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

2.
The effect of rat liver phosphatidylcholine transfer protein on the incorporation of CDP-choline and dioleoylglycerol into phosphatidylcholine catalyzed by rat liver microsomal CDP-choline: 1,2-diacyl-sn-glycerol cholinephosphotransferase was studied. In the presence of phosphatidylcholine transfer protein, the incorporation of CDP-choline into phosphatidylcholine was markedly stimulated. Phosphatidylcholine transfer protein isolated from either rat or bovine liver was capable of this stimulatory effect; in contrast, phosphatidylinositol transfer protein from rat liver had no effect on phosphatidylcholine synthesis. Kinetic analysis showed that microsomal phosphatidylcholine synthesis increased 2.4-fold after 1 min and reached a maximum of approximately 10-fold within 10 min in the presence of phosphatidylcholine transfer protein; in the absence of this protein phosphatidylcholine synthesis stopped after 2-4 min. These results suggest that phosphatidylcholine transfer protein permits phosphatidylcholine synthesis to proceed further. With the addition of phospholipid vesicles, as an acceptor membrane in the reaction mixture, there was a significant amount of protein-mediated transfer of synthesized phosphatidylcholine to the vesicles. Measurable transfer of synthesized phosphatidylcholine to vesicles could only be detected after a lag of 2-4 min. The stimulation of cholinephosphotransferase could be nearly abolished by increasing the amount of added phospholipid vesicles; concurrently, a greater transfer to the vesicles was observed. These results describe a new property of phosphatidylcholine transfer protein which may be of physiological significance in the regulation of phosphatidylcholine synthesis in mammalian tissues.  相似文献   

3.
It was clearly shown that the change in thermodynamical parameters could cause the segregation of membrane protein aggregations in the phospholipid membrane. At first, reconstituted vesicles were prepared with a membrane protein, bacteriorhodopsin and a constituent phospholipid of biomembranes, L-alpha-dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine. When the temperature of the suspension was decreased or the osmotic pressure was increased by adding poly(ethylene glycol) to this vesicle suspension at 23 degrees, the circular dichroism spectra showed a typical band indicating bacteriorhodopsin trimer formation implying their aggregation. This suggests that the aggregation of trimers proceeded by adding poly(ethylene glycol) into vesicle suspension, just as it proceeded by decreasing the temperature. Next, vesicles were prepared with fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled bacteriorhodopsin, photoemissive bacteriorhodopsin and L-alpha-dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine. The excitation energy transfer between the two modified proteins was measured by fluorescence spectroscopy. In this case, however, when poly(ethylene glycol) was added into the suspension, the yield of the excitation energy transfer decreased. This result indicates that modified proteins aggregate separately in a segregated form in the vesicle membrane.  相似文献   

4.
The non-specific phospholipid transfer protein purified from bovine liver has been used to modify the phospholipid content and phospholipid composition of the membrane of intact human erythrocytes. Apart from an exchange of phosphatidylcholine between the red cell and PC-containing vesicles, the protein appeared to facilitate net transfer of phosphatidylcholine from the donor vesicles to the erythrocyte and sphingomyelin transfer in the opposite direction. Phosphatidylcholine transfer was accompanied by an equivalent transfer (on a molar basis) of cholesterol. An increase in phosphatidylcholine content in the erythrocyte membrane from 90 to 282 nmol per 100 microliters packed cells was observed. Phospholipase C treatment of modified cells showed that all of the phosphatidylcholine which was transferred to the erythrocyte was incorporated in the lipid bilayer. The nonspecific lipid transfer protein used here appeared to be a suitable tool to modify lipid content and composition of the erythrocyte membrane, and possible applications of this approach are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
A new, simple and versatile method to measure phospholipid transfer has been developed, based on the use of a fluorescent phospholipid derivative, 1-acyl-2-parinaroylphosphatidylcholine. Vesicles prepared of this phospholipid show a low level of fluorescence due to interactions between the fluorescent groups. When phospholipid transfer protein and vesicles consisting of non-labeled phosphatidylcholine are added the protein catalyzes an exchange of phosphatidylcholine between the labeled donor and non-labeled acceptor vesicles. The insertion of labeled phosphatidylcholine into the non-labeled vesicles is accompanied by an increase in fluorescence due to abolishment of self-quenching. The initial rate of fluorescence enhancement was found to be proportional to the amount of transfer protein added. This assay was applied to determine the effect of membrane phospholipid composition on the activity of the phosphatidylcholine-, phosphatidylinositol- and non-specific phospholipid transfer proteins. Using acceptor vesicles of egg phosphatidylcholine and various amounts of phosphatidic acid it was observed that the rate of phosphatidylcholine transfer was either stimulated, inhibited or unaffected by increased negative charge depending on the donor to acceptor ratio and the protein used. In another set of experiments acceptor vesicles were prepared of phosphatidylcholine analogues in which the ester bonds were replaced with ether bonds or carbon-carbon bonds. Assuming that only a strictly coupled exchange between phosphatidylcholine and analogues gives rise to the observed fluorescence increase, orders of substrate preference could be established for the phosphatidylcholine- and phosphatidylinositol transfer proteins.  相似文献   

