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1.
M E Haque  A J McCoy  J Glenn  J Lee  B R Lentz 《Biochemistry》2001,40(47):14243-14251
The effects of hemagglutinin (HA) fusion peptide (X-31) on poly(ethylene glycol)- (PEG-) mediated vesicle fusion in three different vesicle systems have been compared: dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC) small unilamellar vesicles (SUV) and large unilamellar vesicles (LUV) and palmitoyloleoylphosphatidylcholine (POPC) large unilamellar perturbed vesicles (pert. LUV). POPC LUVs were asymmetrically perturbed by hydrolyzing 2.5% of the outer leaflet lipid with phospholipase A(2) and removing hydrolysis products with BSA. The mixing of vesicle contents showed that these perturbed vesicles fused in the presence of PEG as did DOPC SUV, but unperturbed LUV did not. Fusion peptide had different effects on the fusion of these different types of vesicles: fusion was not induced in the absence of PEG or in unperturbed DOPC LUV even in the presence of PEG. Fusion was enhanced in DOPC SUV at low peptide surface occupancy but hindered at high surface occupancy. Finally, fusion was hindered in proportion to peptide concentration in perturbed POPC LUV. Contents leakage assays demonstrated that the peptide enhanced leakage in all vesicles. The peptide enhanced lipid transfer between both fusogenic and nonfusogenic vesicles. Peptide binding was detected in terms of enhanced tryptophan fluorescence or through transfer of tryptophan excited-state energy to membrane-bound diphenylhexatriene (DPH). The peptide had a higher affinity for vesicles with packing defects (SUV and perturbed LUV). Quasi-elastic light scattering (QELS) indicated that the peptide caused vesicles to aggregate. We conclude that binding of the fusion peptide to vesicle membranes has a significant effect on membrane properties but does not induce fusion. Indeed, the fusion peptide inhibited fusion of perturbed LUV. It can, however, enhance fusion between highly curved membranes that normally fuse when brought into close contact by PEG.  相似文献   

2.
In a previous article, we demonstrated that histones (H1 or histone octamers) interact with negatively charged bilayers and induce extensive aggregation of vesicles containing phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate (PIP) and, to a lesser extent, vesicles containing phosphatidylinositol (PI). Here, we found that vesicles containing PIP, but not those containing PI, can undergo fusion induced by histones. Fusion was demonstrated through the observation of intervesicular mixing of total lipids and inner monolayer lipids, and by ultrastructural and confocal microscopy studies. Moreover, in both PI- and PIP-containing vesicles, histones caused permeabilization and release of vesicular aqueous contents, but the leakage mechanism was different (all-or-none for PI and graded release for PIP vesicles). These results indicate that histones could play a role in the remodeling of the nuclear envelope that takes place during the mitotic cycle.  相似文献   

3.
Interaction of wheat alpha-thionin with large unilamellar vesicles.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The interaction of the wheat antibacterial peptide alpha-thionin with large unilamellar vesicles has been investigated by means of fluorescence spectroscopy. Binding of the peptide to the vesicles is followed by the release of vesicle contents, vesicle aggregation, and lipid mixing. Vesicle fusion, i.e., mixing of the aqueous contents, was not observed. Peptide binding is governed by electrostatic interactions and shows no cooperativity. The amphipatic nature of wheat alpha-thionin seems to destabilize the membrane bilayer and trigger the aggregation of the vesicles and lipid mixing. The presence of distearoylphosphatidylethanolamine-poly(ethylene glycol 2000) (PEG-PE) within the membrane provides a steric barrier that inhibits vesicle aggregation and lipid mixing but does not prevent leakage. Vesicle leakage through discrete membrane channels is unlikely, because the release of encapsulated large fluorescent dextrans is very similar to that of 8-aminonaphthalene-1,3,6,trisulfonic acid (ANTS). A minimum number of 700 peptide molecules must bind to each vesicle to produce complete leakage, which suggests a mechanism in which the overall destabilization of the membrane is due to the formation of transient pores rather than discrete channels.  相似文献   

