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1.
We report a simple new nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopic method to investigate order and dynamics in phospholipids in which inter-proton pair order parameters are derived by using high resolution 13C cross-polarization/magic angle spinning (CP/MAS) NMR combined with 1H dipolar echo preparation. The resulting two-dimensional NMR spectra permit determination of the motionally averaged interpair second moment for protons attached to each resolved 13C site, from which the corresponding interpair order parameters can be deducted. A spin-lock mixing pulse before cross-polarization enables the detection of spin diffusion amongst the different regions of the lipid molecules. The method was applied to a variety of model membrane systems, including 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DMPC)/sterol and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC)/sterol model membranes. The results agree well with previous studies using specifically deuterium labeled or predeuterated phospholipid molecules. It was also found that efficient spin diffusion takes place within the phospholipid acyl chains, and between the glycerol backbone and choline headgroup of these molecules. The experiment was also applied to biosynthetically 13C-labeled ergosterol incorporated into phosphatidylcholine bilayers. These results indicate highly restricted motions of both the sterol nucleus and the aliphatic side chain, and efficient spin exchange between these structurally dissimilar regions of the sterol molecule. Finally, studies were carried out in the lamellar liquid crystalline (L alpha) and inverted hexagonal (HII) phases of 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (DOPE). These results indicated that phosphatidylethanolamine lamellar phases are more ordered than the equivalent phases of phosphatidylcholines. In the HII (inverted hexagonal) phase, despite the increased translational freedom, there is highly constrained packing of the lipid molecules, particularly in the acyl chain region.  相似文献   

2.
Solid-state 1H, 13C, 14N, and 31P NMR spectroscopy was used to study the effects of the bee venom peptide, melittin, on aligned multilayers of dimyristoyl-, dilauryl- and ditetradecyl-phosphatidylcholines above the gel to liquid-crystalline transition temperature, Tc. Both 31P spectra from the lipid headgroups and 1H resonances from the lipid acyl chain methylene groups indicate that the peptide does not affect the mosaic spread of the lipid molecules at lipid:peptide molar ratios of 10:1, or higher. None of the samples prepared above Tc showed any evidence of the formation of hexagonal or isotropic phases. Melittin-induced changes in the chemical shift anisotropy of the headgroup phosphate and the lipid carbonyl groups, and in the choline 14N quadrupole splittings, show that the peptide has effects on the headgroup order and on the molecular organization in the sections of the acyl chains nearest to the bilayer surface. The spin-lattice relaxation time for the lipid acyl chain methylene protons was found to increase and the rotating-frame longitudinal relaxation time to markedly decrease with the addition of melittin, suggesting that motions on the nanosecond time scale are restricted, whereas the slower, collective motions are enhanced in the presence of the peptide.  相似文献   

3.
Solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and X-ray powder diffraction were used to investigate the mechanism of trehalose (TRE) stabilization of lipid bilayers. Calorimetric investigation of dry TRE-stabilized bilayers reveals a first-order phase transition (L kappa----L lambda) at temperatures similar to the L beta'----(P beta')----L alpha transition of hydrated lipid bilayers. X-ray diffraction studies show that dry mixtures of TRE and 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) have a lamellar structure with excess crystalline TRE being present. The L kappa phase shows typical gel-phase X-ray diffraction patterns. In contrast, the L lambda-phase diffraction patterns indicate disordered hydrocarbon chains. 2H NMR of specifically 2H chain-labeled DPPC confirmed that the acyl chains are disordered in the L lambda phase over their entire lengths. 2H spectra of the choline headgroup show hindered molecular motions as compared to dry DPPC alone, and 13C spectra of the sn-2-carbonyl show rigid lattice powder patterns indicating very little motion at the headgroup and interfacial regions. Thus, the sugar interacts extensively with the hydrophilic regions of the lipid, from the choline and the phosphate moieties in the headgroup to the glycerol and carbonyls in the interfacial region. We postulate that the sugar and the lipid form an extensive hydrogen-bonded network with the sugar acting as a spacer to expand the distance between lipids in the bilayer. The fluidity of the hydrophobic region in the L lambda phase together with the bilayer stabilization at the headgroup contributes to membrane viability in anhydrobiotic organisms.  相似文献   

