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1.
The adsorption of doubly lipidated full-length N-Ras protein on 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) monolayers was studied by lateral pressure analysis, grazing incidence X-ray diffraction (GIXD), and specular reflectivity (XR). N-Ras protein adsorbs to the DPPC monolayer (lateral pressure of 20 mN/m) from the subphase thereby increasing the lateral pressure in the monolayer by 4 mN/m. The protein insertion does not alter the tilt angle and structure of the lipid molecules at the air/water interface but influences the electron density profile of the monolayer. Further, electron density differences into the subphase were observed. The Fresnel normalized reflectivity could be reconstructed in the analysis using box models yielding electron density profiles of the DPPC monolayer in the absence and in the presence of N-Ras protein. The electron density profiles of the DPPC monolayer in the presence of Ras showed clear intensity variations in the headgroup/glycerol/upper chain region, the so-called interface region where previous bilayer studies had confirmed Ras binding. Dedicated to Prof. K. Arnold on the occasion of his 65th birthday.  相似文献   

2.
Using synchrotron grazing-incidence x-ray diffraction (GIXD) and reflectivity, the in-plane and out-of-plane structure of mixed ganglioside-phospholipid monolayers was investigated at the air-water interface. Mixed monolayers of 0, 5, 10, 20, and 100 mol% ganglioside GM(1) and the phospholipid dipalmitoylphosphatidylethanolamine (DPPE) were studied in the solid phase at 23 degrees C and a surface pressure of 45 mN/m. At these concentrations and conditions the two components do not phase-separate and no evidence for domain formation was observed. X-ray scattering measurements reveal that GM(1) is accommodated within the host DPPE monolayer and does not distort the hexagonal in-plane unit cell or out-of-plane two-dimensional (2-D) packing compared with a pure DPPE monolayer. The oligosaccharide headgroups were found to extend normally from the monolayer surface, and the incorporation of these glycolipids into DPPE monolayers did not affect hydrocarbon tail packing (fluidization or condensation of the hydrocarbon region). This is in contrast to previous investigations of lipopolymer-lipid mixtures, where the packing structure of phospholipid monolayers was greatly altered by the inclusion of lipids bearing hydrophilic polymer groups. Indeed, the lack of packing disruptions by the oligosaccharide groups indicates that protein-GM(1) interactions, including binding, insertion, chain fluidization, and domain formation (lipid rafts), can be studied in 2-D monolayers using scattering techniques.  相似文献   

3.
This work investigates the discrimination of lipid monolayers by the ovine antimicrobial peptide SMAP-29 and compares it to that of the human LL-37 peptide. Fluid phospholipid monolayers were formed in a Langmuir trough and subsequently studied with the X-ray scattering techniques of X-ray reflectivity and grazing incidence X-ray diffraction. Any changes in the phospholipid structure after injection of peptide under the monolayer were considered to be due to interactions between the peptides and lipids. The data show that SMAP-29 discriminates against negatively charged phospholipids in a similar way to LL-37. However, it is even more interesting to note that despite a higher concentration of SMAP-29 near the monolayer, ensured by its greater charge as compared to LL-37, the amount of SMAP-29 needed to observe monolayer disruption was around three and a half times the number of molecules of LL-37 used to see similar changes with the same system. This result suggests that the structure, amino acid sequence or size of the peptide may well be as important as electrical charge and therefore gives many implications for the further study of antimicrobial peptides with regards to novel drug design and development.  相似文献   

4.
Lipid A structure at the air-aqueous interface has been studied using pressure-area isotherm methods coupled with the surface X-ray scattering techniques of X-ray reflectivity (XR) and grazing incidence X-ray diffraction (GIXD). Lipid A monolayers were formed at the air-aqueous interface to represent the lipid moiety of the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria. Lipid A structure was characterized at surface pressures between 10 and 35 mN/m. Interactions of α-helical antimicrobial peptides LL-37, SMAP-29 and D2A22 with lipid A monolayers were subsequently studied. Although insertion into the lipid A monolayers was observed with the α-helical peptides, little change was seen from the X-ray data, suggesting that the lipid A hydrocarbon chains are involved in reorientation during insertion and that the hydrocarbon chains have a relatively rigid structure.  相似文献   

