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1.
Recently, evidence for cholesterol and phosphatidylcholine (PC) molecules to adapt superlattice arrangements in fluid lipid bilayers has been presented. Whether superlattice arrangements exist in other biologically relevant lipid membranes, such as phosphatidylethanolamine (PE)/PC, is still speculative. In this study, we have examined the physical properties of fluid 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-PC (POPC) and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-PE (POPE) binary mixtures as a function of the POPE mole fraction (X(PE)) using fluorescence and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. At 30 degrees C, i.e., above the Tm of POPE and POPC, deviations, or dips, as well as local data scattering in the excimer-to-monomer fluorescence intensity ratio of intramolecular excimer forming dipyrenylphosphatidylcholine probe in POPE/POPC mixtures were detected at X(PE) approximately 0.04, 0.11, 0.16, 0.26, 0.33, 0.51, 0.66, 0.75, 0.82, 0.91, and 0.94. The above critical values of X(PE) coincide (within +/-0.03) with the critical mole fractions X(HX,PE) or X(R,PE) predicted by a headgroup superlattice model, which assumes that the lipid headgroups form hexagonal or rectangular superlattice, respectively, in the bilayer. Other spectroscopic data, generalized polarization of Laurdan and infrared carbonyl and phosphate stretching frequency, were also collected. Similar agreements between some of the observed critical values of X(PE) from these data and the X(HX,PE) or X(R,PE) values were also found. However, all techniques yielded critical values of X(PE) (e.g., 0.42 and 0.58) that cannot be explained by the present headgroup superlattice model. The effective cross-sectional area of the PE headgroup is smaller than that of the acyl chains. Hence, the relief of "packing frustration" of PE in the presence of PC (larger headgroup than PE) may be one of the major mechanisms in driving the PE and PC components to superlattice-like lateral distributions in the bilayer. We propose that headgroup superlattices may play a significant role in the regulation of membrane lipid compositions in cells.  相似文献   

2.
Our previous fluorescence study has provided indirect evidence that lipid headgroup components tend to adopt regular, superlattice-like lateral distribution in fluid phosphatidylethanolamine/phosphatidylcholine (PE/PC) bilayers (, Biophys. J. 73:1967-1976). Here we have further studied this intriguing phenomenon by making use of the fluorescence properties of a sterol probe, dehydroergosterol (DHE). Fluorescence emission spectra, fluorescence anisotropy (r), and time-resolved fluorescence intensity decays of DHE in 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-PC (POPC)/1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-PE (POPE) mixtures were measured as a function of POPE mole fraction (X(PE)) at 23 degrees C. Deviations, including dips or kinks, in the ratio of fluorescence peak intensity at 375 nm/fluorescence peak intensity at 390 nm (I(375)/I(390)), fluorescence decay lifetime (tau), or rotational correlation time (rho) of DHE versus PE composition plots were found at X(PE) approximately 0.10, 0.25, 0.33, 0.65, 0.75, and 0.88. The critical values at X(PE) approximately 0.33 and 0.65 were consistently observed for all measured parameters. In addition, the locations, but not the depth, of the dips for X(PE) < 0.50 did not vary significantly over 10 days of annealing at 23 degrees C. The observed critical values of X(PE) coincide (within +/-0.03) with some of the critical mole fractions predicted by a headgroup superlattice model proposing that the PE and PC headgroups tend to be regularly distributed in the plane of the bilayer. These results agree favorably with those obtained in our previous fluorescence study using dipyrenylPC and Laurdan probes and thus support the proposition that 1) regular arrangement within a domain exists in fluid PE/PC bilayers, and 2) superlattice formation may play a significant role in controlling the lipid composition of cellular membranes (, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 95:4964-4969). The present data provide new information on the physical properties of such superlattice domains, i.e., the dielectric environment and rotational motion of membrane sterols appear to change abruptly as the lipid headgroups exhibit regular superlattice-like distributions in fluid bilayers.  相似文献   