4.
Magic-angle spinning 1H and 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) have been employed to study 50%-by-weight aqueous dispersions of 1-octadecanoyl-2-decanoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (C[18]:C[10]PC) and 1-octadecanoyl-2-d19-decanoyl-PC (C[18]:C[10]PC-d19), mixed-chain phospholipids which can form interdigitated multibilayers. The 1H NMR linewidth for methyl protons of the choline headgroup has been used to monitor the liquid crystalline-to-gel (LC-to-G) phase transition and confirm variations between freezing and melting temperatures. Both 1H and 13C spin-lattice relaxation times indicate unusual restrictions on segmental reorientation at megahertz frequencies for C(18):C(10)PC as compared with symmetric-chain species in the LC state; nevertheless each chemical moiety of the mixed-chain phospholipid exhibits motional behavior that may be classified as liquidlike. Two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser spectroscopy (NOESY) on C(18):C(10)PC and C(18):C(10)PC-d19 reveals cross-peaks between the omega-methyl protons of the C18 chain and the N-methyl protons of the phosphocholine headgroup, and several experimental and theoretical considerations argue against an interpretation based on spin diffusion. Using NMR relaxation times and NOESY connectivities along with a computational formalism for four-spin systems (Keepers, J. W., and T. L. James. 1984. J. Magn. Reson. 57:404-426), an estimate of 3.5 A is obtained for the average distance between the omega-methyl protons of the C18 chain and the N-methyl protons of the phosphocholine headgroup. This finding is consistent with a degree of interdigitation similar to that proposed for organized assemblies of gel-state phosphatidylcholine molecules with widely disparate acyl-chain lengths (Hui, S. W., and C.-H. Huang. 1986. Biochemistry. 25:1330-1335); however, acyl-chain bendback or other intermolecular interactions may also contribute to the NOESY results. For multibilayers of C(18):C(10)PC in the gel phase, 13C chemical-shift measurements indicate that trans conformers predominate along both acyl chains. 13C Spin-lattice relaxation times confirm the unusual motional restrictions noted in the LC state; nevertheless, 13C and 1H rotating-frame relaxation times indicate that the interdigitated arrangement enhances chain or bilayer motions which occur at mid-kilohertz frequencies.  相似文献   

5.
F Adebodun  J Chung  B Montez  E Oldfield  X Shan 《Biochemistry》1992,31(18):4502-4509
We have obtained 1H and 13C magic-angle sample-spinning (MAS) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra of three glycosyldiacylglycerol-water (1:1, weight ratio) mesophases, at 11.7 T, as a function of temperature, in order to probe lipid headgroup, backbone, and acyl chain dynamics by using natural-abundance NMR probes. The systems investigated were monogalactosyldiacyldiglyceride [MGDG; primarily 1,2-di[(9Z,12Z,15Z)octadec-9,12,15-trienoyl++ +]-3-beta-D-galactopyranosyl- sn-glycerol]; digalactosyldiacyldiglyceride [DGDG; primarily 1,2-di[(9Z,12Z,15Z)octadec-9,12,15-trienoyl++ +]-3- (alpha-D-galactopyranosyl-1-6-beta-D-glactopyranosyl)-sn-glycerol] ; and sulfoquinovosyldiacyldiglyceride [SQDG; primarily 1-[(9Z,12Z,15Z)octadec-9,12,15-trienoyl]-2 -hexadecanoyl-3-(6-deoxyl-6- sulfono-alpha-D-glucopyranosyl)-sn-glycerol]. At approximately 22 degrees C, all three lipid-water systems give well-resoled 13C and 1H MAS NMR spectra, characteristic of fluid, liquid-crystalline mesophases. 13C spin-lattice relaxation times of the headgroup and glycerol backbone carbons of all three materials give, within experimental error, the same NT1 values (approximately 400 ms), implying similar high-frequency motions, independent of headgroup size and charge. Upon cooling, pronounced line broadenings are observed, due to an increase in slow motional behavior. For each lipid, the onset of line broadening is seen with the glycosyl headgroup, glycerol backbone, and the first two or three carbons of the acyl chains. By approximately -20 degrees, all headgroup carbon resonances are broadened beyond detection. Both galactose moieties in DGDG "freeze out" together, implying a rigid-body motion of the disaccharide unit. Upon further cooling, the bulk polymethylene chain resonances in all three systems (in both 13C and 1H MAS) broaden greatly, followed by the olefinic and allylic carbon resonances.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
A direct and quantitative analysis of the internal structure and dynamics of a polyunsaturated lipid bilayer composed of 1-stearoyl-2-docosahexaenoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (18:0-22:6n3-PC) containing 29 mol% cholesterol was carried out by neutron diffraction, (2)H-NMR and (13)C-MAS NMR. Scattering length distribution functions of cholesterol segments as well as of the sn-1 and sn-2 hydrocarbon chains of 18:0-22:6n3-PC were obtained by conducting experiments with specifically deuterated cholesterol and lipids. Cholesterol orients parallel to the phospholipids, with the A-ring near the lipid glycerol and the terminal methyl groups 3 ? away from the bilayer center. Previously, we reported that the density of polyunsaturated docosahexaenoic acid (DHA, 22:6n3) chains was higher near the lipid-water interface. Addition of cholesterol partially redistributes DHA density from near the lipid-water interface to the center of the hydrocarbon region. Cholesterol raises chain-order parameters of both stearic acid and DHA chains. The fractional order increase for stearic acid methylene carbons C(8)-C(18) is larger, reflecting the redistribution of DHA chain density toward the bilayer center. The correlation times of DHA chain isomerization are short and mostly unperturbed by the presence of cholesterol. The uneven distribution of saturated and polyunsaturated chain densities and the cholesterol-induced balancing of chain distributions may have important implications for the function and integrity of membrane receptors, such as rhodopsin.  相似文献   