4.
Villar AV  Alonso A  Goñi FM 《Biochemistry》2000,39(46):14012-14018
Large unilamellar vesicles containing phosphatidylinositol (PI), neutral phospholipids, and cholesterol are induced to fuse by the catalytic activity of phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC). PI cleavage by PI-PLC is followed by vesicle aggregation, intervesicular lipid mixing, and mixing of vesicular aqueous contents. An average of 2-3 vesicles merge into a large one in the fusion process. Vesicle fusion is accompanied by leakage of vesicular contents. A novel method has been developed to monitor mixing of lipids located in the inner monolayers of the vesicles involved in fusion. Using this method, the mixing of inner monolayer lipids and that of vesicular aqueous contents are seen to occur simultaneously, thus giving rise to the fusion pore. Kinetic studies show, for fusing vesicles, second-order dependence of lipid mixing on diacylglycerol concentration in the bilayer. Varying proportions of PI in the liposomal formulation lead to different physical effects of PI-PLC. Specifically, 30-40 mol % PI lead to vesicle fusion, while with 5-10 mol % PI only hemifusion is detected, i.e., mixing of outer monolayer lipids without mixing of aqueous contents. However, when diacylglycerol is included in the bilayers containing 5 mol % PI, PI-PLC activity leads to complete fusion.  相似文献   

5.
Lung surfactant secretion in alveolar type II cells occurs following lamellar body fusion with plasma membrane. Annexin A7 is a Ca2+-dependent membrane-binding protein that is postulated to promote membrane fusion during exocytosis in some cell types including type II cells. Since annexin A7 preferably binds to lamellar body membranes, we postulated that specific lipids could modify the mode of annexin A7 interaction with membranes and its membrane fusion activity. Initial studies with phospholipid vesicles containing phosphatidylserine and other lipids showed that certain lipids affected protein interaction with vesicle membranes as determined by change in protein tryptophan fluorescence, protein interaction with trans membranes, and by protein sensitivity to limited proteolysis. The presence of signaling lipids, diacylglycerol or phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate, as minor components also modified the lipid vesicle effect on these characteristics and membrane fusion activity of annexin A7. In vitro incubation of lamellar bodies with diacylglycerol or phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate caused their enrichment with either lipid, and increased the annexin A7 and Ca2+-mediated fusion of lamellar bodies. Treatment of isolated lung lamellar bodies with phosphatidylinositol- or phosphatidylcholine phospholipase C to increase diacylglycerol, without or with preincubation with phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate, augmented the fusion activity of annexin A7. Thus, increased diacylglycerol in lamellar bodies following cell stimulation with secretagogues may enhance membrane fusion activity of annexin A7.  相似文献   

6.
The phosphatidylinositol transfer protein from bovine brain (PI-TP) has lipid transfer characteristics which make it well suited to maintain phosphatidylinositol (PI) levels in intracellular membranes (Van Paridon, P.A., Gadella, Jr., T.W.J., Somerharju, P.J. and Wirtz, K.W.A. (1987) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 903, 68-77). Using a continuous fluorimetric transfer assay we have investigated in what way phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate (PIP), phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) and phosphatidic acid (PA) affect the transfer activity of this protein in model systems. The effects were analysed by application of a kinetic model which yielded the association constant (K) and dissociation rate constant (k-) for the PI-TP/vesicle complex. Incorporation of PA, PIP and PIP2 into the phosphatidylcholine-containing vesicles increased the association constant solely by diminishing the dissociation rate constant. This effect could be completely accounted for by changes in the membrane surface charge density. In contrast to the inhibitory effect of PA, the inhibition caused by PIP2 was completely abolished by the addition of neomycin, in agreement with the observed preferential binding of this polyamine antibiotic to PIP2. A rise in pH from 5.5 to 8 drastically reduced the association constant for vesicles containing 16 mol% PA (e.g., from 38 to 2 mM-1), without affecting the Vmax. This effect could be mainly attributed to an increase in the negative charge on PI-TP (isoelectric point 5.5), resulting in an enhanced repulsion. Increasing the negative membrane surface charge at pH 7.4 had the opposite effect. This is interpreted to indicate that the membrane interaction site on PI-TP must be positively charged, overcoming the repulsive forces between PI-TP and the vesicle. Addition of PIP2 micelles as a third component in the transfer assay strongly inhibited PI-TP transfer activity. The extent of inhibition suggests a very high affinity of PI-TP for this lipid.  相似文献   