3.
Time-resolved fluorescence and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopies were used to investigate the lateral organization of lipids in compositionally uniform and fully equilibrated 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine/cholesterol (POPC/CHOL) liposomes prepared by a recently devised low-temperature trapping method. Independent fluorescence decay lifetime and rotational dynamics parameters of diphenylhexatriene (DPH) chain-labeled phosphatidylcholine (DPH-PC) in these liposomes were recovered from the time-resolved fluorescence measurements as a function of cholesterol molar fraction (X(CHOL)) at 23 degrees C. The results indicate significantly greater lifetime heterogeneity, shorter average lifetime, rotational correlation time, and lower order parameter of the DPH moiety at X(CHOL) approximately 0.40 and 0.50 as compared to the adjacent cholesterol concentrations. Less prominent changes were also detected at, for example, X(CHOL) approximately 0.20 and 0.33. These X(CHOL)'s coincide with the "critical" X(CHOL)'s predicted by the previously proposed superlattice (SL) model, thus indicating that POPC and cholesterol molecules tend to form SL domains where the components tend to be regularly distributed. The data also support another prediction of the SL model, namely that lateral packing defects coexist with the ordered SL domains. It appears that unfavorable interaction of the DPH-moiety of DPH-PC with cholesterol results in a preferential partition of DPH-PC to the defect regions. Fourier transform infrared analysis of the native lipid O=P=O, C=O, and C-H vibrational bands of POPC/CHOL liposomes in the absence of DPH-PC revealed an increase in the conformational order of the acyl chains and a decrease in the conformational order (or increased hydration) of the interfacial and headgroup regions at or close to the predicted critical X(CHOL)'s. This provides additional but probe-independent evidence for SL domain formations in the POPC/CHOL bilayers. We propose that the defect regions surrounding the putative SL domains could play an important role in modulating the activity of various membrane-associated enzymes, e.g., those regulating the lipid compositions of cell membranes.  相似文献   

4.
Wang MM  Olsher M  Sugár IP  Chong PL 《Biochemistry》2004,43(8):2159-2166
Here, the interplay between membrane cholesterol lateral organization and the activity of membrane surface-acting enzymes was addressed using soil bacteria cholesterol oxidase (COD) as a model. Specifically, the effect of the membrane cholesterol mole fraction on the initial rate of cholesterol oxidation catalyzed by COD was investigated at 37 degrees C using cholesterol/1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-l-alpha-phosphatidylcholine (POPC) large unilamellar vesicles (LUVs, approximately 800 nm in diameter). In the three concentration ranges examined (18.8-21.2, 23.6-26.3, and 32.2-34.5 mol % cholesterol), the initial activity of COD changed with cholesterol mole fraction in a biphasic manner, exhibiting a local maximum at 19.7, 25.0, and 33.4 mol %. Within the experimental errors, these mole fractions agree with the critical cholesterol mole fractions (C(r)) (20.0, 25.0, and 33.3) theoretically predicted for maximal superlattice formation. The activity variation with cholesterol content was correlated well with the area of regular distribution (A(reg)) in the plane of the membrane as determined by nystatin fluorescence. A similar biphasic change in COD activity was detected at the critical sterol mole fraction 20 mol % in dehydroergosterol (DHE)/POPC LUVs (approximately 168 nm in diameter). These results indicate that the activity of COD is regulated by the extent of sterol superlattice for both sterols (DHE and cholesterol) and for a wide range of vesicle sizes (approximately 168-800 nm). The present work on COD and the previous study on phospholipase A(2) (sPLA(2)) [Liu and Chong (1999) Biochemistry 38, 3867-3873] suggest that the activities of some surface-acting enzymes may be regulated by the extent of sterol superlattice in the membrane in a substrate-dependent manner. When the substrate is a sterol, as it is with COD, the enzyme activity reaches a local maximum at C(r). When phospholipid is the substrate, the minimum activity is at C(r), as is the case with sPLA(2). Both phenomena are in accordance with the sterol superlattice model and manifest the functional importance of membrane cholesterol content.  相似文献   