7.
W Stoffel  K Bister 《Biochemistry》1975,14(13):2841-2847
13-C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) studies are described regarding the lipid organization in the envelope of the vesicular stomatitis virion. The fatty acid chains (oleic acid) and the choline moiety of the 3-sn-phosphatidylcholine and spingomyelin have been labeled specifically with 13-C by growing the virions in prelabeled host cells (BHK 21 cells). The results suggest that 130C NMR spectroscopy is a very feasible method for the study of natural membranes provided the isotope is highly enriched in specific positions and incorporated biochemically. Spin-lattice relaxation (T1) measurements of particular C atoms have been carried out with whole virions, with virions deprived of their surface projections by trypsinization but unaltered in their shape and size, and with liposomes prepared from the total lipid mixture of the envelope in order to get insight into the molecular structure of this model membrane. The mobility of the central part of 11-13-C-labeled oleic acid incorporated into the ester and amide lipids and the choline group of 3-sn-phosphatidylcholine and sphingomyelin is very restricted as indicated by their short T1 times. It is concluded from the data presented here that the high cholesterol content (cholesterol/P: 0.7) of the envelope lipid phase is responsible for the rather rigidly packed envelope structure. The mode and extent of the interactions between lipids and glycoprotein surface projections are subjects for further study.  相似文献   

8.
N Zumbulyadis  D F O'Brien 《Biochemistry》1979,18(24):5427-5432
Proton and carbon-13 nuclear magnetic resonance (1H and 13C NMR) spectra of rhodopsin-phospholipid membrane vesicles and sonicated disk membranes are presented and discussed. The presence of rhodopsin in egg phosphatidylcholine vesicles results in homogeneous broadening of the methylene and methyl resonances. This effect is enhanced with increasing rhodopsin content and decreased by increasing temperature. The proton NMR data indicate the phospholipid molecules exchange rapidly (less than 10(-3) s) between the bulk membrane lipid and the lipid in the immediate proximity of the rhodopsin. These interactions result in a reduction in either or both the frequency and amplitude of the tilting motion of the acyl chains. The 13C NMR spectra identify the acyl chains and the glycerol backbone as the major sites of protein lipid interaction. In the disk membranes the saturated sn-1 acyl chain is significantly more strongly immobilized than the polyunsaturated sn-2 acyl chain. This suggest a membrane model in which the lipid molecules preferentially solvate the protein with the sn-1 chain, which we term an edge-on orientation. The NMR data on rhodopsin-asolectin membrane vesicles demonstrate that the lipid composition is not altered during reconstitution of the membranes from purified rhodopsin and lipids in detergent.  相似文献   