6.
The non-specific phospholipid transfer protein purified from bovine liver has been used to modify the phospholipid content and phospholipid composition of the membrane of intact human erythrocytes. Apart from an exchange of phosphatidylcholine between the red cell and PC-containing vesicles, the protein appeared to facilitate net transfer of phosphatidylcholine from the donor vesicles to the erythrocyte and sphingomyelin transfer in the opposite direction. Phosphatidylcholine transfer was accompanied by an equivalent transfer (on a molar basis) of cholesterol. An increase in phosphatidylcholine content in the erythrocyte membrane from 90 to 282 nmol per 100 μl packed cells was observed. Phospholipase C treatment of modified cells showed that all of the phosphatidylcholine which was transferred to the erythrocyte was incorporated in the lipid bilayer. The nonspecific lipid transfer protein used here appeared to be a suitable tool to modify lipid content and composition of the erythrocyte membrane, and possible applications of this approach are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Sonicated emulsions of egg phosphatidylcholine containing either [14C]-dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (diester-PC) or two metabolically inert analogs. [14C]-1-octadecyl-2-hexadecyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (diether-PC) and [3H]-2-tetradecyloctadecano-(1)-phosphocholine (dialkyl-PC) were injected into the vitreous of the eye of adult rabbits. After 1–40 days, radioactivities were measured in the stations of the optical pathway, and the identities of the labelled lipids arrived at the superior colliculus were ascertained by thin-layer chromatography and treatment with phospholipase A2, with the following results: (1) phosphatidylcholine and its analogs were taken up from the vitreous by the retina at similar rates: (2) all three lipids were transported in the optic nerve axons at similar rates (‘fast’). They reached maximal concentration in the superior colliculus some 20 days after injection: (3) phosphatidylcholine travelled from vitreous to superior colliculus as the intact molecule: (4) maximal accumulation of the two analogs in the superior colliculus reached only about 1 per cent of that of phosphatidylcholine. The results suggest that the vehicles of fast axonal transport can pick up intact phospholipid molecules originating in the ganglionic cell plasma membrane (and, likely, from other cellular compartments). The packaging process is promoted by the presence of carboxyl ester groups in the phospholipid; this fact suggests the involvement of ganglionic phospholipid transfer protein with specificity for these groups.  相似文献   

8.
Phospholipid transfer proteins have been found in lung just as they have in tissues throughout the body. There is speculation that the proteins are involved in membrane biogenesis and in determining the phospholipid composition of membranes. For this reason the lung, which contains subcellular organelles of distinct phospholipid composition, is of interest in terms of its complement of phospholipid transfer proteins. The lamellar bodies of pulmonary type II alveolar cells have a phospholipid composition unique in terms of the proportions of dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylglycerol. Studies of the phospholipid transfer proteins in lung have demonstrated two molecular species of the transfer proteins that differ significantly from those found in liver and other tissues. These proteins show specificity for the transfer of dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylglycerol.  相似文献   