5.
Ali MR  Cheng KH  Huang J 《Biochemistry》2006,45(41):12629-12638
The effect of brain ceramide on the maximum solubility of cholesterol in ternary mixtures of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC), cholesterol, and ceramide was investigated at 37 degrees C by a cholesterol oxidase (COD) reaction rate assay and by optical microscopy. The COD reaction rate assay showed a sharp increase in cholesterol chemical potential as the cholesterol mole fraction approaches the solubility limit. A decline in the COD reaction rate was found after the formation of cholesterol crystals. The maximum solubility of brain ceramide in POPC bilayers was determined to be 68 +/- 2 mol % by microscopy. We found that ceramide has a much higher affinity for the ordered bilayers than cholesterol, and the maximum solubility of cholesterol decreases with the increase in ceramide content. More significantly, the displacement of cholesterol by ceramide follows a 1:1 relation. At the cholesterol solubility limit, adding one more ceramide molecule to the lipid bilayer drives one cholesterol out of the bilayer into the cholesterol crystal phase, and cholesterol is incapable of displacing ceramide from the bilayer phase. On the basis of these findings, a ternary phase diagram of the POPC/cholesterol/ceramide mixture was constructed. The behaviors of ceramide and cholesterol can be explained by the umbrella model. Both ceramide and cholesterol have small polar headgroups and relatively large nonpolar bodies. In a PC bilayer, ceramide and cholesterol compete for the coverage of the headgroups of neighboring PC to prevent the exposure of their nonpolar bodies to water. This competition results in the 1:1 displacement as well as the displacement of cholesterol by ceramide from lipid raft domains.  相似文献   

6.
The sarcoplasmic reticulum channel (ryanodine receptor) from cardiac myocytes was reconstituted into planar lipid bilayers consisting of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylethanolamine (POPE) and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine (POPC) in varying ratios. The channel activity parameters, i.e., open probability and average open time and its resolved short and long components, were determined as a function of POPE mole fraction (X(PE)) at 22.4 degrees C. Interestingly, all of these parameters exhibited a narrow and pronounced peak at X(PE) approximately 0.80. Differential scanning calorimetric measurements on POPE/POPC liposomes with increasing X(PE) indicated that the lipid bilayer enters a composition-driven transition from the liquid-crystalline state to the gel state at 22.4 degrees C when X(PE) approaches 0.80. Thus, the peaking of the reconstituted channel activity at X(PE) approximately 0.80 in the planar bilayer could result from the appearance of gel/liquid-crystalline domain boundaries at this POPE content. Lipid packing at domain boundaries is known to be looser as compared to the homogenous gel or liquid-crystalline state. We propose that the attractive potential of packing defects at lipid domain boundaries and entropic excluded-volume effects could result in the direct interactions of the transmembrane region of the channel protein with the lipid-packing defects at the lipid/protein interface, which could thus provide a favorable environment for the open state of the protein. The present findings indicate that the activity of the sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium channel could be modulated by lipid domain formation upon slight changes in membrane lipid composition in vivo.  相似文献   

7.
Liu F  Chong PL 《Biochemistry》1999,38(13):3867-3873
We have conducted a detailed study of the effect of membrane cholesterol content on the initial hydrolytic activity of Crotalus durissus terrificus venom phospholipase A2 (sPLA2) in large unilamellar vesicles of cholesterol/dimyristoyl-L-alpha-phosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and cholesterol/1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-L-alpha-phosphatidylcholine (POPC) at 37 degrees C. The activity was monitored by using the acrylodan-labeled intestinal fatty acid binding protein and HPLC. In contrast to conventional approaches, we have used small cholesterol concentration increments ( approximately 0.3-1.0 mol %) over a wide concentration range (e.g., 13-54 mol % cholesterol). In both membrane systems examined, the initial hydrolytic activity of sPLA2 is found to change with cholesterol content in an alternating manner. The activity reaches a local minimum when the membrane cholesterol content is at or near the critical cholesterol mole fractions (e.g., 14.3, 15.4, 20.0, 22.2, 25.0, 33.3, 40.0, and 50.0 mol % cholesterol) predicted for cholesterol regularly distributed in either hexagonal or centered rectangular superlattices. According to the sterol regular distribution model [Chong, P. L.-G. (1994) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 91, 10069-10073; Liu et al. (1997) Biophys. J. 72, 2243-2254], the extent of lipid superlattices is maximal at the critical cholesterol mole fractions, at which the membrane free volume is minimal. Thus, our present data can be taken to indicate that the initial hydrolytic activity of sPLA2 is governed by the extent of cholesterol superlattice. These data provide the first functional evidence for the formation of cholesterol superlattices in both saturated (e.g., DMPC) and unsaturated (e.g., POPC) liquid-crystalline phospholipid bilayers. The data also illustrate the functional importance of cholesterol superlattice and demonstrate a new type of regulation of sPLA2. Furthermore, upon binding to cholesterol/POPC large unilamellar vesicles, the intrinsic fluorescence intensity of sPLA2 shows an alternating variation with cholesterol content, exhibiting a minimum at the critical cholesterol mole fractions. This result suggests that either the number of sPLA2 bound to lipid vesicles or the conformation of membrane-bound sPLA2 or both vary with the extent of the cholesterol superlattice in the plane of the membrane.  相似文献   