7.
The incorporation of phosphatidyl[2-3H]inositol ([3H]PI) from vesicles or microsomal membranes into rat liver nuclei is greatly stimulated by phosphatidylinositol transfer protein (PI-TP). The nuclei are able to phosphorylate [3H]PI, with the production of phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate (PIP). Recovery of tritiated inositol trisphosphate, inositol phosphate, glycerophosphoinositol and inositol, suggests that in isolated nuclei a large set of enzymes of the PI cycle is present, similar to the enzymes involved in the plasma membrane PI cycle. Incubation with [gamma-32P]ATP shows that isolated nuclei are able to phosphorylate endogenous PI to PIP and phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2). In the presence of exogenous PI and detergent the synthesis of PIP is increased, indicating that in nuclei the PI pool is suboptimal for the PI-kinase activity. The present study suggests that PI-TP may be involved in providing substrates for PI metabolism at the nuclear level.  相似文献   

8.
The effect of lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC) on lipid vesicle fusion and leakage induced by influenza virus fusion peptides and the peptide interaction with lipid membranes were studied by using fluorescence spectroscopy and monolayer surface tension measurements. It was confirmed that the wild-type fusion peptide-induced vesicle fusion rate increased several-fold between pH 7 and 5, unlike a mutated peptide, in which valine residues were substituted for glutamic acid residues at positions 11 and 15. This mutated peptide exhibited a much greater ability to induce lipid vesicle fusion and leakage but in a less pH-dependent manner compared to the wild-type fusion peptide. The peptide-induced vesicle fusion and leakage were well correlated with the degree of interaction of these peptides with lipid membranes, as deduced from the rotational correlation time obtained for the peptide tryptophan fluorescence. Both vesicle fusion and leakage induced by the peptides were suppressed by LPC incorporated into lipid vesicle membranes in a concentration-dependent manner. The rotational correlation time associated with the peptide’s tryptophan residue, which interacts with lipid membranes containing up to 25 mole % LPC, was virtually the same compared to lipid membranes without LPC, indicating that LPC-incorporated membrane did not affect the peptide interaction with the membrane. The adsorption of peptide onto a lipid monolayer also showed that the presence of LPC did not affect peptide adsorption.  相似文献   

9.
The role of phosphoinositides has been thoroughly described in many signalling and membrane trafficking events but their function as modulators of membrane structure and dynamics in membrane fusion has not been investigated. We have reconstructed models that mimic the composition of nuclear envelope precursor membranes with naturally elevated amounts of phosphoinositides. These fusogenic membranes (membrane vesicle 1(MV1) and nuclear envelope remnants (NER) are critical for the assembly of the nuclear envelope. Phospholipids, cholesterol, and polyphosphoinositides, with polyunsaturated fatty acid chains that were identified in the natural nuclear membranes by lipid mass spectrometry, have been used to reconstruct complex model membranes mimicking nuclear envelope precursor membranes. Structural and dynamic events occurring in the membrane core and at the membrane surface were monitored by solid-state deuterium and phosphorus NMR. "MV1-like" (PC∶PI∶PIP∶PIP(2), 30∶20∶18∶12, mol%) membranes that exhibited high levels of PtdIns, PtdInsP and PtdInsP(2) had an unusually fluid membrane core (up to 20% increase, compared to membranes with low amounts of phosphoinositides to mimic the endoplasmic reticulum). "NER-like" (PC∶CH∶PI∶PIP∶PIP(2), 28∶42∶16∶7∶7, mol%) membranes containing high amounts of both cholesterol and phosphoinositides exhibited liquid-ordered phase properties, but with markedly lower rigidity (10-15% decrease). Phosphoinositides are the first lipids reported to counterbalance the ordering effect of cholesterol. At the membrane surface, phosphoinositides control the orientation dynamics of other lipids in the model membranes, while remaining unchanged themselves. This is an important finding as it provides unprecedented mechanistic insight into the role of phosphoinositides in membrane dynamics. Biological implications of our findings and a model describing the roles of fusogenic membrane vesicles are proposed.  相似文献   