9.
13C NMR spin-lattice relaxation (T1) rates and 13C-1H nuclear Overhauser effects (NOEs) were measured in an identical fashion in two lipid preparations having dramatically different curvatures. The T1 times that were obtained at four magnetic field strengths were fit along with the NOEs to simple models for lipid molecular dynamics. The results indicate that phospholipid chain ordering and dynamics are virtually identical in small and large unilamellar vesicles at the time scales sampled by these 13C-NMR studies. The order parameters and reorientational correlation times that characterize the amplitudes and rates of internal acyl chain motions were equal within experimental error for the methylene segments in the middle of the chains. The only significant differences in order parameters and correlation times between the two vesicle types were small and appeared at the ends of the acyl chains. At the carbonyl end the order was slightly higher in small vesicles than large vesicles, and at the methyl end the order was slightly lower for small vesicles. This indicates that in the more planar systems the acyl chains exhibit a slightly flatter order profile than in more highly curved membranes. The use of the same experimental approach in both small and large vesicle systems provided a more reliable and accurate assessment of the effect of curvature on molecular order than has been previously obtained.  相似文献   

10.
Interactions between anesthetics (lidocaine and short chain alcohols) and lipid membranes formed by dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) were studied using NMR spectroscopy. The orientational order of lidocaine was investigated using deuterium NMR on a selectively labelled compound whereas segmental ordering in the lipids was probed by two-dimensional 1H-13C separated local field experiments under magic-angle spinning conditions. In addition, trajectories generated in molecular dynamics (MD) computer simulations were used for interpretation of the experimental results. Separate simulations were carried out with charged and uncharged lidocaine molecules. Reasonable agreement between experimental dipolar interactions and the calculated counterparts was observed. Our results clearly show that charged lidocaine affects significantly the lipid headgroup. In particular the ordering of the lipids is increased accompanied by drastic changes in the orientation of the P-N vector in the choline group.  相似文献   

11.
Deuterium ((2)H) NMR spectroscopy provides detailed information regarding the structural fluctuations of lipid bilayers, including both the equilibrium properties and dynamics. Experimental (2)H NMR measurements for the homologous series of 1, 2-diacyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholines with perdeuterated saturated chains (from C12:0 to C18:0) have been performed on randomly oriented, fully hydrated multilamellar samples. For each lipid, the C-D bond order parameters have been calculated from de-Paked (2)H NMR spectra as a function of temperature. The experimental order parameters were analyzed using a mean-torque potential model for the acyl chain segment distributions, and comparison was made with the conventional diamond lattice approach. Statistical mechanical principles were used to relate the measured order parameters to the lipid bilayer structural parameters: the hydrocarbon thickness and the mean interfacial area per lipid. At fixed temperature, the area decreases with increasing acyl length, indicating increased van der Waals attraction for longer lipid chains. However, the main effect of increasing the acyl chain length is on the hydrocarbon thickness rather than on the area per lipid. Expansion coefficients of the structural parameters are reported and interpreted using an empirical free energy function that describes the force balance in fluid bilayers. At the same absolute temperature, the phosphatidylcholine (PC) series exhibits a universal chain packing profile that differs from that of phosphatidylethanolamines (PE). Hence, the lateral packing of phospholipids is more sensitive to the headgroup methylation than to the acyl chain length. A fit to the area per lipid for the PC series using the empirical free energy function shows that the PE area represents a limiting value for the packing of fluid acyl chains.  相似文献   

12.
Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), the longest and most unsaturated fatty acid commonly found in biological membranes, is known to affect various membrane properties. In a variety of cell membranes, DHA is primarily incorporated in phosphatidylethanolamines, where its function remains poorly understood. In order to understand the role of DHA in influencing membrane structure, we utilize (31)P NMR spectroscopy to study the phase behavior of 1-stearoyl-2-docosahexaenoyl-sn-glycerophosphoethanolamine (SDPE) in comparison to 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycerophosphoethanolamine (POPE) from 20 to 50 degrees C. Spectra of SDPE phospholipids show the formation of inverted hexagonal phase (H(II)) from 20 to 50 degrees C; in contrast, POPE mutilamellar dispersions exist in a lamellar liquid-crystalline phase (L(alpha)) at the same temperatures. The ability of SDPE to adopt nonbilayer phases at a physiological temperature may indicate its role in imparting negative curvature stress upon the membrane and may affect local molecular organization including the formation of lipid microdomains within biological membranes.  相似文献   

