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1.
The influence of membrane cholesterol content on 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl CoA reductase (HMG-CoA reductase, EC 1.1.1.34) in rat liver microsomes was investigated. Microsomes were enriched in cholesterol by incubation with egg phosphatidylcholine-cholesterol vesicles and the nonspecific lipid transfer protein from rat liver. By this method, the microsomal cholesterol content was 2.5-fold enhanced up to final concentrations of 140 nmol cholesterol per mg microsomal protein. In another experiment, microsomes isolated from rats fed a cholesterol-rich diet were depleted of cholesterol by incubation with egg phosphatidylcholine vesicles and the transfer protein. Both cholesterol enrichment and depletion had virtually no effect on the microsomal HMG-CoA reductase activity. In another set of experiments, normal rat liver microsomes were incubated with human serum, resulting in a rise of microsomal cholesterol content. This was reflected in an increase of acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase activity but failed to have an effect on HMG-CoA reductase.  相似文献   

2.
The phospholipids of intact microsomal membranes were hydrolysed 50% by phospholipase C of Clostridium welchii, without loss of the secretory protein contents of the vesicle, which are therefore not permeable to the phospholipase. Phospholipids extracted from microsomes and dispersed by sonication were hydrolysed rapidly by phospholipase C-Cl. welchii with the exception of phosphatidylinositol. Assuming that only the phospholipids of the outside of the bilayer of the microsomal membrane are hydrolysed in intact vesicles, the composition of this leaflet was calculated as 84% phosphatidylcholine, 8% phosphatidylethanolamine, 9% sphingomyelin and 4% phosphatidylserine, and that of the inner leaflet 28% phosphatidylcholine, 37% phosphatidylethanolamine, 6% phosphatidylserine and 5% sphingomyelin. Microsomal vesicles were opened and their contents released in part by incubation with deoxycholate (0.098%) lysophosphatidylcholine (0.005%) or treatment with the French pressure cell. Under these conditions, hydrolysis of the phospholipids by phospholipase C-Cl. welchii was increased and this was mainly due to increased hydrolysis of those phospholipids assigned to the inner leaflet of the bilayer, phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylserine. Phospholipase A2 of bee venom and phospholipase C of Bacillus cereus caused rapid loss of vesicle contents and complete hydrolysis of the membrane phospholipids, with the exception of sphingomyelin which is not hydrolysed by the former enzyme.  相似文献   

3.
The exchange of cholesterol between [14C]cholesterol-labeled Mycoplasma gallisepticum cells and an excess of sonicated egg phosphatidylcholine/cholesterol vesicles (molar ratio of 0.9) was measured. More than 90% of the radioactive cholesterol underwent transfer from intact cells to the vesicles. The kinetics of the transfer was biphasic. About 50% of the radioactive cholesterol was exchanged with a half-time of about 4 h. The residual was exchanged at a slower rate with a half-time of about 9 h at 37°C. Bovine serum albumin had a pronounced effect in enhancing both the fast and slow rates of cholesterol exchange, but did not affect the pool sizes significantly. The half-time for equilibration of the two pools in the presence of 2% albumin, calculated using a reversible two-pool method of analysis, was 6.2 h. The effect of albumin was also obtained with isolated membrane preparations and with cells treated with growth inhibitors, suggesting that this effect is independent of albumin preservation of cell viability. The rate enhancement of albumin was concentration dependent with maximal effects observed with 2%, where the rates of exchange of both the rapidly and slowly exchanging pools were twice as fast. The mechanism by which albumin may affect the exchange rates is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Preincubation of rat liver microsomal vesicles at 37 degrees C in the presence of [3H]cholesterol/phospholipid liposomes results in a net transfer of cholesterol from liposomes to microsomal vesicles. This transfer follows first-order kinetics. For similar concentrations of the donor vesicles, rates of transfer are about 6-8 times lower with cholesterol/sphingomyelin liposomes compared with cholesterol/phosphatidylcholine liposomes. Also, transfer of cholesterol from cholesterol/sphingomyelin liposomes to microsomal vesicles reveals a larger activation energy than for the process from cholesterol/phosphatidylcholine liposomes. There is a significant correlation between the amount of liposomal cholesterol transferred to microsomal vesicles during preincubation and the increase found with acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase activity in these microsomes over their corresponding controls. If, however, liposomes made solely of phospholipids are substituted for the cholesterol/phospholipid liposomes in the preincubation system containing microsomal vesicles, then the acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase activity is decreased compared with the corresponding control system. Both sphingomyelin and phosphatidylcholine liposomes are equally effective in decreasing the enzyme activity. These results offer direct kinetic evidence for the positive correlation between cholesterol and sphingomyelin found in vivo in biological membranes.  相似文献   