10.
The metabolism of polyphosphoinositides (PPI) has been investigated during the meiosis reinitiation of the oocytes of a prosobranch mollusk, the limpet Patella vulgata. Meiosis reinitiation which leads to germinal vesicle breakdown (GVBD) and metaphase-1 spindle formation was artificially induced by treating the prophase-blocked oocytes with 10 mM NH4Cl, pH 8.2. This treatment, which results in a rise in intracellular pH, triggered a general increase in polyphosphoinositide synthesis. Determinations of phosphorus content showed that maturation induced a 30 to 50% increase in both phosphatidylinositol (PI) and phosphatidylinositol-1 monophosphate (PIP) concentrations. Incorporations of 32PO4 and [3H]inositol have been measured in three classes of polyphosphoinositides: PI, PIP, and phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2). By comparing incorporation rates of the radiolabeled precursors into PPI before and after meiosis reinitiation, we found that artificial maturation by ammonia induced a 50-fold increase in the turnover of these lipids. No significant burst of inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3) was observed after maturation. We suggest that modifications in PPI metabolism occurring at maturation of Patella oocytes might ensure the formation of an important stock of PPI that would be available for the profuse production of IP3, the messenger responsible for the Ca2+ signal at fertilization.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Fusion of phosphatidylserine vesicles induced by divalent cations, temperature and osmotic pressure gradients across the membrane was studied with respect to variations in vesicle size. Vesicle fusion was followed by two different methods: 1) the Tb/DPA fusion assay, whereby the fluorescent intensity upon mixing of the internal aqueous contents of fused lipid vesicles was monitored, and 2) measurement of the changes in turbidity of the vesicle suspension due to vesicle fusion. It was found that the threshold concentration of divalent cations necessary to induce vesicle fusion depended on the size of vesicles; as the diameter of the vesicle increased, the threshold value increased and the extent of fusion became less. For the osmotic pressure-induced vesicle fusion, the larger the diameter of vesicles, the smaller was the osmotic pressure gradient required to induce membrane fusion. Divalent cations, temperature increase and vesicle membrane expansion by osmotic pressure gradient all resulted in increase in surface energy (tension) of the membrane. The degree of membrane fusion correlated with the corresponding surface energy changes of vesicle membranes due to the above fusion-inducing agents. The increase in surface energy of 9.5 dyn/cm from the reference state corresponded to the threshold point of phosphatidylserine membrane fusion. An attempt was made to explain the factors influencing fusion phenomena on the basis of a single unifying theory.  相似文献   

12.
Unilamellar vesicles of varying and reasonably uniform size were prepared from 1,2-dipalmitoyl-3-sn-phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) by the extrusion procedure and sonication. Quasi-elastic light scattering was used to show that different vesicle preparations had mean (Z-averaged) diameters of 1340, 900, 770, 630, and 358 A (sonicated). Bilayer-phase behavior as detected by differential scanning calorimetry was consistent with the existence of essentially uniform vesicle populations of different sizes. The response of these different vesicles to treatment with poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) was monitored using fluorescence assays for lipid transfer, contents leakage, and contents mixing, as well as quasi-elastic light scattering. No fusion, as judged by vesicle contents mixing and change in vesicle size, was detected for vesicles of diameter greater than 770 A. The diameters of smaller vesicles increased dramatically when treated with high concentrations of PEG, although mixing of their contents could not be detected both because of their small trapped volumes and because of the extensive leakage induced in small vesicles by high concentrations of PEG. Lipid transfer was detected between vesicles of all sizes. We conclude the high bilayer curvature does encourage fusion of closely juxtaposed membrane bilayers but that highly curved vesicles appear also to rupture and form larger structures when diluted from high PEG concentration, a process that can be confused with fusion. Despite the failure of PEG to induce fusion of large, uncurved vesicles composed of a single phosphatidylcholine, these vesicles can be induced to fuse when they contain small amounts of certain amphiphathic compounds thought to play a role in cellular fusion processes. Thus, vesicles which contained 0.5 mol % L-alpha-lysopalmitoylphosphatidylcholine, 5 mol % platelet activating factor, or 0.5 mol % palmitic acid fused in the presence of 30%, 25%, and 20% (w/w) PEG, respectively. However, vesicles containing 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycerol, 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycerol, 1-oleoyl-2-acetyl-sn-glycerol, or monooleoyl-rac-glycerol at surface concentrations up to 5 mol % did not fuse in the presence or absence of PEG. There was no correlation between the abilities of these amphipaths to induce phase separation or nonlamellar phases and their abilities to support fusion of pure DPPC unilamellar vesicles in the presence of high concentrations of PEG. The results are discussed in terms of the type of disrupted lipid packing that could be expected to favor PEG-mediated fusion.  相似文献   