5.
Using synchrotron grazing-incidence x-ray diffraction (GIXD) and reflectivity, the in-plane and out-of-plane structures of mixed-ganglioside GT1b-phospholipid monolayers were investigated at the air-liquid interface and compared with monolayers of the pure components. The receptor GT1b is involved in the binding of lectins and toxins, including botulinum neurotoxin, to cell membranes. Monolayers composed of 20 mol % ganglioside GT1b, the phospholipid dipalmitoyl phosphatidylethanolamine (DPPE), and the phospholipid dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) were studied in the gel phase at 23°C and at surface pressures of 20 and 40 mN/m, and at pH 7.4 and 5. Under these conditions, the two components did not phase-separate, and no evidence of domain formation was observed. The x-ray scattering measurements revealed that GT1b was intercalated within the host DPPE/DPPC monolayers, and slightly expanded DPPE but condensed the DPPC matrix. The oligosaccharide headgroups extended normally from the monolayer surfaces into the subphase. This study demonstrated that these monolayers can serve as platforms for investigating toxin membrane binding and penetration.  相似文献   

6.
Interaction of the human antimicrobial peptide LL-37 with lipid monolayers has been investigated by a range of complementary techniques including pressure-area isotherms, insertion assay, epifluorescence microscopy, and synchrotron x-ray scattering, to analyze its mechanism of action. Lipid monolayers were formed at the air-liquid interface to mimic the surface of the bacterial cell wall and the outer leaflet of erythrocyte cell membrane by using phosphatidylglycerol (DPPG), phosphatidylcholine (DPPC), and phosphatidylethanolamine (DPPE) lipids. LL-37 is found to readily insert into DPPG monolayers, disrupting their structure and thus indicating bactericidal action. In contrast, DPPC and DPPE monolayers remained virtually unaffected by LL-37, demonstrating its nonhemolytic activity and lipid discrimination. Specular x-ray reflectivity data yielded considerable differences in layer thickness and electron-density profile after addition of the peptide to DPPG monolayers, but little change was seen after peptide injection when probing monolayers composed of DPPC and DPPE. Grazing incidence x-ray diffraction demonstrated significant peptide insertion and lateral packing order disruption of the DPPG monolayer by LL-37 insertion. Epifluorescence microscopy data support these findings.  相似文献   

7.
J P Slotte 《Biochemistry》1992,31(24):5472-5477
In this study, we have used cholesterol oxidase as a probe to study cholesterol/phospholipid interactions in mixed monolayers at the air/water interface. Mixed monolayers, containing a single phospholipid class and cholesterol at differing cholesterol/phospholipid molar ratios, were exposed to cholesterol oxidase at a lateral surface pressure of 20 mN/m (at 22 degrees C). At equimolar ratios of cholesterol to phospholipid, the average rate of cholesterol oxidation was fastest in unsaturated phosphatidylcholine mixed monolayers (1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine and egg yolk phosphatidylcholine), intermediate in 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine, and slowest in sphingomyelin monolayers (egg yolk or bovine brain sphingomyelin). The average oxidation rate in mixed monolayers was not exclusively a function of monolayer packing density, since egg yolk and bovine brain sphingomyelin mixed monolayers occupied similar mean molecular areas even though the measured average oxidation rate was different with these two phospholipids. This suggests that the phospholipid acyl chain composition influenced the oxidation rate. The importance of the phospholipid acyl chain length on influencing the average oxidation rate was further examined in defined phosphatidylcholine mixed monolayers. The average oxidation rate decreased linearly with increasing acyl chain lengths (from di-8:0 to di-18:0). When the average oxidation rate was examined as a function of the cholesterol to phospholipid (C/PL) molar ratio in the monolayer, the otherwise linear function displayed a clear break at a 1:1 stoichiometry with phosphatidylcholine mixed monolayers, and at a 2:1 C/PL stoichiometry with sphingomyelin mixed monolayers.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Hydroxy-galactocerebrosides (mixed chain length, constituent of myelin membranes) from bovine brain are investigated as monolayers at the air-water interface with isotherms, fluorescence microscopy, x-ray reflectivity and grazing incidence diffraction. With grazing incidence diffraction a monoclinic tilted chain lattice is found in the condensed phase. According to x-ray reflectivity, the longest chains protrude above the chain lattice and roughen the lipid/air interface. On compressing the chain lattice, the correlation length increases by approximately 65%; obviously, the sugar headgroups are flexible enough to allow for lattice deformation. With fluorescence experiments, small coexisting fluid and ordered domains are observed, and there is lipid dissolution into the subphase as well. The dissolved hydroxy-galactocerebroside molecules reenter on monolayer expansion. The electron density profiles derived from x-ray reflectometry (coherent superposition) show that the chain-ordering transition causes the molecules to grow into the subphase.  相似文献   