9.
Lung lamellar bodies and liver mitochondria were used to demonstrate that soluble phospholipid transfer proteins from lung transfer phosphatidylcholine to both of these acceptors. The initial rate of transfer to lung lamellar bodies is about half that of the rate of transfer to the liver mitochondria when both acceptor membranes are present at saturating concentrations. Phosphatidylcholine unilamellar vesicles were used to demonstrate that the fatty acyl composition of the membrane phosphatidylcholine is a significant determinant of the rate of phosphatidylcholine transfer catalyzed by these proteins. The lamellar bodies have a unique phosphatidylcholine composition, and these studies suggest that this is an important factor in determining the lower initial rate of transfer to lamellar bodies. The studies have also characterized two phospholipid transfer proteins in rat lung in terms of isoelectric point. Isoelectric points for the two proteins which transfer phosphatidylcholine were found to be 5.6 ± 0.08 and 6.2 ± 0.03.  相似文献   

10.
Two synthetic photoactive azidoarylphosphatidylcholines were used to investigate the level of interaction between D-beta-hydroxybutyrate apodehydrogenase (apoBDH), an amphipathic membrane protein, with the hydrophobic domain of phospholipids. The two synthetic lecithins, PL I (1-myristoyl-2-12-N-(4-azido-2-nitrophenyl) aminododecanoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine) and PL II (1-myristoyl-2-(2-azido-4-nitrobenzoyl)-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine), are able to reactivate the non-active purified apoBDH as well as the non-photoactive homologs, indicating that the photoreactive chemical groups are without effect on the cofactor properties of phosphatidylcholine. Photoirradiation of reconstituted complexes between phospholipid containing azidoaryllecithin and apoBDH leads to a covalent binding of some synthetic lecithin molecules on the protein. The labelling, about 3 times higher with PL II than with PL I, suggests that the area of interacting domain of BDH with the hydrophobic moiety of phospholipid is more important at or near the surface of the lipid bilayer than in the inner part. This approach is further demonstration that BDH is an integral protein.  相似文献   

11.
When microsomes containing phosphatidylcholine labelled with[1-14C]-linoleate were incubated with pea or spinach chloroplasts,active transfer of this phospholipid took place in the presenceof phospholipid transfer protein. This transfer also was demonstratedby incubating unlabelled microsomes, chloroplasts and the phospholipidtransfer protein in the presence of [1-14C]-acetate. The reconstitutedsystems could synthesize fatty acids which were acylated inmicrosomal phosphatidylcholine. The transfer of this phospholipidto chloroplasts is mediated by the transfer protein. Our resultssuggest a role for phospholipid transfer protein in the synthesisof chloroplast lipids. (Received October 25, 1983; Accepted July 18, 1984)  相似文献   

12.
The transfer of phospholipid molecules between biological and synthetic membranes is facilitated by the presence of soluble catalytic proteins, such as those isolated from bovine brain which interacts with phosphatidylinositol and phosphatidylcholine and from bovine liver which is specific for phosphatidylcholine. A series of tertiary amine local anesthetics decreases the rates of protein-catalyzed phospholipid transfer. The potency of inhibition is dibucaine>tetracaine>lidocaine>procaine, an order which is compared with and identical to those for a wide variety of anesthetic-dependent membrane phenomena. Half-maximal inhibition of phosphatidylinositol transfer by dibucaine occurs at a concentration of 0.18 mM, significantly lower than the concentration of 1.9 mM required for half-maximal inhibition of phosphatidylcholine transfer activity of the brain protein. Comparable inhibition of liver protein phosphatidylcholine transfer activity is observed at 1.6 mM dibucaine. For activity measurements performed at different pH, dibucaine is more potent at the lower pH values which favor the equilibrium toward the charged molecular species. With membranes containing increasing molar proportions of phosphatidate, dibucaine is increasingly more potent. No effect of Ca2+ on the control transfer activity or the inhibitory action of dibucaine is noted. These results are discussed in terms of the formation of specific phosphatidylinositol or phosphatidylcholine complexes with the amphiphilic anesthetics in the membrane bilayer.  相似文献   