8.
Giant bilayer vesicles were reconstituted from several lipids and lipid/cholesterol (CHOL) mixtures: stearolyloleoylphosphatidylcholine (SOPC), bovine sphingomyelin (BSM), diarachidonylphosphatidylcholine (DAPC), SOPC/CHOL, BSM/CHOL, DAPC/CHOL, and extracted red blood cell (RBC) lipids with native cholesterol. Single-walled vesicles were manipulated by micropipette suction and several membrane material properties were determined. The properties measured were the elastic area compressibility modulus K, the critical areal strain alpha c, and the tensile strength tau lys, from which the failure energy or membrane toughness Tf was calculated. The elastic area expansion moduli for these lipid and lipid/cholesterol bilayers ranged from 57 dyn/cm for DAPC to 1,734 dyn/cm for BSM/CHOL. The SOPC/CHOL series and RBC lipids had intermediate values. The results indicated that the presence of cholesterol is the single most influential factor in increasing bilayer cohesion, but only for lipids where both chains are saturated, or mono- or diunsaturated. Multiple unsaturation in both lipid chains inhibits the condensing effect of cholesterol in bilayers. The SOPC/CHOL system was studied in more detail. The area expansion modulus showed a nonlinear increase with increasing cholesterol concentration up to a constant plateau, indicating a saturation limit for cholesterol in the bilayer phase of approximately 55 mol% CHOL. The membrane compressibility was modeled by a property-averaging composite theory involving two bilayer components, namely, uncomplexed lipid and a lipid/cholesterol complex of stoichiometry 1/1.22. The area expansion modulus of this molecular composite membrane was evaluated by a combination of the expansion moduli of each component scaled by their area fractions in the bilayer. Bilayer toughness, which is the energy stored in the bilayer at failure, showed a maximum value at approximately 40 mol% CHOL. This breakdown energy was found to be only a fraction of the available thermal energy, implying that many molecules (approximately 50-100) may be involved in forming the defect structure that leads to failure. The area expansion modulus of extracted RBC lipids with native cholesterol was compared with recent measurements of intact RBC membrane compressibility. The natural membrane was also modeled as a simple composite made up to a compressible lipid/cholesterol matrix containing relatively incompressible transmembrane proteins. It appears that the interaction of incompressible proteins with surrounding lipid confers enhanced compressibility on the composite structure.  相似文献   