9.
Thionins, ubiquitous plant toxins, are believed to act by lysing the membrane of pathogenic organisms. Several competing mechanisms were proposed for the lysis of phospholipid membranes by the toxins. In order to study in more detail the proposed mechanisms and possibly resolve among the competing proposals, the interactions of purothionins with a model lipid membrane in the form of a monolayer were studied. The monolayer formed at the air-water interface was studied by synchrotron X-ray reflectivity and grazing incidents diffraction methods. The model membrane was composed of 90:10 mol% DPPC:DPPS (dipylmitoyl phosphatidylcholine:dipylmitoyl phosphatidylserine). The protein interaction with the monolayer disturbs the in-plane and out-of-plane order of phospholipids, increases the amount of the liquid phase of the monolayer, and increases the average surface area per alkyl chain. The results indicate that the protein is bound only transiently, and after ~4 h most of the properties of the monolayer are reminiscent of the pure DPPC monolayer suggesting partial withdrawal of DPPS. Obtained electron density distributions perpendicular to the membrane interface do not show any significant contribution from the adsorbed proteins, further supporting the withdrawal hypothesis.  相似文献   

10.
The influence of carbohydrate structure on the ordering of glycosphingolipids (GSLs) and surrounding phospholipids was investigated in monolayers at the air-water interface. Binary mixtures composed of GSLs, chosen to span a range of carbohydrate complexity, and zwitterionic dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine phospholipid, were studied. X-ray reflectivity was used to measure the out-of-plane structure of the monolayers and characterize the extension and conformation of the GSL carbohydrates. Using synchrotron grazing incidence x-ray diffraction, the in-plane packing of the lipid acyl chains and the area per molecule within ordered domains were characterized at different mole ratios of the two components. Our findings indicate that GSL-containing mixtures, regardless of the carbohydrate size, enhance the ordering of the surrounding lipids, resulting in a larger fraction of ordered phase of the monolayer and greater dimensions of the ordered domains. Reduction of the averaged area per molecule within the ordered domains was also observed but only in the cases where there was a size mismatch between the phospholipid headgroups and GSL components, suggesting that the condensation mechanism involves the relief of steric interactions between headgroups in mixtures.  相似文献   

11.
This study has examined the importance of the isocaproic side chain at C-17 of cholesterol to sterol/phospholipid interactions in monolayer membranes and to the cholesterol oxidase-susceptibility of cholesterol in pure and mixed monolayers at the air/water interface. The interactions between cholesterol or 5-androsten-3 beta-ol (which lacks the C-17 side chain) and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC) in monolayers indicated that 5-androsten-3 beta-ol was not very efficient in causing condensation of the monolayer packing of POPC. Whereas cholesterol condensed the packing of POPC at all molar fractions examined (i.e., 0.25, 0.50 and 0.75 with regard to POPC), 5-androsten-3 beta-ol caused a slight condensing effect on POPC packing only in the equimolar mixture. The mean molecular area requirement of 5-androsten-3 beta-ol (in pure sterol monolayers at different lateral surface pressures) was 2.2-6.7% less than that observed for cholesterol. The pure 5-androsten-3 beta-ol monolayer also collapsed at lower lateral surface pressures compared with the pure cholesterol monolayer (34 mN/m and 45 mN/m, respectively). The cholesterol oxidase (Streptomyces sp.) catalyzed oxidation of cholesterol or 5-androsten-3 beta-ol in pure monolayers in the air/water interface (10 mN/m) proceeded with very similar rates, indicating that the enzyme did not recognize that the C-17 side chain of 5-androsten-3 beta-ol was missing. The oxidation of cholesterol or 5-androsten-3 beta-ol in mixed POPC-containing monolayers (equimolar mixture) also revealed similar reaction rates, although the reaction was slower in the mixed monolayer compared with the pure sterol monolayer. When the oxidation of cholesterol and 5-androsten-3 beta-ol was examined by monitoring the production of H2O2 (the sterol was solubilized in 2-propanol and the assay conducted in phosphate buffer), the maximal reaction rate observed with 5-androsten-3 beta-ol was only about 41% of that measured with cholesterol. From the cholesterol oxidase point-of-view, it can be concluded that the enzyme did not recognize the C-17 side chain of cholesterol (or lack of it in 5-androsten-3 beta-ol), when the sterol was properly oriented as a monolayer at the air/water interface. However, when the substrate was presented to the enzyme in a less controlled orientation (organic solvent in water), 5-androsten-3 beta-ol may have oriented itself unfavorably compared with the orientation of cholesterol, thereby leading to slower oxidation rates.  相似文献   