13.
We have used assays of lipid probe mixing, contents mixing and contents leakage to monitor the divalent cation-mediated interactions between lipid vesicles containing phosphatidylserine (PS) as a minority component together with mixtures of phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), phosphatidylcholine (PC) or sphingomyelin, and cholesterol in varying proportions. The initial rates of calcium- and magnesium-induced lipid probe quenching between vesicles, which reflect primarily the rates of vesicle aggregation, are strongly reduced as progressively higher proportions of PC or sphingomyelin are incorporated into PE/PS vesicles. The initial rates of divalent cation-induced contents mixing and contents leakage for PE/PS vesicles are also strongly reduced when choline phospholipids are incorporated into the vesicles in even low molar proportions. Sphingomyelin has a more potent inhibitory effect on these processes than does PC at an equal level in the vesicle membranes. The inclusion of cholesterol in these vesicles, at levels up to 1:2 moles sterol/mole phospholipid, has little effect on the rates of calcium- or magnesium-induced vesicle aggregation. However, cholesterol significantly enhances the initial rates of vesicle contents mixing and contents leakage in the presence of divalent cations when the vesicles contain choline as well as amino phospholipids. This effect is substantial only when the level of cholesterol exceeds the level of choline phospholipids in the vesicles. These results may have significance for the fusion of certain cellular membranes in mammalian cells, whose cytoplasmic faces have lipid compositions very similar to those of the vesicles examined in this study.  相似文献   

14.
Cationic, triple-chain amphiphiles promote vesicle fusion more than structurally related double-chain or single-chain analogues. Two types of vesicle fusion experiments were conducted, mixing of oppositely charged vesicles and acid-triggered self-fusion of vesicles composed of cationic amphiphile and anionic cholesteryl hemisuccinate (CHEMS). Vesicle fusion was monitored by standard fluorescence assays for intermembrane lipid mixing, aqueous contents mixing and leakage. Differential scanning calorimetry was used to show that triple-chain amphiphiles lower the lamellar-inverse hexagonal (L(alpha)-H(II)) phase transition temperature for dipalmitoleoylphosphatidylethanolamine. The triple-chain amphiphiles may enhance vesicle fusion because they can stabilize the inversely curved membrane surfaces of the fusion intermediates, however, other factors such as extended conformation, packing defects, chain motion, or surface dehydration may also contribute. From the perspective of drug delivery, the results suggest that vesicles containing cationic, triple-chain amphiphiles (and cationic, cone-shaped amphiphiles in general) may be effective as fusogenic delivery capsules.  相似文献   

15.
Cationic, triple-chain amphiphiles promote vesicle fusion more than structurally related double-chain or single-chain analogues. Two types of vesicle fusion experiments were conducted, mixing of oppositely charged vesicles and acid-triggered self-fusion of vesicles composed of cationic amphiphile and anionic cholesteryl hemisuccinate (CHEMS). Vesicle fusion was monitored by standard fluorescence assays for intermembrane lipid mixing, aqueous contents mixing and leakage. Differential scanning calorimetry was used to show that triple-chain amphiphiles lower the lamellar-inverse hexagonal (Lα-HII) phase transition temperature for dipalmitoleoylphosphatidylethanolamine. The triple-chain amphiphiles may enhance vesicle fusion because they can stabilize the inversely curved membrane surfaces of the fusion intermediates, however, other factors such as extended conformation, packing defects, chain motion, or surface dehydration may also contribute. From the perspective of drug delivery, the results suggest that vesicles containing cationic, triple-chain amphiphiles (and cationic, cone-shaped amphiphiles in general) may be effective as fusogenic delivery capsules.  相似文献   