13.
The topological distribution of the two major phospholipids of brush-border membrane, phosphatidylcholine (PC) and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), has been investigated using brush-border membrane vesicles from rabbit small intestine. Bee venom phospholipase A2 and phosphatidylcholine exchange protein from bovine liver were used as membrane probes. It is shown that the brush-border membrane retains its integrity under conditions of phospholipase hydrolysis and intermembrane phospholipid exchange. Kinetic analysis of the data of phospholipase hydrolysis and phospholipid exchange at temperatures under 10 degrees C shows that both PC and PE occur in two pools: a minor (about 25%) more readily accessible pool and a major one (about 75%) less readily available. The rate of PC exchange between these two pools is relatively fast. The half-time derived under conditions of phospholipase hydrolysis is of the order of 20 min. Under conditions of phospholipid exchange the exchange rates may be even faster. The difference in exchange kinetics observed with the two methods of probing is probably due to changes in membrane properties such as the bilayer fluidity induced by the probing process itself. It is proposed that the two pools represent the transverse distribution of the phospholipids. The two major phospholipids of brush-border membranes, PC and PE, would be distributed mainly on the inner (cytoplasmic) side of the brush-border membrane. The phospholipid exchange between the brush-border vesicles and unilamellar phosphatidylcholine vesicles in the presence of phosphatidylcholine exchange protein reveals that significant quantities of phospholipid are taken up by brush-border membrane independently, i.e., in a separate process independent of the exchange protein-catalyzed phosphatidylcholine exchange.  相似文献   

14.
A recently developed fluorimetric transfer assay (Somerharju, P., Brockerhoff, H. and Wirtz, K.W.A. (1981) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 649, 521-528) has been applied to study the substrate specificity and membrane binding of the phosphatidylinositol-transfer protein from bovine brain. The substrate specificity was investigated by measuring the rate of transfer, either directly or indirectly, for a series of phosphatidylinositol analogues which included phosphatidic acid, phosphatidylglycerol as well as three lipids obtained from yeast phosphatidylinositol by partial periodate oxidation and subsequent borohydride reduction. Phosphatidylglycerol and the oxidation products of phosphatidylinositol were transferred at about one tenth of the rate observed for phosphatidylinositol while phosphatidic acid was not transferred. It is concluded that an intact inositol moiety favours the formation of the putative transfer protein-phosphatidylinositol complex. In addition to phosphatidylinositol, the transfer protein also transfers phosphatidylcholine. In order to obtain information on the possible occurrence of two sites of interaction, vesicles consisting of either pure 1-acyl-2-parinaroylphosphatidylinositol or 1-acyl-2-parinaroylphosphatidylcholine were titrated with the protein. Binding of labeled phospholipid to the protein was represented by an increase of lipid fluorescence and found to be much more efficient for phosphatidylinositol than for phosphatidylcholine. This is interpreted to indicate that the protein contains an endogenous phosphatidylinositol molecule which can be easily replaced by exogenous phosphatidylinositol but not by phosphatidylcholine, a lipid with a lower affinity for this protein. Thus the binding sites for the two phospholipids are mutually exclusive, i.e. phosphatidylinositol and phosphatidylcholine cannot be bound to the protein simultaneously. Finally, the effect of acidic phospholipids on the transfer protein activity was studied either by varying the content of phosphatidic acid in the acceptor vesicles or by adding vesicles of pure acidic phospholipids to the normal assay system. The latter vesicles consisted of either phosphatidic acid, phosphatidylglycerol, phosphatidylserine, phosphatidylinositol or cardiolipin. In both instances the transfer protein activity was inhibited, obviously through the enhanced association of the protein with the negatively charged vesicles. These findings strongly suggest that relatively nonspecific ionic forces rather than specific protein-phospholipid headgroup interactions contribute to the association of the phosphatidylinositol-transfer protein with membranes.  相似文献   