9.
The envelope (E) protein of Dengue virus rearranges to a trimeric hairpin to mediate fusion of the viral and target membranes, which is essential for infectivity. Insertion of E into the target membrane serves to anchor E and possibly also to disrupt local order within the membrane. Both aspects are likely to be affected by the depth of insertion, orientation of the trimer with respect to the membrane normal, and the interactions that form between trimer and membrane. In the present work, we resolved the depth of insertion, the tilt angle, and the fundamental interactions for the soluble portion of Dengue E trimers (sE) associated with planar lipid bilayer membranes of various combinations of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC), 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phospho-rac-glycerol (POPG), 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (POPE), and cholesterol (CHOL) by neutron reflectivity (NR) and by molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. The results show that the tip of E containing the fusion loop (FL) is located at the interface of the headgroups and acyl chains of the outer leaflet of the lipid bilayers, in good agreement with prior predictions. The results also indicate that E tilts with respect to the membrane normal upon insertion, promoted by either the anionic lipid POPG or CHOL. The simulations show that tilting of the protein correlates with hydrogen bond formation between lysines and arginines located on the sides of the trimer close to the tip (K246, K247, and R73) and nearby lipid headgroups. These hydrogen bonds provide a major contribution to the membrane anchoring and may help to destabilize the target membrane.  相似文献   

10.
The effects of increased unsaturation in the sn-2 fatty acyl chain of phosphatidylcholines (PCs) on the lipid lateral diffusion have been investigated by pulsed-field gradient NMR. Macroscopically oriented bilayers containing a monosaturated PC, egg sphingomyelin, and cholesterol (CHOL) have been studied at temperatures between 0 degrees C and 60 degrees C, and the number of double bonds in the PC was one, two, four, or six. For PC bilayers, with and without the incorporation of egg sphingomyelin and CHOL, the lateral diffusion increased with increasing number of double bonds, as a consequence of the increased headgroup area caused by the unsaturation. Addition of CHOL caused a decrease in lipid diffusion due to the condensing effect of CHOL on the headgroup area. Phase separation into large domains of liquid-disordered and liquid-ordered phases were observed in the ternary systems with PCs containing four and six double bonds, as evidenced by the occurrence of two lipid diffusion coefficients. PC bilayers with one or two double bonds appear homogeneous on the length scales probed by the experiment, but the temperature dependence of the diffusion suggests that small domains may be present also in these ternary systems.  相似文献   

11.
To characterize the specificity of zinc binding to phospholipid membranes in terms of headgroup structure, hydration and phase behavior we studied the zwitterionic lipid 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine as a function of hydration at 30 degreesC in the presence and absence of ZnCl2. Zinc forms a 2:1-1:1 complex with the lipid, and in particular with the negatively charged phosphate groups. Zn2(+)-bridges between neighboring lipid molecules stabilize the gel phase of the lipid relative to the liquid-crystalline state. Upon Zn2+ binding the C-O-P-O-C- backbone of the lipid headgroup changes from a gauche/gauche into the trans/trans conformation and it loses roughly 50% of the hydration shell. The ability of the Zn2(+)-bound phosphate groups to take up water is distinctly reduced, meaning that the headgroups have become less hydrophilic. The energetic cost (on the scale of Gibbs free energy) for completely dehydrating the lipid headgroups is decreased by approximately 10 kJ/mole in the presence of Zn2+. The interaction of phospholipid headgroups with Zn2+ is conveniently described by a hydrated zinc-phosphate complex the key energy contribution of which is more covalent than electrostatic in nature. Dehydration of phospholipid headgroups due to complexation with zinc cations is suggested to increase fusogenic potency of lipid membranes. Zinc appears to be one of the most potent divalent cation in inducing membrane fusion.  相似文献   

12.
Sphingomyelins (SMs) and sterols are important constituents of the plasma membrane and have also been identified as major lipid components in membrane rafts. Using SM analogs with decreasing headgroup methylation, we systemically analyzed the effect of headgroup size on membrane properties and interactions with cholesterol. An increase in headgroup size resulted in a decrease in the main phase transition. Atom-scale molecular-dynamics simulations were in agreement with the fluorescence anisotropy experiments, showing that molecular areas increased and acyl chain order decreased with increasing headgroup size. Furthermore, the transition temperatures were constantly higher for SM headgroup analogs compared to corresponding phosphatidylcholine headgroup analogs. The sterol affinity for phospholipid bilayers was assessed using a sterol-partitioning assay and an increased headgroup size increased sterol affinity for the bilayer, with a higher sterol affinity for SM analogs as compared to phosphatidylcholine analogs. Moreover, the size of the headgroup affected the formation and composition of cholesterol-containing ordered domains. Palmitoyl-SM (the largest headgroup) seemed to attract more cholesterol into ordered domains than the other SM analogs with smaller headgroups. The ordering and condensing effect of cholesterol on membrane lipids was also largest for palmitoyl-SM as compared to the smaller SM analogs. The results show that the size of the SM headgroup is crucially important for SM-SM and SM-sterol interactions. Our results further emphasize that interfacial electrostatic interactions are important for stabilizing cholesterol interactions with SMs.  相似文献   

