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1.
During the asexual stage of malaria infection, the intracellular parasite exports membranes into the erythrocyte cytoplasm and lipids and proteins to the host cell membrane, essentially "transforming" the erythrocyte. To investigate lipid and protein trafficking pathways within Plasmodium falciparum-infected erythrocytes, synchronous cultures are temporally analyzed by confocal fluorescence imaging microscopy for the production, location and morphology of exported membranes (vesicles) and parasite proteins. Highly mobile vesicles are observed as early as 4 h postinvasion in the erythrocyte cytoplasm of infected erythrocytes incubated in vitro with C6-NBD-labeled phospholipids. These vesicles are most prevalent in the trophozoite stage. An immunofluorescence technique is developed to simultaneously determine the morphology and distribution of the fluorescent membranes and a number of parasite proteins within a single parasitized erythrocyte. Parasite proteins are visualized with FITC- or Texas red-labeled monoclonal antibodies. Double-label immunofluorescence reveals that of the five parasite antigens examined, only one was predominantly associated with membranes in the erythrocyte cytoplasm. Two other parasite antigens localized only in part to these vesicles, with the majority of the exported antigens present in lipid-free aggregates in the host cell cytoplasm. Another parasite antigen transported into the erythrocyte cytoplasm is localized exclusively in lipid-free aggregates. A parasite plasma membrane (PPM) and/or parasitophorous vacuolar membrane (PVM) antigen which is not exported always colocalizes with fluorescent lipids in the PPM/PVM. Visualization of two parasite proteins simultaneously using FITC- and Texas red-labeled 2 degrees antibodies reveals that some parasite proteins are constitutively transported in the same vesicles, whereas other are segregated before export. Of the four exported antigens, only one appears to cross the barriers of the PPM and PVM through membrane-mediated events, whereas the others are exported across the PPM/PVM to the host cell cytoplasm and surface membrane through lipid (vesicle)-independent pathways.  相似文献   

2.
D Liebowitz  D Wang    E Kieff 《Journal of virology》1986,58(1):233-237
Epstein-Barr virus is known to encode three nuclear proteins and one membrane protein (LMP) in latently infected growth-transformed cells. Studies of the plasma membrane localization and orientation of LMP by protease digestion of live cells and by immunofluorescence indicated the following. (i) At least 30% of LMP is in the plasma membrane, as opposed to other cytoplasmic membranes. (ii) A small LMP domain which corresponds to a previously proposed outer reverse turn between the first two transmembrane domains is exposed on the outer cell surface (and two other proposed outer-reverse-turn domains may be exposed), whereas all or almost all of the rest of the protein is not exposed on the outer cell surface. (iii) LMP is present in patches in the cell plasma membrane.  相似文献   

3.
Plasma membranes of normal duckling erythrocytes were prepared by blender homogenization and nitro-en decompression. Surface membrane vesicles of red cells infected with the avian malaria Plasmodium lophurae were produced by nitrogen decompression. Membranes of erythrocyte-free malaria parasites were removed from cytoplasmic constituents by Dounce homogenization. These membranes were collected by centrifugation in a sucrose step gradient and purified on a linear sucrose gradient. Red cell membranes had a buoyant density of 1.159 g/cm3, whereas plasmodial membranes banded at 2 densities: 1.110 g/cm3 and 1.158 g/cm3. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis of the isolated red cell membranes revealed 7 major protein bands with molecular weights (MW) ranging from 230, 000 to 22,000, and 3 glycoprotein bands with MW of 160,000, 88,000 and 37,000. Parasite membranes also had 7 major bands with MW ranging from 100,000 to 22,000. No glycoproteins were identifiable in these membranes. The proteins of the surface membranes from infected red cells had MW similar to those from normal red cells; however, there was some evidence of a reduction in the amount of the high MW polypeptides. The red cell membrane contained 79 nmoles sialic acid/mg membrane protein, whereas plasmodial membranes had 8 nmoles sialic acid/mg membrane protein. The sialic acid content of the surface membranes of infected red cells was significantly smaller than that of normal cells. Lactoperoxidase-glucose oxidase-catalyzed iodination of intact normal and malaria-infected erythrocytes labeled 7 surface components. Although no observable differences in iodinatable proteins were seen in these preparations, there was a striking reduction in the iodinatability of erythrocytic membranes obtained from P. lophurae-infected cells. Erythrocyte-free plasmodia bound very little radioactive iodine; the small amount of radioactivity was distributed among 3 major bands with MW of 42,000, 32,000 and 28,000. It is suggested that the alterations of the surface of the P. lophurae-infected erythrocyte do not occur by a wholesale insertion of plasmodial membrane proteins into the red cell plasma membrane, but rather that there are parasite-mediated modifications of existing membrane polypeptides.  相似文献   