5.
The latency of inosine-5'-diphosphatase has been studied in microsomes isolated from rat liver. The appearance of latent activity was the result of an increase in the Vmax of the enzyme. This was observed when assays were carried out in the presence of sodium deoxycholate, after microsomes were treated wtih phospholipase C, or at pH 10.3 and after microsomes were subjected to nitrogen cavitation. The apparent Km of inosine-5'-diphosphatase for IDP was unchanged when microsomes were treated with phospholipase C or at pH 10.3 after both these treatments approximately 85% of the enzyme remained bound to the membrane. In contrast, when microsomes were treated with phospholipase C or at pH 10.3 after both these treatments approximately 85% of the enzyme remained bound to the membrane. In contrast, when microsomes were treated with sodium deoxycholate or subjected to nitrogen cavitation, approximately 75% of the inosine-5'-diphosphatase activity was released from the membrane, and the apparent Km of the enzyme for IDP increased 4- and 2-fold, respectively. Microsomal cisternae were loaded with lead phosphate by incubation with glucose-6-P and Pb2+, and the release of this lead phosphate following the addition of EDTA to the medium was determined to estimate the permeability of the microsomal membrane. When microsomes were treated with sodium deoxycholate, phospholipase C, or at alkaline pH, the microsomal membrane became almost completely permeable to EDTA under conditions where there was little or no increase in the activity of inosine-5'-diphosphatase. Microsomes were treated at pH 10.3 and then adjusted slowly to pH 7.5. The activity of inosine-5'-diphosphatase decreased to the same activity observed in untreated preparations. The results seem of exclude the possibility that latent inosine-5'-diphosphatase activity is the result of an increased permeability of the membrane to IDP. They are, however, consistent with the presence of a noncompetitive inhibitor of the enzyme in the microsomal membrane.  相似文献   

6.
We have studied the effects of trinitrophenylation on the transbilayer movement of phosphatidylcholine and the macroscopic lipid structure in rat liver microsomal membranes. The transbilayer movement of phosphatidylcholine was investigated using the PC-specific transfer protein. 31P-NMR was employed to monitor the phospholipid organization in intact microsomal vesicles. The results indicate that modification of microsomes with trinitrobenzenesulfonic acid enhances the transbilayer movement of phosphatidylcholine at 4°C. Furthermore, phosphatidylethanolamine headgroup trinitrophenylation in microsomes increases the isotropic component in the 31P-NMR spectra even at 4°C, possibly representing the appearance of intermediate non-bilayer lipid structures. The observed parallel between these data suggests that phosphatidylethanolamine molecules in the microsomal membrane, probably in combination with a protein component, are able to destabilize the bilayer organization, thereby facilitating the transmembrane movement of phospholipids.  相似文献   

7.
Guinea pig liver microsomal and mitochondrial membranes were degraded with phospholipase C and D followed by partial biosynthetic reconstitution. Activities of phosphatidylinositol synthetase in microsomal membranes and NADPH-cytochrome c reductase were almost completely lost after phospholipase C and D treatment; almost complete restoration of the original activity was achieved after biosynthesis of phosphatidylcholine in degraded microsomes, but was not reparable after biosynthesis of cytidinediphosphodiglycerides (CDP-diglycerides). The mitochondrial biosynthesis of polyglycerophosphatides was completely retained after degradation of these membranes with phospholipase C, but after similar treatment with phospholipase D, only about one-quarter of the original activity remained, the relative composition of polyglycerophosphatides being significantly different. The activity of NADPH-cytochrome c reductase of microsomes represented about 76% of the original activity after phospholipase C treatment, but only approximately 1% after treatment with phospholipase D. Although this activity could not be restored with CDP-diglyceride synthesis, it was restored to about 75% of the original activity after the biosynthesis of phosphatidylcholine in these fragments. These and additional experimental findings are discussed in terms of the relation between structural organization of lipids and proteins and enzymatic activities of membrane-bound phospholipid-synthesizing enzymes in microsomal and mitochondrial membranes isolated from guinea pig liver.  相似文献   