13.
Lateral organization of cholesterol in dioleoyl-phosphatidylcholine (DOPC) lipid bilayers at high cholesterol concentration (>45 mol%) was investigated using steady-state fluorescence anisotropy and fluorescent resonance energy transfer techniques. The recently devised Low Temperature Trap method was used to prepare compositionally uniform cholesterol/DOPC liposomes to avoid the problem of lipid demixing. The fluorescence anisotropy of diphenylhexatrience chain-labeled phosphatidylcholine (DPH-PC) in these liposomes exhibited local maxima at cholesterol mol fractions of 0.50 and 0.57, and a sharp drop at 0.67. For the liposomes labeled with both dehydroergosterol and DPH-PC, the fluorescent resonance energy transfer efficiency from dehydroergosterol to DPH-PC displayed a steep jump at cholesterol mol fraction of 0.5, and dips at 0.57 and 0.68. These results indicate the presence of highly ordered cholesterol regular distribution domains at those observed critical compositions. The observed critical mol fraction at 0.67 agreed favorably with the solubility limit of cholesterol in DOPC bilayers as independently measured by light scattering and optical microscopy. The regular distribution at 0.57 was previously predicted from a Monte Carlo simulation based on the Umbrella model. The results strongly support the hypothesis that the primary requirement for cholesterol-phospholipid mixing is that the polar phospholipid headgroups need to cover the nonpolar body of cholesterol to avoid the exposure of cholesterol to water.  相似文献   

14.
Ceramides (Cers) may exert their biological activity through changes in membrane structure and organization. To understand this mechanism, the effect of Cer on the biophysical properties of phosphatidylcholine, sphingomyelin (SM) and SM/cholesterol bilayers was determined using fluorescence probe techniques. The Cers were bovine brain Cer and synthetic Cers that contained a single acyl chain species. The phospholipids were 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC) and 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glyero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC) and bovine brain, egg yolk and bovine erythrocyte SM. The addition of Cer to POPC and DPPC bilayers that were in the liquid-crystalline phase resulted in a linear increase in acyl chain order and decrease in membrane polarity. The addition of Cer to DPPC and SM bilayers also resulted in a linear increase in the gel to liquid-crystalline phase transition temperature (T(M)). The magnitude of the change was dependent upon Cer lipid composition and was much higher in SM bilayers than DPPC bilayers. The addition of 33 mol% cholesterol essentially eliminated the thermal transition of SM and SM/Cer bilayers. However, there is still a linear increase in acyl chain order induced by the addition of Cer. The results are interpreted as the formation of DPPC/Cer and SM/Cer lipid complexes. SM/Cer lipid complexes have higher T(M)s than the corresponding SM because the addition of Cer reduces the repulsion between the bulky headgroup and allows closer packing of the acyl chains. The biophysical properties of a SM/Cer-rich bilayer are dependent upon the amount of cholesterol present. In a cholesterol-poor membrane, a sphingomyelinase could catalyze the isothermal conversion of a liquid-crystalline SM bilayer to a gel phase SM/Cer complex at physiological temperature.  相似文献   

