilayer, and conclude that the translocation of anionic NPs through cholesterol-rich membranes must be accompanied by formation of cholesterol-lean regions in the proximity of NPs.  相似文献   

17.
BackgroundThe use of functionalized iron oxide nanoparticles of various chemical properties and architectures offers a new promising direction in theranostic applications. The increasing applications of nanoparticles in medicine require that these engineered nanomaterials will contact human cells without damaging essential tissues. Thus, efficient delivery must be achieved, while minimizing cytotoxicity during passage through cell membranes to reach intracellular target compartments.MethodsDifferential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC), molecular modeling, and atomistic Molecular Dynamics (MD) simulations were performed for two magnetite nanoparticles coated with polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) and polyarabic acid (ARA) in order to assess their interactions with model DPPC membranes.ResultsDSC experiments showed that both nanoparticles interact strongly with DPPC lipid head groups, albeit to a different degree, which was further confirmed and quantified by MD simulations. The two systems were simulated, and dynamical and structural properties were monitored. A bimodal diffusion was observed for both nanoparticles, representing the diffusion in the water phase and in the proximity of the lipid bilayer. Nanoparticles did not enter the bilayer, but caused ordering of the head groups and reduced the area per lipid compared to the pure bilayer, with MAG-PVA interacting more strongly and being closer to the lipid bilayer.ConclusionsResults of DSC experiments and MD simulations were in excellent agreement. Our findings demonstrate that the external coating is a key factor that affects nanoparticle-membrane interactions. Magnetite nanoparticles coated with PVA and ARA did not destabilize the model membrane and can be considered promising platforms for biomedical applications.General significanceUnderstanding the physico-chemical interactions of different nanoparticle coatings in contact with model cell membranes is the first step for assessing toxic response and could lead to predictive models for estimating toxicity. DSC in combination with MD simulations is an effective strategy to assess physico-chemical interactions of coated nanoparticles with lipid bilayers.  相似文献   

18.
The effect of three water-soluble fusogens: dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), glycerol and sucrose on the structural properties of model lipid membranes has been studied by electron spin resonance (ESR) using 5-doxylstearic acid as a spin probe and by fluorescence spectroscopy using pyrene as an excimer forming fluorescent probe. All three fusogens tested produce a marked increase in the order parameter of the region close to the polar surface of the lipid bilayer. The ordering effect of DMSO, but not of glycerol and sucrose, is much stronger with respect to membranes prepared from acidic than from neutral phospholipids. The membrane-perturbing action of glycerol and sucrose manifests itself also in the reduced lateral mobility of membrane incorporated pyrene, indicating thus a decreased fluidity of the bilayer hydrophobic region. The structural perturbations produced in model membranes by DMSO, glycerol and sucrose are discussed in relation to the mechanism by which these substances promote cell fusion.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of alpha-tocopherol (alpha-tp) prepared in solvents of different polarity in a wide range of concentrations (10(-4) M - 10(-25) M) on lipid phase structural characteristics of microsomal membranes isolated from mouse liver cells has been investigated in vitro. Structural changes in membranes were detected on a Bruker-200D ESR-spectrometer (Germany) by the method of spin probes. Changes in the rigidity of surface lipid bilayer regions (8 A) and microviscosity of deep membrane layers (20 A) were studied using the stable nitroxyl radicals 5- and 16-doxylstearic acids, correspondingly. As a result, nonlinear multimodal dose dependences were obtained. It was demonstrated that the physiological (10(-4) M - 10(-9) M) and ultralow doses of alpha-tocopherol up to "apparent" concentrations (10(-11) M - 10(-25) M) increased the rigidity of surface lipid bilayer regions and microviscosity in the depth of membrane. Additionally, these doses of alpha-tp induced an increase in the number of thermoinduced structural transitions in deep lipid bilayer regions. The effect at "apparent" concentrations (< 10(-18) M) has only been observed in polar alpha-tocopherol solutions. The results obtained are statistically reliable with a significance level of 95%.  相似文献   

20.
Lipid bilayer assembly in cell membranes has been simulated with total lipid extracts from human red blood cells and from mesophilic and thermophilic bacteria grown at several temperatures. Aqueous dispersions of these natural lipid mixtures form surface bilayers, a single bimolecular lipid state, but only at the growth temperature of the source organism. Thus, a single isolated bilayer state forms spontaneously in vitro from lipids that are available in vivo at the growth temperature of the cell. Surface bilayers form at a specific temperature that is a function of hydrocarbon chain length and degree of fatty acid unsaturation of the phospholipids; this property is proposed as an essential element in the control of membrane lipid composition.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号