8.
The role of phospholipids in the glucose-6-phosphatase system, including glucose-6-P phosphohydrolase and glucose-6-P translocase, was studied in rat liver microsomes by using phospholipases C and detergents. In the time course experiments on detergent exposure, the maximal activation of glucose-6-P phosphohydrolase varied according to the nature of the detergent used. On treatment of microsomes with phospholipase C of C. perfringens, the activity of glucose-6-P phosphohydrolase without detergent (i.e. without rupture of translocase activity) was gradually decreased with the progressive hydrolysis of phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine on the microsomal membrane, and was restored by incubation of these microsomes with egg yolk phospholipids. The extent of decrease in this phosphohydrolase activity in the detergent-exposed microsomes (with rupture of translocase activity) also varied depending on the detergent used (Triton X-114 or taurocholate). When 66% of the phosphatidylinositol on the membrane was hydrolyzed by phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C of B. thuringiensis, the inhibition of glucose-6-P phosphohydrolase activity without detergent was very small. Although the inhibition of enzyme activity with detergent was apparently greater than that without detergent, the enzyme activity was stimulated by the breakdown of phosphatidylinositol when the enzyme activity was measured at lower concentration (0.5 mM) of substrate, glucose-6-P. The latency of mannose-6-P phosphohydrolase, a plausible index of microsomal integrity, remained above 70% after the hydrolysis of phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine, or phosphatidylinositol. The results show that the glucose-6-phosphatase system requires microsomal phospholipids for its integrity, suggesting that there exists a close relation between phosphatidylinositol and glucose-6-P translocase.  相似文献   

9.
B Bloj  D B Zilversmit 《Biochemistry》1976,15(6):1277-1283
Purified phospholipid exchange protein from beef heart cytosol is used to accelerate the exchange of phospholipids between labeled sealed ghosts and phosphatidylcholine/cholesterol liposomes. The purified protein accelerates the transfer of phosphatidylcholine and, to a lesser degree, that of sphingomyelin, phosphatidylinositol, and lysophosphatidylcholine. The presence of exchange protein does not accelerate the exchange of phospholipids between intact red blood cells and liposomes, but 75% of the phosphatidylcholine of sealed ghosts is readily available for exchange. The remaining 25% is also exchangeable but at a slower rate. When the exchange is assayed between inside-out vesicles and liposomes, 37% of the phosphatidylcholine is readily available, and 63% is exchanged at a slower rate. These results are consistent with an asymmetric distribution of phosphatidylcholine in isolated erythrocyte membrane fractions. The sum of the forward and backward transposition of phosphatidylcholine between the inside and outside layers of sealed ghost membranes amounts to 11% per hour, and the half-time for equilibration is 2.3 h. Significatnly lower values are obtained for the inside-out vesicles (half-time for equilibration: 5.3 h). These results suggest that, during the formation of the vesicles, the asymmetry of phosphatidylcholine is partially preserved, but structural changes occur in the membrane that affect the rate of membrane transposition of phosphatidylcholine.  相似文献   

10.
Glycerol diffusional permeabilities through the cytoplasmic cell membrane of Dunaliella salina, the cell envelope of pig erythrocyte and egg phosphattidylcholine vesicles were measured by NMR spectroscopy employing the spin-echo method and nuclear T1 relaxation. The following permeability coefficients (P) and corresponding enthalpies of activation (ΔH) were determined for glycerol at 25°C: for phosphatidylcholine vesicles 5·10−6 cm/s and 11±2 kcal/mol; for pig erythrocytes 7·10−8 cm/s and 18±3 kcal/mol, respectively; for the cytoplasmic membrane of D. salina the permeability at 17°C was found to be exceptionally low and only a lower limit (P<5·10−11cm/s) could be calculated. At temperatures above 50°C a change in membrane permeability occurred leading to rapid leakage of glycerol accompanied by cell death. The data reinforce the notion that the cytoplasmic membrane of Dunaliella represents a genuine anomaly in its exceptional low permeability to glycerol.  相似文献   