16.
Recent discoveries on the presence and location of phosphoinositides in the eukaryotic cell nucleoplasm and nuclear membrane prompted us to study the putative interaction of chromatin components with these lipids in model membranes (liposomes). Turbidimetric studies revealed that a variety of histones and histone combinations (H1, H2AH2B, H3H4, octamers) caused a dose-dependent aggregation of phosphatidylcholine vesicles (large unilamellar vesicle or small unilamellar vesicle) containing negatively charged phospholipids. 5 mol % phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate (PIP) was enough to cause extensive aggregation under our conditions, whereas with phosphatidylinositol (PI) at least 20 mol % was necessary to obtain a similar effect. Histone binding to giant unilamellar vesicle and vesicle aggregation was visualized by confocal microscopy. Histone did not cause vesicle aggregation in the presence of DNA, and the latter was able to disassemble the histone-vesicle aggregates. At DNA/H1 weight ratios 0.1–0.5 DNA- and PIP-bound H1 appear to coexist. Isothermal calorimetry studies revealed that the PIP-H1 association constant was one order of magnitude higher than that of PI-H1, and the corresponding lipid/histone stoichiometries were ∼0.5 and ∼1, respectively. The results suggest that, in the nucleoplasm, a complex interplay of histones, DNA, and phosphoinositides may be taking place, particularly at the nucleoplasmic reticula that reach deep within the nucleoplasm, or during somatic and nonsomatic nuclear envelope assembly. The data described here provide a minimal model for analyzing and understanding the mechanism of these interactions.  相似文献   

17.
Recent discoveries on the presence and location of phosphoinositides in the eukaryotic cell nucleoplasm and nuclear membrane prompted us to study the putative interaction of chromatin components with these lipids in model membranes (liposomes). Turbidimetric studies revealed that a variety of histones and histone combinations (H1, H2AH2B, H3H4, octamers) caused a dose-dependent aggregation of phosphatidylcholine vesicles (large unilamellar vesicle or small unilamellar vesicle) containing negatively charged phospholipids. 5 mol % phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate (PIP) was enough to cause extensive aggregation under our conditions, whereas with phosphatidylinositol (PI) at least 20 mol % was necessary to obtain a similar effect. Histone binding to giant unilamellar vesicle and vesicle aggregation was visualized by confocal microscopy. Histone did not cause vesicle aggregation in the presence of DNA, and the latter was able to disassemble the histone-vesicle aggregates. At DNA/H1 weight ratios 0.1–0.5 DNA- and PIP-bound H1 appear to coexist. Isothermal calorimetry studies revealed that the PIP-H1 association constant was one order of magnitude higher than that of PI-H1, and the corresponding lipid/histone stoichiometries were ∼0.5 and ∼1, respectively. The results suggest that, in the nucleoplasm, a complex interplay of histones, DNA, and phosphoinositides may be taking place, particularly at the nucleoplasmic reticula that reach deep within the nucleoplasm, or during somatic and nonsomatic nuclear envelope assembly. The data described here provide a minimal model for analyzing and understanding the mechanism of these interactions.  相似文献   