12.
The amyloid beta (1-40) peptide (A beta) is the main component of amyloid deposits found in the brain of patients afflicted with Alzheimer's disease. After treatment with hexafluoroisopropanol, commercial A beta is readily soluble in water and buffers at pH 7.4 and has an irregular secondary structure. The adsorption of A beta to the water-air interface and to the surface of the dipalmitoylphosphatidylethanolamine monolayer at a surface pressure pi close to zero leads to an increase in pressure up to 17 mN/m. When being adsorbed, the molecules of the peptide occupy a part of the monolayer surface, which leads to the compression of lipid molecules forming the monolayer. Further compression of the monolayer composed of the molecules of the lipid and peptide leads to the extrusion of the peptide from the monolayer. If the lipid monolayer is preliminarily (prior to the addition of the peptide to the liquid phase) compressed to pi = 30 mN/m, no adsorption of the peptide to the monolayer occurs. No changes in the structure of the dipalmitoylphosphatidylethanolamine monolayer were detected by the sliding X-ray diffraction method, indicating the absence of specific interactions. The method of reflection and absorption infrared spectroscopy makes it possible to determine the conformation of the adsorbed peptide and its orientation in the lipid monolayer. It was found that A beta has the conformation of a beta-fold oriented parallel to the interface, as it is the case with the adsorption of peptide molecules to the lipid monolayer at pi < 30 mN/m and upon adsorption to the interface that is not occupied by the lipid.  相似文献   

13.
We investigate the effect of the skeletal protein spectrin on the lateral order in dipalmitoyl phosphatidylserine monolayers spread on aqueous surfaces using grazing incidence X-ray diffraction. Without spectrin, the condensed lipid monolayer exhibits two-dimensional hexagonal packing, characterized by monotonic decrease in the d-spacing and increase in the degree of order with increasing surface pressure between 17 and 36 mN/m. Addition of spectrin to the aqueous subphase at high pressures preserves the monolayers structural parameters unchanged from 36 to 25 mN/m. These results demonstrate for the first time that spectrin could participate in sustaining the two-dimensional order in lipid domains through a direct interaction with phosphatidylserine species.  相似文献   

14.
Surface-active properties of ubiquinones and ubiquinols have been investigated by monomolecular-film techniques. Stable monolayers are formed at an air/water interface by the fully oxidized and reduced forms of the coenzyme; collapse pressures and hence stability of the films tend to increase with decreasing length of the isoprenoid side chain and films of the reduced coenzymes are more stable than those of their oxidized counterparts. Ubiquinone with a side chain of two isoprenoid units does not form stable monolayers at the air/water interface. Mixed monolayers of ubiquinol-10 or ubiquinone-10 with 1,2-dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine, soya phosphatidylcholine and diphosphatidylglycerol do not exhibit ideal mixing characteristics. At surface pressures less than the collapse pressure of pure ubiquinone-10 monolayers (approx. 12mN.m(-1)) the isoprenoid chain is located substantially within the region occupied by the fatty acyl residues of the phospholipids. With increasing surface pressure the ubiquinones and their fully reduced equivalents are progressively squeezed out from between the phospholipid molecules until, at a pressure of about 35mN.m(-1), the film has surface properties consistent with that of the pure phospholipid monolayer. This suggests that the ubiquinone(ol) forms a separate phase overlying the phospholipid monolayer. The implications of this energetically poised situation, where the quinone(ol) is just able to penetrate the phospholipid film, are considered in terms of the function of ubiquinone(ol) as electron and proton carriers of energy-transducing membranes.  相似文献   