15.
Integral membrane proteins are characterized by having a preference for aromatic residues, e.g., tryptophan (W), at the interface between the lipid bilayer core and the aqueous phase. The reason for this is not clear, but it seems that the preference is related to a complex interplay between steric and electrostatic forces. The flat rigid paddle-like structure of tryptophan, associated with a quadrupolar moment (aromaticity) arising from the pi-electron cloud of the indole, interacts primarily with moieties in the lipid headgroup region hardly penetrating into the bilayer core. We have studied the interaction between the nitrogen moiety of lipid molecule headgroups and the pi-electron distribution of gramicidin (gA) tryptophan residues (W9, W11, W13, and W15) using molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of gA embedded in two hydrated lipid bilayers composed of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylethanolamine (POPE) and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidyl-choline (POPC), respectively. We use a force field model for tryptophan in which polarizability is only implicit, but we believe that classical molecular dynamics force fields are sufficient to capture the most prominent features of the cation-pi interaction. Our criteria for cation-pi interactions are based on distance and angular requirements, and the results from our model suggest that cation-pi interactions are relevant for W(PE)1), W(PE)13, W(PE)15, and, to some extent, W(PC)11 and W(PC)13. In our model, W9 does not seem to engage in cation-pi interactions with lipids, neither in POPE nor POPC. The criteria for the cation-pi effect are satisfied more often in POPE than in POPC, whereas the H-bonding ability between the indole donor and the carbonyl acceptor is similar in POPE and POPC. This suggests an increased affinity for lipids with ethanolamine headgroups to transmembrane proteins enriched in interfacial tryptophans.  相似文献   

16.
Cholesterol, stigmastanol, and stigmastanyl-phosphorylcholine (ST-PC) were incorporated into model membranes composed of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC) or 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DOPC). POPC and ST-PC were deuterated at the lipid headgroup, DOPC at the cis-double bonds. The influence of the three sterols on the motion and conformation of the lipid headgroups and the hydrocarbon chains was monitored with 2H- and 31P-NMR. All three sterols were freely miscible with the lipid matrix in concentrations of up to 50 mol% without inducing phase separations or nonbilayer structures. However, the molecules exert quite different effects on the phospholipid bilayer. Cholesterol and stigmastanol are largely buried in the hydrocarbon part of the membrane, distinctly restricting the flexing motions of the fatty acyl chains whereas the conformation of the phospholipid headgroups is little affected. In contrast, ST-PC is anchored with its headgroup in the layer of phospholipid dipoles, preventing an extensive penetration of the sterol ring into the hydrocarbon layer. Hence ST-PC has almost no effect on the hydrocarbon chains but induces a characteristic conformational change of the phospholipid headgroups. The 2H- and 31P-NMR spectra of mixed phospholipid/ST-PC membranes further demonstrate that the PC headgroup of ST-PC has a similar orientation as the surrounding phosphatidylcholine headgroups. For both types of molecules the -P-N+ dipole is essentially parallel to the membrane surface. Addition of ST-PC induces a small rotation of the POPC headgroup towards the water phase.  相似文献   

17.
We report the microstructure and phase behavior of three ternary mixtures each containing a long-chain saturated glycosphingolipid, galactosylceramide (GalCer), and cholesterol at room temperature. The unsaturation level of the fluid-phase component was varied by lipid choice, i.e., saturated 1,2-dilauroyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DLPC), singly unsaturated 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC), or doubly unsaturated 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DOPC). GalCer was used because of its biological significance, for example, as a ligand in the sexual transmission of HIV and stimulator of natural killer T-cells. Supported lipid bilayers of the ternary mixtures were imaged by atomic force microscopy and GalCer-rich domains were characterized by area/perimeter ratios (A/P). GalCer domain phase transitions from solid (S) to liquid (L) phase were verified by domain behavior in giant unilamellar vesicles, which displayed two-dimensional microstructure similar to that of supported lipid bilayers. As cholesterol concentration was increased, we observed approximately 2.5, approximately 10, and approximately 20-fold decreases in GalCer domain A/P for bilayers in L-S phase coexistence containing DOPC, POPC, and DLPC, respectively. The transition to L-L phase coexistence occurred at approximately 10 mol % cholesterol for bilayers containing DOPC or POPC and was accompanied by maintenance of a constant A/P. L-L phase coexistence did not occur for bilayers containing DLPC. We systematically relate our results to the impact of chain unsaturation on the interaction of the fluid-phase lipid and cholesterol. Physiologically, these observations may give insight into the interplay of fatty acid chain unsaturation, sterol concentration, and lipid hydrophobic mismatch in membrane phenomena.  相似文献   