11.
Phosphatidylcholine is synthesized on the cytoplasmic surface of the endoplasmic reticulum and transported to the lumenal monolayer by a protein transporter, a phosphatidylcholine "flippase" (Bishop, W. R., and Bell, R. M. (1985) Cell 42, 51-60). Since the endoplasmic reticulum contains enzymes involved in phosphatidylcholine turnover that have different locations within the organelle, transport systems may exist for phosphatidylcholine metabolites. To test the hypothesis that rat liver microsomes contain a lysophosphatidylcholine transporter, sn-1-monobutyroylphosphatidylcholine was employed. Since this homolog is highly water-soluble, transport of lysophosphatidylcholine could be measured using standard transport methods. sn-1-Monobutyroylphosphatidylcholine entered the lumenal compartment of microsomal vesicles. Transport was saturable and dependent on time and on amount of microsomes and required an intact permeability barrier. sn-1-Monobutyroylphosphatidylcholine transport was inhibited by treatment of microsomes with trypsin, N-ethylmaleimide, and trinitrobenzene-sulfonic acid. These findings suggest that sn-1-monobutyroylphosphatidylcholine transport is protein-mediated. sn-1-Monobutyroylphosphatidylcholine transported into microsomes was degraded to glycerophosphorylcholine. Glycerophosphorylcholine was also transported across the microsomal membrane. Glycerophosphorylcholine transport was also saturable and dependent on time, amount of microsomes, and an intact permeability barrier but was not inhibited by treatment with trypsin or the two protein modification agents. Thus, separate and distinct transport systems exist for phosphatidylcholine metabolites. Molecular events of phosphatidylcholine turnover in the endoplasmic reticulum are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
The transbilayer distribution of phospholipids in chicken brain microsomal membranes has been investigated using trinitrobenzenesulfonic acid and phospholipase C from Clostridium weichii. The exposure of intact microsomes to trinitrobenzenesulfonic acid showed that the labelling of aminophospholipids followed biphasic kinetics, indicating that these membranes contain a fast- and a slow-reacting pool of aminophospholipids. Use of microsomes radioiodinated on their surface led to the conclusion that the fast-reacting pool may be located on the outer leaflet of the microsomal vesicles. It contains about 35% of the phosphatidylethanolamine, 29% of the ethanolamine plasmalogens and 18% of the phosphatidylserine. The treatment of intact microsomes with the phospholipase C Cl. welchii produced the hydrolysis of 50% of the phospholipids without any loss of their permeability properties, indicating that they are not permeable to the hydrolase. Phospholipids extracted from the microsomes were hydrolyzed rapidly by the phospholipase C with the exception of phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylinositol. In intact microsomes about 90% of phosphatidylcholine, 32% of ethanolamine phospholipids and 60% of sphingomyelin were accessible to the phospholipase. These results suggest that the phospholipids have an asymmetric distribution in chicken brain microsomes, the external leaflet containing about 75% of the choline phospholipids and 25% of the aminophospholipids, whereas an opposite distribution is observed in the inner leaflet.  相似文献   

13.
Phosphatidylinositol exchange protein, purified from bovine cerebral cortex, catalyzes the transfer of phosphatidylinositol and, to a lesser extent, phosphatidylcholine between rat liver microsomes and egg phosphatidylcholine liposomes. Transfer activity is sensitive to pH, temperature, and the method of liposome preparation. Variation of the phospholipid composition of the liposomes produces vesicles for which the apparent Michaelis constant decreases with increasing molar proportions of phosphatidylinositol. Interaction of exchange protein with liposomes containing radioactively labeled phosphatidylcholine allows the isolation of a phospholipid-protein complex; dissociation of this complex occurs upon subsequent interaction with unlabeled liposomes. Changes in the concentration of the two membrane species, microsomes and liposomes, yield results which are interpreted in terms of a ping-pong kinetic mechanism for the protein-catalyzed, intermembrane transfer of phospholipids.  相似文献   

14.
Transfer of phosphatidylcholine molecules between different membrane fractions of Tetrahymena pyriformis cells grown at 15, 27 and 39.5°C was studied by electron spin resonance (ESR). Microsomes were labeled densely with a phosphatidylcholine spin label and the spin-labeled microsomes were incubated with non-labeled cilia, pellicles or microsomes. The transfer of the phosphatidylcholine spin labels was measured by decrease in the exchange broadening of the electron spin resonance spectrum. In one experiment, the lipid transfer was measured between 32P-labeled microsomes and non-labeled pellicles by use of their radioactivity. The result was in good agreement with that by ESR. The fluidity of the membrane was estimated using a fatty-acid spin label incorporated into the membranes. Transfer between lipid vesicles was also studied. The results obtained were as follows: (1) The transfer between sonicated vesicles of egg- or dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine occurred rapidly in the liquid crystalline phase, with an activation energy of 20 kcal/mol, whereas it hardly occurred in the solid crystalline phase. (2) The transfer rate between microsomal membranes increased with temperature, and an activation energy of the reaction was 17.8 kcal/mol. (3) The transfer from the spin-labeled microsomes to subcellular membranes of the cells grown at 15°C was larger than that to the membranes of the cells grown at 39.5°C. The membrane fluidity was larger for the cells grown at lower temperature. (4) Similar tendency was observed for the transfer between microsomal lipid vesicles prepared from the cells grown at 15°C and at 39.5°C. (5) The transfer from microsomes to various membrane fractions increased in the order, cilia < pellicles < microsomes. The order of increase in the membrane fluidity was cilia < microsomes < pellicles, although the difference between microsomes and pellicles was slight. These results indicate a crucial role of the membrane fluidity in the transfer reaction. (6) Some evidence supported the idea that the lipid transfer between these organelles occurred through the lipid exchange rather than through the fusion.  相似文献   