4.
Limiting membranes of malaria parasites and host red cells stain differently when exposed to positively charged iron colloid. Negatively charged red cell membranes avidly bind colloid, whereas parasite membranes do not. This selectivity in colloidal iron uptake by the 2 types of membranes can be utilized as an aid in discerning the amounts of contaminating host cell membranes in “free” malaria parasite preparations and in related cell-free membrane extracts.  相似文献   

5.
The human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum develops in a parasitophorous vacuolar membrane (PVM) within the mature red cell and extensively modifies structural and antigenic properties of this host cell. Recent studies shed significant new, mechanistic perspective on the underlying processes. There is finally, definitive evidence that despite the absence of endocytosis, transmembrane proteins in the host red cell membrane are imported in to the PVM. These are not major erythrocyte proteins but components that reside in detergent resistant membrane (DRM) rafts in red cell membrane and are detected in rafts in the PVM. Disruption of either erythrocyte or vacuolar rafts is detrimental to infection suggesting that raft proteins and lipids are essential for the parasitization of the red cell. On secretory export of parasite proteins: an ER secretory signal (SS) sequence is required for protein secretion to the PV. Proteins carrying an additional plastid targeting sequence (PTS) are also detected in the PV but subsequently delivered to the plastid organelle within the parasite, suggesting that the PTS may have a second function as an endocytic sorting signal. A distinct but yet undefined peptidic motif underlies protein transport across the PVM to the red cell (although all of the published data does not yet fit this model). Further multiple exported proteins transit through secretory 'cleft' structures, suggesting that clefts may be sorting compartments assembled by the parasite in the red cell.  相似文献   

6.
Intracellular membrane traffic, during endocytosis in mouse bone marrow-derived macrophages, was studied quantitatively by morphometric and kinetic analysis. Three functionally different markers were used: Horseradish peroxidase (HRP) served as a fluid-phase (FP) marker (1000 micrograms HRP/ml in the presence of mannan) or as a receptor-mediated (RM) membrane marker (25 micrograms HRP/ml) and, third, plasma membrane (PM) glycoconjugates, enzymatically labeled with [3H]galactose at the cell surface, served as a covalent membrane marker. The cell surface was labeled with [3H]galactose, followed by either FP or by RM uptake of HRP. The kinetics of the intracellular appearance of the markers were measured as the membrane area stained by HRP-reaction product and as the number of autoradiographic grains associated with these membranes. The following compartments were distinguished: PM, coated vesicles (VI), pinosomes or endosomes (VII), secondary lysosomes (VIII), and HRP-negative vesicles (EV). Tubular structures of VII became labeled with HRP only during RM uptake. The markers flowed first into VI and VII, and after 5 min into VIII. EV became labeled with the covalent membrane marker starting from 5 min. The ratio of autoradiographic grain number to HRP-stained membrane area remained constant with time although substantially different for the various compartments, viz. 100% (VI), 50% (VII and EV) and 30% (VIII) as compared to the PM (100%). This indicated that endosomes were only partially derived from internalized PM and that secondary lysosomes contained a substantial pool of PM constituents. The observed kinetics suggested that once every 30 to 40 min the entire PM was internalized, the bulk of which was recycled after 4 min from a prelysosomal compartment(s) leaving only 12 to 20% for recycling via membranes of secondary lysosomes after a residence time of 24 to 33 min.  相似文献   