13.
The orientation of the disaccharide headgroup of a lactose-containing lipid, 3-O-(4-O-beta-D-galactopyranosyl-beta-D-glucopyranosyl)-1,2-di-O-tetrade cyl-sn- glycerol (DTLL), relative to the surface of bilayer membranes has been determined via 2H NMR. The lactosyl headgroup is extended away from the membrane surface into the aqueous phase. The headgroup motion has axial symmetry as evidenced by the spectral line shape and order parameter tensor. 2H NMR of oriented multibilayers of DTLL confirms that the director of motional averaging is the bilayer normal. The two sugar residues have segmental order parameters S (glucose, 0.53; galactose, 0.51) which indicate that the headgroup fluctuates about the bilayer normal as a rigid unit. 2H spin-lattice relaxation times T1z for deuterons on each of the two sugar rings are similar, indicating further that there is no substantial motion about the disaccharide linkage within the headgroup. The magnitude of the relaxation times (4 ms) suggests that the rigid body motions of the headgroup are approaching the Larmor frequency; however, they increase with increasing temperature, indicating that the motions are rapid enough to be in the fast motional regime (omega o2 tau c2 less than 1). The conformation about the galactose-glucose intersaccharide linkage, calculated from the 2H NMR data, is shown to differ substantially from those found in X-ray diffraction studies of crystalline lactose and high-resolution NMR studies of methyl lactoside in nonviscous solution. The orientations of the hydroxymethyl groups in the headgroup have been calculated from the 2H NMR data. For the galactosyl residue the data are consistent with the presence of more than one rotamer about the C5"-C6" bond which are in fast exchange on the 2H NMR time scale. The hydroxymethyl group of the glucose residue exists in two rotameric forms about the C5'-C6' bond which have relative populations of ca. 2:1 and which are in slow exchange on the 2H NMR time scale (10(-5) s). The two rotamers differ from those deduced from X-ray crystallography of crystalline lactose and 13C NMR studies of methyl lactoside in solution.  相似文献   

14.
Cholesterol dynamics in membranes.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy of the sterol analogue, cholestatrienol, and 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spin lattice relaxation time (T1c) measurements of [13C4] labeled cholesterol were exploited to determine the correlation times characterizing the major modes of motion of cholesterol in unsonicated phospholipid multilamellar liposomes. Two modes of motion were found to be important: (a) rotational diffusion and (b) time dependence of the orientation of the director for axial diffusion, or "wobble." From the time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy decays of cholestatrienol in egg phosphatidylcholine (PC) bilayers, a value for tau perpendicular, the correlation time for wobble, of 0.9 x 10(-9) s and a value for S perpendicular, the order parameter characterizing the same motion, of 0.45 s were calculated. Both tau perpendicular and S perpendicular were relatively insensitive to temperature and cholesterol content of the membranes. The T1c measurements of [13C4] labeled cholesterol did not provide a quantitative determination of tau parallel, the correlation time for axial diffusion. T1c from the lipid hydrocarbon chains suggested a value for tau perpendicular similar to that for cholesterol. Steady-state anisotropy measurements and time-resolved anisotropy measurements of cholestatrienol were used to probe sterol behavior in a variety of pure and mixed lipid multilamellar liposomes. Both the lipid headgroups and the lipid hydrocarbons chains contributed to the determination of the sterol environment in the membrane, as revealed by these fluorescence measurements. In particular, effects of the phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) headgroup and of multiple unsaturation in the lipid hydrocarbon chains were observed. However, while the steady-state anisotropy was sensitive to these factors, the time-resolved fluorescence analysis indicated that tau perpendicular was not strongly affected by the lipid composition of the membrane. S perpendicular may be increased by the presence of PE. Both steady-state anisotropy measurements and time-resolved anisotropy measurements of cholestatrienol were used to probe sterol behavior in three biological membranes: bovine rod outer segment (ROS) disk membranes, human erythrocyte plasma membranes, and light rabbit muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum membranes. In the ROS disk membranes the value for S perpendicular was marginally higher than in the PC membranes, perhaps reflecting the influence of PE. The dramatic difference noted was in the value for tau perpendicular. In both the ROS disk membranes and the erythrocyte membranes, tau perpendicular was one-third to one-fifth of tau perpendicular in the phospholipid bilayers. This result may reveal an influence of membrane proteins on sterol behavior.  相似文献   