15.
G Lipka  J A Op den Kamp  H Hauser 《Biochemistry》1991,30(51):11828-11836
All classes of phospholipids present in brush border membrane are exchanged in a 1:1 ratio for egg phosphatidylcholine when brush border membrane vesicles from rabbit small intestine are incubated with small unilamellar vesicles of egg phosphatidylcholine. The exchange reaction exhibits biphasic kinetics similar to those of the hydrolysis of brush border membrane phospholipids by phospholipase A2 and sphingomyelinase C. In both reactions there is an initial fast phase followed by a markedly slower one. The phospholipid exchange appears to be catalyzed by intrinsic brush border membrane protein(s), while the digestion by phospholipases is mediated by externally added enzymes. From a comparison of the kinetics of phospholipid exchange and phospholipid hydrolysis, the following conclusions can be drawn: Both sets of experiments indicate the presence of two phospholipid pools differing in the rate of phospholipid exchange and hydrolysis. Except for sphingomyelin, the size of the two phospholipid pools derived from phospholipid exchange is in good agreement with that derived from phospholipid hydrolysis. This is the main finding of this work, and on the basis of this result the two lipid pools are tentatively assigned to phospholipid molecules located on the outer and inner layer of the brush border membrane. The slow rate of phospholipid exchange reflects the rate of transverse or flip-flop movement of phospholipids. The half-time of this motion is approximately 8 h for isoelectric (neutral) phospholipids such as phosphatidylethanolamine and approximately 80 h for negatively charged phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylinositol. Isoelectric phospholipids (phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine) are preferentially located on the inner (cytoplasmic) side (to about 70%) while the negatively charged phospholipids are more evenly distributed: 55-60% are located on the inner side.  相似文献   

16.
The rate of transfer of spin-labeled phospholipid from donor vesicles of sonicated 1-acyl-2-(10-doxylstearoyl)-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine to other vesicle was determined as a function of content of cytochrome P-450 and the phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylethanolamine ratio in the acceptor vesicles. The transfer rate was measured as an increase in intensity that resulted from a decrease in the line width in the EPR spectrum of the spin-labeled phospholipids as they was transferred to the nonspin-labeled acceptor vesicles. A lower transfer rate was observed for acceptor vesicles of pure egg phosphatidylcholine vesicles than for vesicles for a mixture of phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine. The presence of cytochrome P-450 in the acceptor vesicles further increased the transfer rate. Those alterations in the mole ratios of the protein and the two phospholipids that made the bilayer of the reconstituted vesicles more like the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum resulted in an increase in phospholipid-transfer rate. The mole ratios of components that produce high phospholipid-transfer rates were similar to those that in an earlier study produced a 31P-NMR spectrum characteristic of a nonbilayer phase. These findings suggest that, in the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum, phospholipid exchange may be an important element in function and interaction with other intracellular organelles.  相似文献   

17.
Three model membrane systems have been characterized in terms of their interaction with phospholipid exchange proteins. Large unilamellar vesicles of phosphatidylcholine prepared by ether vaporization are shown to be homogeneous by gel filtration. Phospholipid exchange proteins from three sources are capable of catalyzing the rapid exchange of approximately half of the phospholipid from these vesicles. The remaining pool of radioactive phospholipid is virtually nonexchangeable (t1/2 of several days). Small unilamellar vesicles of phosphatidylcholine prepared by cholate dialysis also exhibit two pools of phospholipid (65% rapidly exchangable, 35% very slowly exchangeable) when incubated with beef liver phospholipid exchange protein. Cytochrome oxidase vesicles prepared both by a cholate dialysis method and by a direct incorporation method have been fractionated on a Ficoll discontinuous gradient, and tested for interaction with beef heart exchange protein. Two pools of phospholipid are once again observed (70% rapidly exchangable, 30% nonexchangeable), even for vesicles which have incorporated the transmembranous enzyme at a phospholipid to protein weight ratio of 2. The size of the rapidly exchangeable pool of phosphatidylcholine for each of the vesicle systems is consistent with the calculated fraction of phospholipid in the outer monolayer. The extremely slow rate of exchange of the second pool of the second pool of phospholipid reflects the virtual nonexistence of phospholipid flip-flop in any of these model membranes.  相似文献   