7.
SYNOPSIS. Plasma membranes of normal duckling erythrocytes were prepared by blender homogenization and nitrogen decompression. Surface membrane vesicles of red cells infected with the avian malaria Plasmodium lophurae were produced by nitrogen decompression. Membranes of erythrocyte-free malaria parasites were removed from cytoplasmic constituents by Dounce homogenization. These membranes were collected by centrifugation in a sucrose step gradient and purified on a linear sucrose gradient. Red cell membranes had a buoyant density of 1.159 g/cm3, whereas plasmodial membranes banded at 2 densities: 1.110 g/cm3 and 1.158 g/cm3. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis of the isolated red cell membranes revealed 7 major protein bands with molecular weights (MW) ranging from 230,000 to 22,000, and 3 glycoprotein bands with MW of 160,000, 88,000 and 37,000. Parasite membranes also had 7 major bands with MW ranging from 100,000 to 22,000. No glycoproteins were identifiable in these membranes. The proteins of the surface membranes from infected red cells had MW similar to those from normal red cells; however, there was some evidence of a reduction in the amount of the high MW polypeptides. The red cell membrane contained 79 nmoles sialic acid/mg membrane protein, whereas plasmodial membranes had 8 nmoles sialic acid/mg membrane protein. The sialic acid content of the surface membranes of infected red cells was significantly smaller than that of normal cells. Lactoperoxidase-glucose oxidase-catalyzed iodination of intact normal and malaria-infected erythrocytes labeled 7 surface components. Although no observable differences in iodinatable proteins were seen in these preparations, there was a striking reduction in the iodinatability of erythrocytic membranes obtained from P. lophurae-infected cells. Erythrocyte-free plasmodia bound very little radioactive iodine; the small amount of radioactivity was distributed among 3 major bands with MW of 42,000, 32,000 and 28,000. It is suggested that the alterations of the surface of the P. lophurae-infected erythrocyte do not occur by a wholesale insertion of plasmodial membrane proteins into the red cell plasma membrane, but rather that there are parasite-mediated modifications of existing membrane polypeptides.  相似文献   

8.
J W Barnwell 《Blood cells》1990,16(2-3):379-395
Malaria parasites during intraerythrocytic development change the ultrastructure, biophysics, and the antigens of the host red blood cell membrane. Parasite-encoded proteins are associated with, inserted into, or secreted across the infected erythrocyte membrane. Since parasites of the genus Plasmodium are eukaryotic cells, it must be assumed that they possess essentially eukaryotic modes of vesicle-mediated transport and translocation of proteins and membranes. Numerous studies have demonstrated vesicular structures in the cytoplasm of malaria-infected red blood cells and an assortment of parasite proteins associated with the different vesicles, membranes, and membrane-defined compartments. Some parasite polypeptides remain trapped between the parasite and the parasitophorous vacuole membranes PVM, whereas others are associated with morphologically distinct membrane-limited vesicles and vacuoles. Some of these same parasite protein antigens also associate with the erythrocyte membrane or with parasite-induced ultrastructural modifications in the membrane of the parasitized red blood cells. This implies that intracellular transport occurs in malaria-infected erythrocytes, a capacity that uninfected red blood cells normally lose upon enucleation. The specific locations of parasite antigens within the infected cell also implys the existence of targeting signals in the translocated parasite polypeptides and perhaps transport-mediating proteins. The genes corresponding to some of these translocated proteins have been sequenced. Typical (and in some cases atypical) signal peptide sequences occur, as well as a number of sequences that may result in posttranslational modifications. How or if these features figure in to the translocation across, and targeting to a particular membrane compartment of the intraerythrocytic parasite remains unknown.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
This paper describes the fine structural changes of the egg of the brittle-star Amphipholis kochii Lütken during the cortical reaction. The vitelline coat is 20 nm thick, when Ruthenium Red stain is used, and consists of a dense network of fibers. The cortical granules are large, 1.5–2.0 μm in diameter, and exist in several layers in the egg cortex, unlike the monolayer arrangement found in many other animals. The contents of the cortical granules are clearly distinguished into two components: peripheral fibrous (PF) material and central fibrous (CF) material that consists of two components differing in electron density. The PF material is densely stained by periodic acid-chromic acid-silver methenamine stain, while the CF material is stained little if at all by this technique. The vitelline coat and some PF materials form the fertilization membrane, which is about 40 nm thick and consists of three layers; the outer and the inner layer of the fertilization membrane each have a trilaminated structure. The vitelline coat substances are probably located in the upper part of the fertilization membrane. The hyaline layer, 7–8 μm thick, consists mainly of CF materials. These observations on the morphology of the ophiuroid egg are discussed in comparison with those on other echinoderms, especially echinoids and asteroids.  相似文献   