15.
Rat and rabbit liver microsomes catalyze an NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase-dependent peroxidation of endogenous lipid in the presence of the chelate, ADP-Fe3+. Although liver microsomes from both species contain comparable levels of NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase and cytochrome P-450, the rate of lipid peroxidation (assayed by malondialdehyde and lipid hydroperoxide formation) catalyzed by rabbit liver microsomes is only about 40% of that catalyzed by rat liver microsomes. Microsomal lipid peroxidation was reconstituted with liposomes made from extracted microsomal lipid and purified protease-solubilized NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase from both rat and rabbit liver microsomes. The results demonstrated that the lower rates of lipid peroxidation catalyzed by rabbit liver microsomes could not be attributed to the specific activity of the reductase. Microsomal lipid from rabbit liver was found to be much less susceptible to lipid peroxidation. This was due to the lower polyunsaturated fatty acid content rather than the presence of antioxidants in rabbit liver microsomal lipid. Gas-liquid chromatographic analysis of fatty acids lost during microsomal lipid peroxidation revealed that the degree of fatty acid unsaturation correlated well with rates of lipid peroxidation.  相似文献   

16.
1. The pretreatment of rat liver microsomes with phospholipase C or D decreased the N-demethylation of (+)-benzphetamine. The hydroxylation of aniline was essentially unchanged by pretreatment of microsomes with phospholipase C. 2. Some components of the microsomal mixed-function oxidase system were impaired by phospholipases. 3. The fluorescence of 1-anilinonaphthalene-8-sulphonate (ANS) was greatly enhanced by microsomes. Phospholipase C or D markedly decreased ANS–microsome fluorescence. Quantum yield of ANS–microsome fluorescence appeared to be related directly to phospholipid content of microsomes. 4. Most of the drugs studied enhanced ANS–microsome fluorescence. Warfarin, however, displaced ANS fluorescence competitively from microsomes. The latter effect was postulated as being due to warfarin competing with ANS for the cationic site on microsomal phosphatidylcholine. 5. ANS fluorescence was also increased by the presence of phospholipid micelles. The fluorescence of ANS–phosphatidylcholine micelles was modified by warfarin and (+)-benzphetamine in a manner similar to that observed with microsomes. Warfarin decrease of fluorescence was absent when ANS was bound to phosphatidic acid, which lacks a cationic site. 6. Trypsin pretreatment of microsomes did not modify ANS–microsome fluorescence, including drug-induced changes. 7. It was postulated that phospholipids have a permissive role in the metabolism of most drugs by hepatic microsomes and that the ANS probe might reflect interactions of compounds with microsomal membrane phospholipids.  相似文献   

17.
Cytidine-diphospho-choline diacyl-glycerol phosphorylcholine phosphotransferase activity was demonstrated in potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) microsomes and the incorporation of cytidine-diphospho[14C]choline into phosphatidylcholine was characterized by the time course of 14C incorporation and the effect of microsomal protein concentration on choline incorporation.

Potato microsomes were progressively delipidated by treatments (2 min at 0°C) with increasing amounts of phospholipase C from Bacillus cereus. A decrease in choline phosphotransferase activity was observed in parallel with the progressive hydrolysis of membrane phospholipids. A 70% (or more) phospholipid hydrolysis provoked the total inactivation of the enzyme.

Adding back exogenous phospholipids (in the form of liposomes) to phospholipase C-treated membranes restored the enzymic activity. Restoration could be obtained with egg yolk phospholipids as well as with potato phospholipids. Restoration was time dependent and completed after 10 minutes; restoration was also dependent on the quantity of liposomes added to lipid-depleted membranes: the best restorations were obtained with 1 to 2.5 milligrams of phospholipid per mg of microsomal protein; higher phospholipid to protein ratios were less efficient or inhibitory.