15.
DSC and (1H and 31P) NMR measurements are used to investigate the perturbation caused by the keratolytic drug, salicylic acid (SA) on the physicochemical properties of the model membranes. Model membranes (in unilamellar vesicular (ULV) form) in the present studies are prepared with the phospholipids, dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC), dipalmitoyl phosphatidylethanolamine (DPPE), dipalmitoyl phosphatidic acid (DPPA) and mixed lipid DPPC-DPPE (with weight ratio, 2.5:2.2). These lipids have the same acyl (dipalmitoyl) chains but differed in the headgroup. The molar ratio of the drug to lipid (lipid mixture), is in the range 0 to 0.4. The DSC and NMR results suggest that the lipid head groups have a pivotal role in controlling (i) the behavior of the membranes and (ii) their interactions with SA. In the presence of SA, the main phase transition temperature of (a) DPPE membrane decreases, (b) DPPA membrane increases and (c) DPPC and DPPC-DPPE membranes are not significantly changed. The drug increases the transition enthalpy (i.e., acyl chain order) in DPPC, DPPA and DPPC-DPPE membranes. However, the presence of the drug in DPPC membrane formed using water (instead of buffer), shows a decrease in the transition temperature and enthalpy. In all the systems studied, the drug molecules seem to be located in the interfacial region neighboring the glycerol backbone or polar headgroup. However, in DPPC-water system, the drug seems to penetrate the acyl chain region also.  相似文献   

16.
The extent to which current force fields faithfully reproduce conformational properties of lipids in bilayer membranes, and whether these reflect the structural principles established for phospholipids in bilayer crystals, are central to biomembrane simulations. We determine the distribution of dihedral angles in palmitoyl-oleoyl phosphatidylcholine from molecular dynamics simulations of hydrated fluid bilayer membranes. We compare results from the widely used lipid force field of Berger et al. with those from the most recent C36 release of the CHARMM force field for lipids. Only the CHARMM force field produces the chain inequivalence with sn-1 as leading chain that is characteristic of glycerolipid packing in fluid bilayers. The exposure and high partial charge of the backbone carbonyls in Berger lipids leads to artifactual binding of Na+ ions reported in the literature. Both force fields predict coupled, near-symmetrical distributions of headgroup dihedral angles, which is compatible with models of interconverting mirror-image conformations used originally to interpret NMR order parameters. The Berger force field produces rotamer populations that correspond to the headgroup conformation found in a phosphatidylcholine lipid bilayer crystal, whereas CHARMM36 rotamer populations are closer to the more relaxed crystal conformations of phosphatidylethanolamine and glycerophosphocholine. CHARMM36 alone predicts the correct relative signs of the time-average headgroup order parameters, and reasonably reproduces the full range of NMR data from the phosphate diester to the choline methyls. There is strong motivation to seek further experimental criteria for verifying predicted conformational distributions in the choline headgroup, including the 31P chemical shift anisotropy and 14N and CD3 NMR quadrupole splittings.  相似文献   

17.
Glyoxysome, endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria, and proplastid fractions were isolated from endosperm of castor beans (Ricinus communis) germinated for 5 days at 30 C. Samples from sucrose density gradients were diluted with 0.15 m KCI and the membranes pelleted. Lipid extracts of these membranes were analyzed for phosphoglyceride, acyl lipid, and sterol content. The endoplasmic reticulum contains 1.24 mumol of phosphoglyceride per mg of protein; the mitochondria, 0.65 mumol/mg; and the glyoxysome membranes, 0.55 mumol/mg. Phosphatidyl choline and phosphatidyl ethanolamine are the most abundant lipids in all membranes studied, accounting for 70% or more of the lipid phosphorus and 50% or more of the fatty acid. Glyoxysome membranes and endoplasmic reticulum also contain phosphatidyl inositol (respectively, 9 and 17% of the lipid phosphorus) and free fatty acids (13% of the total fatty acid in each). Compared with other organelles, mitochondrial membranes have more phosphatidyl ethanolamine relative to phosphatidyl choline and are characterized by the presence of cardiolipin, in which 80% of the fatty acid is linoleate. The relative amounts of linoleate, palmitate, oleate, stearate, and linolenate in each of the phosphotoglycerides are constant regardless of the membrane source. Stimasgasterol and beta-sitosterol are present in the membranes (1-9 nmol each/mg protein).The data provide further evidence that glyoxysome membranes are derived from the endoplasmic reticulum but at the same time indicate some differentiation.  相似文献   