18.
Sec14, a yeast phosphatidylinositol/phosphatidylcholine transfer protein, functions at the trans-Golgi membranes. It lacks domains involved in protein-protein or protein-lipid interactions and consists solely of the Sec14 domain; hence, the mechanism underlying Sec14 function at proper sites remains unclear. In this study, we focused on the lipid packing of membranes and evaluated its association with in vitro Sec14 lipid transfer activity. Phospholipid transfer assays using pyrene-labelled phosphatidylcholine suggested that increased membrane curvature as well as the incorporation of phosphatidylethanolamine accelerated the lipid transfer. The quantity of membrane-bound Sec14 significantly increased in these membranes, indicating that “packing defects” of the membranes promote the membrane binding and phospholipid transfer of Sec14. Increased levels of phospholipid unsaturation promoted Sec14-mediated PC transfer, but had little effect on the membrane binding of the protein. Our results demonstrate the possibility that the location and function of Sec14 are regulated by the lipid packing states produced by a translocase activity at the trans-Golgi network.  相似文献   

19.
The role of methionine residues in the interaction of the phosphatidylcholine transfer protein from bovine liver with phospholipid vesicles was investigated by specific modification of these residues with iodoacetamide. The modified protein was digested with cyanogen bromide in order to determine which methionine residues had become resistant to this cleavage. Automated Edman degradation on the digest indicated that after 72 h of reaction, Met-1 was modified for 80%, Met-73 for 50%, Met-109 for 20%, whilst Met-173 and Met-203 were found to be unmodified. This distinct modification did not result in any loss of phosphatidylcholine transfer activity. The interaction of the phosphatidylcholine transfer protein with phospholipid vesicles was investigated by making use of electron spin resonance spectroscopy. The interaction of unmodified protein with vesicles composed of phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidic acid/spin-labeled phosphatidylethanolamine (79:16:5, mol%) or composed of phosphatidylserine/spin-labeled phosphatidylethanolamine (95:5, mol%), gave an increase of about 50% in the rotation correlation time. A similar increase was observed with the modified protein. This interaction was further investigated by labeling Met-1 and Met-73 in the transfer protein with iodoacetamidoproxyl spin-label. Spin-labeling did not inactivate the transfer protein. In addition, the electron spin resonance spectra of the spin-labeled protein were not affected upon addition of vesicles composed of phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidic acid (80:20, mol%). These experiments strongly suggest that Met-1 and Met-73 are not part of the site that interacts with the membrane.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Purified, delipidated rhodopsin is recombined with phospholipid using octyl-glucoside (OG) and preformed vesicles. Normal egg phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylcholine in which the N-methyl groups are fully deuterated, and dioleoyl phosphatidylcholine labeled with deuterium at carbons 9 and 10 were used.31P nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and2H NMR measurements were obtained of the pure phospholipids and of the recombined membranes containing rhodopsin.31P NMR of the recombined membrane (containing the deuterated phospholipid) showed two overlapping resonances. One resembled a normal phospholipid bilayer, and the other was much broader, representing a motionally restricted phospholipid headgroup environment. The population of phospholipids in the motionally restricted environment can be modulated by conditions in the media.2H NMR spectra of the same recombined membranes showed only one component. These experimental results agree with a theoretical analysis that predicts an insensitivity of2H NMR to lipids bound to membrane proteins. A model containing at least three different phospholipid environments in the presence of the membrane protein rhodopsin is described.Deceased.  相似文献   

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