These results clearly demonstrate the phospholipid dependence of the cytidine-diphospho-choline phosphotransferase from potato microsomes.

  相似文献   

18.
Rat liver rough microsomal membranes were stripped of bound ribosomes by treatment with puromycin and high concentrations of monovalent ions. Ribosomal subunits labeled in the RNA were detached from rough microsomes by the same procedure, recombined into monomers, and then incubated with stripped membranes in a medium of low ionic strength (25 mm-KCl, 50 mm-Tris-HCl, 5 mm-MgCl2). These ribosomes readily attached to the stripped membranes, as determined by isopycnic flotation of the reconstituted microsomes. The binding reaction was complete after incubation for five minutes at 37 °C, but also proceeded at 0 °C, at a lower rate. Scatchard plots showed a binding constant of ~8 × 107m?1 and ~5 × 10?8 mol binding sites per gram of membrane protein. Native rough microsomes showed a much lower binding capacity at 0 °C than stripped rough microsomes, but showed considerable uptake of ribosomes at 37 °C. Smooth microsomes, treated for stripping and incubated at 0 °C, accepted less than half as many ribosomes as stripped rough microsomes. Erythrocyte ghosts were incapable of binding ribosomes. Microsomal binding sites were heat sensitive, were destroyed by a brief incubation with a mixture of trypsin and chymotrypsin in the cold, and were unaffected by incubation with phospholipase C.Ribosome binding was decreased by increasing the concentration of monovalent ions and was strongly inhibited by 10?4m-aurintricarboxylic acid. Experiments with purified ribosomal subunits revealed that at concentrations of monovalent ions close to physiological concentrations (100 to 150 mm-KCl), microsomal binding sites had a greater affinity for 60 S than for 40 S subunits.Stripped rough microsomes were also capable of accepting polysomes obtained from rough microsomes by detergent treatment. Although this binding presumably involves the correct membrane binding sites, polypeptides discharged from re-bound polymers were not transferred to the vesicular cavities, as in native microsomes. The released polypeptides remained firmly associated with the outer microsomal face, as shown by their accessibility to proteases.  相似文献   

19.
EFFECT OF TRYPSIN ON LIVER MICROSOMES   总被引:3,自引:3,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
The effect of trypsin on the morphology of the rat liver microsomal fraction isolated by differential centrifugation has been investigated. The microsomes were incubated at 37°C and centrifuged thereafter under the conditions of their initial isolation. The trypsin-treated microsomes and the untreated controls were fixed in unbuffered osmium tetroxide and embedded first in gelose and then in methacrylate. In the trypsin-treated microsomes, there was a removal of the ribosomes from the rough vesicles. Parallel chemical determinations showed that the total nitrogen and total phosphorus of the pellet were lowered. Particles, densely stained with phosphotungstic acid (PTA) and homogeneous in appearance, were found within microsome smooth vesicles in a fluffy layer which collects on the top of the microsome pellet. The morphology of these PTA-stained particles remained unchanged after incubation with trypsin.  相似文献   

20.
Several detergents activated microsomal dehydrodolichyl diphosphate synthase of rat liver, but the chain length of products shifted downward from C90 and C95 with increasing concentration of the detergents. Maximum activation was observed at the concentration of 2% Triton X-100, 30 mM octyl glucoside, 30 mM 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate, and 10 mM deoxycholate with the product chain length being C80-C85, C65-C75, C70-C75, and C55-C65, respectively. The activity of Triton X-100 solubilized enzyme was decreased by asolectin, phosphatidylethanolamine, and phosphatidylcholine. The chain lengths of products formed in the presence of these phospholipids were C85 and C90. In the presence of both phosphatidylcholine and Mg2+ the solubilized enzyme was able to produce C90 and C95 dehydrodolichyl diphosphates like native microsomal enzyme. Microsomal enzyme preparations from rat liver, brain, and testis catalyzed the formation of dehydrodolichyl diphosphates with the same chain lengths as those of the natural dolichols occurring in individual tissues. The chain length distribution of dehydrodolichyl products by (rat liver) microsomes also depended on the concentration of substrates. Not only did increasing the concentration of isopentenyl diphosphate lead to longer chain product, but decreasing that of farnesyl diphosphate increased product chain length.  相似文献   

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