18.
Mingtao Ge 《Biophysical journal》2009,96(12):4925-4934
A spin-labeling study of interactions of a fusion peptide from the hemagglutinin of the influenza virus, wt20, and a fusion-inactive mutant ΔG1 with dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatdylcholine bilayers was performed. We found that upon binding of wt20, the ordering of headgroups and the ordering of acyl chains near the headgroup increased significantly, in a manner consistent with a cooperative phenomenon. However, changes in the order at the end of the acyl chains were negligible. The ordering effect of wt20 on the headgroup was much stronger at pH 5 than at pH 7. No effect of ΔG1 binding on the order of bilayers was evident. We also found that 1-palmitoyl-2-hydroxyl phosphatidylcholine, a membrane-fusion inhibitor, decreased the ordering of DMPC headgroups, whereas arachidonic acid, a membrane-fusion promoter, increased the ordering of DMPC headgroups. These results suggest that increases in headgroup ordering may be important for membrane fusion. We propose that upon binding of wt20, which is known to affect only the outer leaflet of the bilayer, this outer leaflet becomes more ordered, and thus more solid-like. Then the coupling between the hardened outer leaflet and the softer inner leaflet generates bending stresses in the bilayer, which tend to increase the negative curvature of the bilayer. We suggest that the increased ordering in the headgroup region enhances dipolar interactions and lowers electrostatic energy, which may provide an energy source for membrane fusion. Possible roles of bending stresses in promoting membrane fusion are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
The rate of reaction of the ascorbate ion with the nitroxide group of spin probes intercalated in lipid bilayers has been studied to examine the mechanism of transport of solutes across membranes. The loss of electron spin resonance (ESR) signal follows first-order kinetics. For a given bilayer system, the half-time of the process increases with the distance of the reacting group from the aqueous interface, according to an approximately linear permeation profile. The dependence on phospholipid headgroup is that which would be predicted from the net charge; addition of negatively charged headgroups increases the half-time of reaction, and positively charged headgroups decrease it, compared with bilayers having no net charge. Addition of cholesterol, which is known to decrease the fluidity of the hydrocarbon core of the bilayer, is found to increase the half-time of reaction. The results have been analyzed in terms of a partition-diffusion mechanism. It is suggested that the rate-limiting step for partitioning the solute into the bilayer might be removal of water of hydration. Cholesterol increases the activation energy, most probably by increasing the height of the barriers to diffusion. Quantitation of the changes in reaction rates gives an estimate of the change in bilayer surface potential on changing the headgroup composition. Examination of the permeation profile supports a diffusive mechanism, from which it can be estimated that the diffusion coefficient is approximately halved on adding 35 mol% cholesterol to egg lecithin bilayers.  相似文献   

20.
Huang J 《Biophysical journal》2002,83(2):1014-1025
Experimental evidences have indicated that cholesterol may adapt highly regular lateral distributions (i.e., superlattices) in a phospholipid bilayer. We investigated the formations of superlattices at cholesterol mole fraction of 0.154, 0.25, 0.40, and 0.5 using Monte Carlo simulation. We found that in general, conventional pairwise-additive interactions cannot produce superlattices. Instead, a multibody (nonpairwise) interaction is required. Cholesterol superlattice formation reveals that although the overall interaction between cholesterol and phospholipids is favorable, it contains two large opposing components: an interaction favoring cholesterol-phospholipid mixing and an unfavorable acyl chain multibody interaction that increases nonlinearly with the number of cholesterol contacts. The magnitudes of interactions are in the order of kT. The physical origins of these interactions can be explained by our umbrella model. They most likely come from the requirement for polar phospholipid headgroups to cover the nonpolar cholesterol to avoid the exposure of cholesterol to water and from the sharp decreasing of acyl chain conformation entropy due to cholesterol contact. This study together with our previous work demonstrate that the driving force of cholesterol-phospholipid mixing is a hydrophobic interaction, and multibody interactions dominate others over a wide range of cholesterol concentration.  相似文献   

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