18.
The role of specific membrane lipids in transport between endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and Golgi compartments is poorly understood. Using cell-free assays that measure stages in ER-to-Golgi transport, we screened a variety of enzyme inhibitors, lipid-modifying enzymes, and lipid ligands to investigate requirements in yeast. The pleckstrin homology (PH) domain of human Fapp1, which binds phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate (PI(4)P) specifically, was a strong and specific inhibitor of anterograde transport. Analysis of wild type and mutant PH domain proteins in addition to recombinant versions of the Sac1p phosphoinositide-phosphatase indicated that PI(4)P was required on Golgi membranes for fusion with coat protein complex II (COPII) vesicles. PI(4)P inhibition did not prevent vesicle tethering but significantly reduced formation of soluble n-ethylmaleimide sensitive factor adaptor protein receptor (SNARE) complexes between vesicle and Golgi SNARE proteins. Moreover, semi-intact cell membranes containing elevated levels of the ER-Golgi SNARE proteins and Sly1p were less sensitive to PI(4)P inhibitors. Finally, in vivo analyses of a pik1 mutant strain showed that inhibition of PI(4)P synthesis blocked anterograde transport from the ER to early Golgi compartments. Together, the data presented here indicate that PI(4)P is required for the SNARE-dependent fusion stage of COPII vesicles with the Golgi complex.  相似文献   

19.
We have examined the effect of poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) on stable large unilamellar vesicles formed by a rapid extrusion technique and composed of pure synthetic phosphatidylcholines. The lipid systems studied were the saturated 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC) and the monounsaturated 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycerol-3-phosphocholine (DOPC). PEG at all concentrations (3.8-40 wt %) induced lipid mixing between large vesicles composed of these phosphatidylcholines. Extensive leakage of internal contents also occurred at high PEG concentrations. However, in contrast to our previous report [Parente, R. A., & Lentz, B. R. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 6678], we could detect no mixing of internal contents indicative of fusion. This discrepancy is due to environmental factors that affect the behavior of 8-amino-naphthalene-1,3,6-trisulfonic acid (ANTS), the fluorophore used in the assay for contents mixing and leakage [McIntyre, Parks, Massenburg, & Lentz (1991) (submitted)]. In agreement with the results of the fusion assay, quasielastic light-scattering measurements revealed no increase in vesicle size following treatment with PEG. These results emphasize the importance of using assays for both membrane mixing and contents mixing to demonstrate fusion, since significant lipid mixing occurred in the absence of fusion. We conclude that large vesicles composed of pure phosphatidylcholine do not fuse in the presence of even high concentrations of PEG. However, DOPC vesicles containing a small amount of an amphipathic "impurity" have been shown to fuse in the presence of PEG at 23 degrees C. These results are discussed in terms of their implications for the mechanism of PEG-induced membrane fusion.  相似文献   

20.
The fusogenic properties of gramicidin were investigated by using large unilamellar dioleoylphosphatidylcholine vesicles. It is shown that gramicidin induces aggregation and fusion of these vesicles at peptide to lipid molar ratios exceeding 1/100. Both intervesicle lipid mixing and mixing of aqueous contents were demonstrated. Furthermore, increased static and dynamic light scattering and a broadening of 31P NMR signals occurred concomitant with lipid mixing. Freeze-fracture electron microscopy revealed a moderate vesicle size increase. Lipid mixing is paralleled by changes in membrane permeability: small solutes like carboxyfluorescein and smaller dextrans, FD-4(Mr approximately 4000), rapidly (1-2 min) leak out of the vesicles. However, larger molecules like FD-10 and FD-17 (Mr approximately 9400 and 17,200) are retained in the vesicles for greater than 10 min after addition of gramicidin, thereby making detection of contents mixing during lipid mixing possible. At low lipid concentrations (5 microM), lipid mixing and leakage are time resolved: leakage of CF shows a lag phase of 1-3 min, whereas lipid mixing is immediate and almost reaches completion during this lag phase. It is therefore concluded that leakage, just as contents mixing, occurs subsequent to aggregation and lipid mixing. Although addition of gramicidin at a peptide/lipid molar ratio exceeding 1/50 eventually leads to hexagonal HII phase formation and a loss of vesicle contents, it is concluded that leakage during fusion (1-2 min) is not the result of HII phase formation but is due to local changes in lipid structure caused by precursors of this phase. By making use of gramicidin derivatives and different solvent conformations, it is shown that there is a close parallel between the ability of the peptide to induce the HII phase and its ability to induce intervesicle lipid mixing and leakage. It is suggested that gramicidin-induced fusion and HII phase formation share common intermediates.  相似文献   

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