18.
Fish antifreeze proteins and glycoproteins (AF(G)Ps) prevent ice crystal growth and are able to protect mammalian cells and tissues from hypothermic damage in the sub-zero Polar oceans. This protective mechanism is not fully understood, and further data is required to explain how AF(G)Ps are able to stabilize lipid membranes as they pass through their phase transition temperatures. Solid-state NMR spectroscopy was used as a direct method to study the interaction of the 37-residue alpha-helical type I AFP, TTTT, and the low molecular weight fraction glycoprotein, AFGP8, with dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine membranes above and below the gel-fluid phase transition temperature. In contrast to previous studies in fluid phase bilayers these experiments have provided direct information regarding both the mobility of the phosphate headgroups and perturbation of the acyl chains at a range of temperatures under identical conditions on the same sample. At 5 degrees C changes in the (2)H and (31)P spectra and a dramatic increase in the (31)P T(1) relaxation times were consistent with a significant disruption of the membrane by TTTT. Heating to 30 degrees C appeared to expel the peptide from the lipid and re-cooling showed that the interaction of TTTT was not reversible. By contrast, (31)P spectra of the membranes with AFGP8 were consistent with interaction with the phosphate headgroups at both 5 and 30 degrees C. Although both peptides interact with the phospholipid bilayer surface, which may stabilize the membrane at lower temperatures, the longer (31)P T(1) values and the (2)H NMR data obtained for TTTT compared with AFGP8 suggest that TTTT causes a greater reduction of phosphate headgroup mobility and has a greater effect on the lipid acyl chains at 5 degrees C.  相似文献   

19.
The transbilayer movement (flip-flop) of 7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazol-4-yl phosphatidylethanolamine (NBD-PE) in phosphatidylcholine (PC) membranes containing various acyl chains was measured by dithionite quenching of NBD fluorescence. Of specific interest was docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), the longest and most unsaturated acyl chain commonly found in membranes. This molecule represents the extreme example of a family of important fatty acids known as omega-3s and has been clearly demonstrated to alter membrane structure and function. One important property that has yet to be reported is the effect of DHA on membrane phospholipid flip-flop. This study demonstrates that as the number of double bonds in the fatty acyl chains comprising the membrane increases, so does the rate of flip-flop of the NBD-PE probe. The increase is particularly marked in the presence of DHA. Half-lives t(1/2) of 0.29 and 0.086 h describe the process in 1-stearoyl-2-docosahexaenoylphosphatidylcholine and 1,2-didocosahexaenoylphosphatidylcholine, respectively, whereas in 1-stearoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine t(1/2)=11.5h. Enhanced permeability to dithionite with increasing unsaturation was also indicated by our results. We conclude that PC membranes containing DHA support faster flip-flop and permeability rates than those measured for other less-unsaturated PCs.  相似文献   

20.
Multilamellar dispersions from a new model phospholipid, 1, 2-dioctadec-(14-ynoyl)-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine (DO(14-yne)PC), bearing a triple bond in the fatty acid chains are studied by (2)H, (31)P NMR and Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy. The investigations are focused on the evaluation of the molecular properties of the lipid molecules as function of temperature and sample composition. Information about the fatty acid chain conformations are obtained from FTIR measurements by analysing the CH(2) wagging and stretching modes. (2)H NMR studies are performed on two selectively deuterated compounds that provide further insights into the molecular characteristics at two specific positions along the fatty acid chains. These studies demonstrate that the introduction of the triple bond is accompanied by a reduction of fatty acid chain order which holds for both the conformational and the orientational order. Likewise, (31)P NMR spectroscopy is used for the determination of the dynamics and ordering in the head group region. Here, particular emphasis is given to the evaluation of the lipid lateral motions that are quantified over a large temperature range within the liquid crystalline phase. It is found that the lateral mobility of the lipid molecules is almost unaffected by the triple bond in the fatty acid chains. The addition of cholesterol gives rise to a reduction in lateral mobility for DO(14-yne)PC, as can be followed by spin echo, 2D-exchange NMR and stimulated echo experiments.  相似文献   

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