10.
Diclofenac, a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID), has been widely investigated in terms of its pharmacological action, but less is known about its effects on cell membranes and particularly on those of human erythrocytes. In the present work, the structural effects on the human erythrocyte membrane and molecular models have been investigated and reported. This report presents the following evidence that diclofenac interacts with red cell membranes: a) X-ray diffraction and fluorescence spectroscopy of phospholipid bilayers showed that diclofenac interacted with a class of lipids found in the outer moiety of the erythrocyte membrane; b) in isolated unsealed human erythrocyte membranes (IUM) the drug induced a disordering effect on the acyl chains of the membrane lipid bilayer; c) in scanning electron microscopy (SEM) studies on human erythrocytes it was observed that the drug induced changes different from the normal biconcave morphology of most red blood cells. This is the first time in which structural effects of diclofenac on the human erythrocyte membrane have been described.  相似文献   

11.
Three opposing pathways are proposed for the release of malaria parasites from infected erythrocytes: coordinated rupture of the two membranes surrounding mature parasites; fusion of erythrocyte and parasitophorus vacuolar membranes (PVM); and liberation of parasites enclosed within the vacuole from the erythrocyte followed by PVM disintegration. Rupture by cell swelling should yield erythrocyte ghosts; membrane fusion is inhibited by inner-leaflet amphiphiles of positive intrinsic curvature, which contrariwise promote membrane rupture; and without protease inhibitors, parasites would leave erythrocytes packed within the vacuole. Therefore, we visualized erythrocytes releasing P. falciparum using fluorescent microscopy of differentially labeled membranes. Release did not yield erythrocyte ghosts, positive-curvature amphiphiles did not inhibit release but promoted it, and release of packed merozoites was shown to be an artifact. Instead, two sequential morphological stages preceded a convulsive rupture of membranes and rapid radial discharge of separated merozoites, leaving segregated internal membrane fragments and plasma membrane vesicles or blebs at the sites of parasite egress. These results, together with the modulation of release by osmotic stress, suggest a pathway of parasite release that features a biochemically altered erythrocyte membrane that folds after pressure-driven rupture of membranes.  相似文献   

12.
When human erythrocyte membranes were treated with perfringolysin O (Clostridium perfringens theta-toxin) and examined by electron microscopy after freeze-fracture, two ultrastructural alterations were observed in fracture faces of membrane. (1) A random aggregation of intramembranous particles was seen in the fracture face of the protoplasmic half (PF face) of all membranes treated with the toxin, even if at a low concentration (40 hemolytic units/ml). On the other hand, the aggregation in the fracture face of the exoplasmic half (EF face) was observed only in membranes treated with a high concentration (3300 hemolytic units/ml) for 2 h. (2) Round protrusions and "cavities" with 30 nm in diameter were visible in EF and PF faces of membranes treated with a high concentration, respectively. These structures were always protruded toward cytoplasmic side, but did not appear to form holes through the membrane. Ring and arc shaped structures with a dark center of 26 nm and a distinct border of 5 nm in width were observed when the toxin alone was negatively stained at a very high concentration (170,000 hemolytic units/ml). These structures were also produced in the presence of cholesterol even if the toxin concentration was low.  相似文献   

13.
T A Keil 《Tissue & cell》1984,16(5):705-717
Negatively charged surface coats have been demonstrated on the pore tubules and dendritic membranes of olfactory hairs of male Antheraea polyphemus silkmoths by application of the cationic markers lanthanum (La3+), ruthenium red (RR), and cationized ferritin (CF). Lanthanum and RR diffused readily into the apically opened hairs, whereas CF penetrated only for a relatively short distance. Deposits of the markers are distributed as follows: the inner surfaces of the hair walls are stained by RR and to a small degree by CF; the surfaces of the pore tubules and the dendritic membranes are stained by all three markers. The pore tubules have the strongest affinity for CF. The number of pore tubule-membrane contacts seems to be increased by the cationic dyes. The dendrites are often penetrated by RR, which forms deposits on the inner membrane leaflets, the cytoplasmic microtubules, and microfilaments, and by La3+, but never by CF. The observations provide support for the assumption that, first, the pore tubule-membrane contacts are formed via surface coats of both structures, possibly influenced by cations and, second, that the dendrites remain intact after pinching off the hair tips.  相似文献   

14.
Phenytoin (diphenylhydantoin) is an antiepileptic agent effective against all types of partial and tonic-clonic seizures. Phenytoin limits the repetitive firing of action potentials evoked by a sustained depolarization of mouse spinal cord neurons maintained in vitro. This effect is mediated by a slowing of the rate of recovery of voltage activated Na+ channels from inactivation. For this reasons it was thought of interest to study the binding affinities of phenytoin with cell membranes and their perturbing effects upon membrane structures. The effects of phenytoin on the human erythrocyte membrane and molecular models have been investigated in the present work. This report presents the following evidence that phenytoin interacts with cell membranes: a) X-ray diffraction and fluorescence spectroscopy of phospholipid bilayers showed that phenytoin perturbed a class of lipids found in the outer moiety of cell membranes; b) in isolated unsealed human erythrocyte membranes (IUM) the drug induced a disordering effect on the polar head groups and acyl chains of the erythrocyte membrane lipid bilayer; c) in scanning electron microscopy (SEM) studies on human erythrocytes the formation of echinocytes was observed, due to the insertion of phenytoin in the outer monolayer of the red cell membrane. This is the first time that an effect of phenytoin on the red cell shape is described. However, the effects of the drug were observed at concentrations higher than those currently found in plasma when phenytoin is therapeutically administered.  相似文献   

15.
Plasmodium, the parasite which causes malaria in humans multiplies in the liver and then infects circulating erythrocytes. Thus, the role of the erythrocyte cell membrane in antimalarial drug activity and resistance has key importance. The effects of the antiplasmodial N(6)-(4-methoxybenzyl)quinazoline-2,4,6-triamine (M4), and its inclusion complex (M4/HPβCD) with 2-hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin (HPβCD) on human erythrocytes and on cell membrane molecular models are herein reported. This work evidences that M4/HPβCD interacts with red cells as follows: a) in scanning electron microscopy (SEM) studies on human erythrocytes induced shape changes at a 10μM concentration; b) in isolated unsealed human erythrocyte membranes (IUM) a concentration as low as 1μM induced sharp DPH fluorescence anisotropy decrease whereas increasing concentrations produced a monotonically decrease of DPH fluorescence lifetime at 37°C; c) X-ray diffraction studies showed that 200μM induced a complete structural perturbation of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) bilayers whereas no significant effects were detected in dimyristoylphosphatidylethanolamine (DMPE) bilayers, classes of lipids present in the outer and inner monolayers of the human erythrocyte membrane, respectively; d) fluorescence spectroscopy data showed that increasing concentrations of the complex interacted with the deep hydrophobic core of DMPC large unilamellar vesicles (LUV) at 18°C. All these experiments are consistent with the insertion of M4/HPβCD in the outer monolayer of the human erythrocyte membrane; thus, it can be considered a promising and novel antimalarial agent.  相似文献   

16.
Acanthocytic red blood cells in patients with abetalipoproteinemia have a decrease membrane fluidity that is associated with increased sphingomyelin/phosphatidylcholine (SM/PC) ratios. Here we describe studies designed to gain better insight into (i) the interrelationship between the composition of lipoprotein and red blood cell membrane in abetalipoproteinemia patients and normal controls; and (ii) how the differences in lipid composition of the red blood cell membrane affect its fluidity. The increased SM/PC ratio found in abetalipoproteinemia plasma high density lipoproteins (HDL) (3 times greater than controls) was paralleled by an increase in this ratio in acanthocytic red cells, but to a lesser degree (almost twice greater than control red cells). Cholesterol/phospholipid mole ratios (C/P) were increased 3-fold in abetalipoproteinemia HDL, but only slightly increased in red cells compared to controls values. As in the controls, 80-85% of abetalipoproteinemia red cell sphingomyelin was found to be in the outer half of the erythrocyte membrane. Membrane fluidity was defined in terms of microviscosity (eta) between 5 and 42 degrees C by the fluorescent polarization of 1,6-diphenylhexatriene (DPH) present in erythrocyte ghost membranes. At all temperatures, membrane microviscosity was higher in abetalipoproteinemia ghosts than controls, but these differences decreased at higher temperatures (12.34 vs 9.79 poise, respectively at 10 degrees C; 4.63 vs 4.04 poise at 37 degrees C). These differences were eliminated after oxidation of all membrane cholesterol to cholest-4-en-3-one by incubation with cholesterol oxidase. Following cholesterol oxidation, the membrane microviscosity decreased in patient ghosts more than in normal red blood cells so that at all temperatures no significant differences were present relative to control ghosts, in which the apparent microviscosity was also diminished but to a lesser degree. Therefore, although increased SM/PC ratios in abetalipoproteinemia may be responsible for decreased erythrocyte membrane fluidity, these effects are dependent upon normal interactions of cholesterol with red cell phospholipid.  相似文献   

17.
Summary The chloroplasts ofEuglena gracilis have been examined by freeze-cleaving and deep-etching techniques.The two chloroplast envelope membranes exhibit distinct fracture faces which do not resemble any of the thylakoid fracture faces.Freeze-cleaved thylakoid membranes reveal four split inner faces. Two of these faces correspond to stacked membrane regions, and two to unstacked regions. Analysis of particle sizes on the exposed faces has revealed certain differences from other chloroplast systems, which are discussed. Thylakoid membranes inEuglena are shown to reveal a constant number of particles per unit area (based on the total particle number for both complementary faces) whether they are stacked or unstacked.Deep-etchedEuglena thylakoid membranes show two additional faces, which correspond to true inner and outer thylakoid surfaces. Both of these surfaces carry very uniform populations of particles. Those on the external surface (the A surface) are round and possess a diameter of approximately 9.5 nm. Those on the inner surface (the D surface) appear rectangular (as paired subunits) and measure approximately 10 nm in width and 18 nm in length. Distribution counts of particles show that the number of particles per unit area revealed by freeze-cleaving within the thylakoid membrane approximates closely the number of particles exposed on the external thylakoid surface (the A surface) by deep-etching. The possible significance of this correlation is discussed. The distribution of rectangular particles on the inner surface of the thylakoid sac (D surface) seems to be the same in both stacked and unstacked membrane regions. We have found no correlation between the D surface particles and any clearly defined population of particles on internal, freeze-cleaved membrane faces. These and other observations suggest that stacked and unstacked membranes are similar, if not identical in internal structure.  相似文献   

18.
Cystic fibrosis (CF), the most common genetic disease among Caucasians, is caused by mutations in the gene encoding CFTR (cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator). The most frequent mutation, ΔF508, results in protein misfolding and, as a consequence, prevents CFTR from reaching its final location at the cell surface. CFTR is expressed in various cell types including red blood cells. The functional role of CFTR in erythrocytes is still unclear. Since the number of CFTR copies in a single erythrocyte of healthy donors and CF patients with a homozygous ΔF508 mutation is unknown, we counted CFTR, localized in erythrocyte plasma membrane, at the single molecule level. A novel experimental approach combining atomic force microscopy with quantum-dot-labeled anti-CFTR antibodies, used as topographic surface markers, was employed to detect individual CFTR molecules. Analysis of erythrocyte plasma membranes taken from healthy donors and CF patients with a homozygous ΔF508 mutation reveals mean (SEM) values of 698 (12.8) (n=542) and 172 (3.8) (n=538) CFTR molecules per red blood cell, respectively. We conclude that erythrocytes reflect the CFTR status of the organism and that quantification of CFTR in a blood sample could be useful in the diagnosis of CFTR related diseases.  相似文献   

19.
Three specimen preparation techniques for electron microscopy were used to investigate the incorporation of the ATPase polypeptide chains in the membranes of fragmented sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) obtained from rabbit skeletal muscle. Observations were made of both normal vesicles and vesicles exposed to trypsin, which is known to cleave the ATPase protein and to alter the ultrastructure of the vesicles in predictable ways. Freeze-fracture replicas reveal the typical 90-A particles on the concave (PF) faces with a density of 5,730 +/- 520/mum2. On the other hand both negatively stained and deeply etched preparations display outer projections, which are absent on trypsin-incubated vesicles. The etched specimens afford for the first time top views of the vesicles in the absence of any stain. These views reveal outer projections on the PS surface with a density of 21,000 +/- 3,900/mum2, a value nearly approximating the density of the ATPase polypeptide chains (106,000 mol wt) calculated on the basis of protein and membrane area determinations. On the other hand, this value is three to four times higher than that found for the density of the 90-A particles on the concave fracture faces. Since both outer projections and 90-A particles are identified with the ATPase protein, it is suggested that the ATPase polypeptide chains are amphiphilic molecules, with polar ends protruding individually as outer projections on the surface of the vesicles, and hydrophobic ends appearing as 90-A particles on the concave fracture faces. The discrepancy between the densities of the outer projections and the 90-A particles may be attributed either to variable penetration of the polypeptide chains into the membrane bilayer, or to formation of oligomers containing three or four hydrophobic ends and appearing as single 90-A particles. Each ATPase chain forms a complex with 20-30 phospholipid molecules. The remaining phospholipids (approximately 70% of the total SR phospholipids) account for less than half the membrane volume. It is proposed that the outer leaflet of the SR membrane is prevalently composed of the ATPase lipoprotein complex, and the inner leaflet is mostly a phospholipid monolayer.  相似文献   

20.
Vitamin E is an essential factor to maintain biological membranes stability and its lack may affect membranes structures and reduce erythrocyte life-span. Vitamin E also play a role in the maintenance of a normal platelet aggregation. A.A. studied the effects of a ten days supply of d-1-alpha tocopherol acetate (50 mg/Kg/die) on blood viscosity in 8 rabbits. Results obtained show a significant reduction of blood viscosity on 6th day of treatment in the male rabbits and a progressive reduction of values from the 6th till the 10th day in female rabbits. The most significant decrease of blood viscosity were obtained at the lowest shear-rates, due to an increased red cells deformability to the antioxidative action of vitamin E on the erythrocytes membrane and to a reduced red cells aggregation. Such modifications on the red blood cells caratheristics can be determined by vitamin E through different mechanism: a) inhibiting red cell membrane's polyunsaturable fatty acids oxidation; b) by removal of abnormal lipids from erythrocyte membrane; c) physical and chemical stabilization of membrane's surface.  相似文献   

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