15.
Our study highlights the tight relationship between protein binding to monolayers and the phase-state of the phospholipids. Interaction of mitochondrial creatine kinase with phospholipidic membranes was analysed using a two-phase monolayer system containing anionic phospholipids under chain mismatch conditions. Monolayers were made up of mixtures of DMPC/DPPG or DPPC/DMPG containing 40% negatively charged phospholipids which is approximately the negative charge content of the mitochondrial inner membrane. Langmuir isotherms of these monolayers showed that they underwent a phase transition from a liquid expanded state to a liquid-condensed phase at about 2 mN/m and 5 mN/m respectively. Interface morphology modifications caused by injection of mtCK under these monolayers at low or high surface pressure were monitored by Brewster angle microscopy. This work provides evidence that the presence at the air/water interface of discrete domains with increased charge density, may lead to difference in partition of soluble proteins such as mtCK, interacting with the lipid monolayer. Conversely these proteins may help to organize charged phospholipid domains in a membrane.  相似文献   

16.
The state of photosystem II core complex (PS II CC) in monolayer at the gas-water interface was investigated using in situ polarization-modulated infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy and x-ray reflectivity techniques. Two approaches for preparing and manipulating the monolayers were examined and compared. In the first, PS II CC was compressed immediately after spreading at an initial surface pressure of 5.7 mN/m, whereas in the second, the monolayer was incubated for 30 min at an initial surface pressure of 0.6 mN/m before compression. In the first approach, the protein complex maintained its native alpha-helical conformation upon compression, and the secondary structure of PS II CC was found to be stable for 2 h. The second approach resulted in films showing stable surface pressure below 30 mN/m and the presence of large amounts of beta-sheets, which indicated denaturation of PS II CC. Above 30 mN/m, those films suffered surface pressure instability, which had to be compensated by continuous compression. This instability was correlated with the formation of new alpha-helices in the film. Measurements at 4 degreesC strongly reduced denaturation of PS II CC. The x-ray reflectivity studies indicated that the spread film consists of a single protein layer at the gas-water interface. Altogether, this study provides direct structural and molecular information on membrane proteins when spread in monolayers at the gas-water interface.  相似文献   

17.
A monolayer technique was used to study the substrate specificity of hepatic lipase (HL) and the effect of surface pressure and apolipoproteins on hydrolysis of lipid monolayers by this enzyme. HL hydrolyzed readily phosphatidylethanolamine monolayers. Pure trioctanoylglycerol was found to be a poor substrate but when progressively diluted with nonhydrolyzable 1,2-didodecanoylphosphatidylcholine hydrolysis of triacylglycerol by HL reached maximum at a molar ratio of 1:1 triacylglycerol to phosphatidylcholine. The activation of triacylglycerol hydrolysis was not due to altered penetration of HL. The surface pressure optimum of HL for the hydrolysis of phosphatidylethanolamine monolayers was broad between 12.5 and 25 mN/m. When apolipoprotein E was injected beneath the monolayer of phosphatidylethanolamine prior to enzyme addition, a 3-fold activation of HL was observed at surface pressures equal to or below 15 mN/m. Below surface pressures of 20 mN/m apolipoprotein E did not affect the penetration of HL into the lipid-water interface. Apolipoprotein E slightly activated the hydrolysis of triacylglycerol by HL at 10 mN/m. At a high surface pressure of 25 mN/m all apolipoproteins tested (apolipoproteins A-I, A-II, C-I, C-II, C-III, and E) inhibited the penetration into and HL activity on phosphatidylethanolamine At 18.5 mN/m all apolipoproteins except apolipoprotein E inhibited the hydrolysis of triacylglycerol in the triacylglycerol:phosphatidylcholine mixed film. Based on these results we present a hypothesis that phospholipid present in apolipoprotein E-rich high density lipoprotein-1 and triacylglycerol in intermediate density lipoprotein would be preferred substrates for HL.  相似文献   

18.
L K Tamm 《Biochemistry》1986,25(23):7470-7476
The interaction of the chemically synthesized 25-residue signal peptide of subunit IV of yeast cytochrome c oxidase with synthetic and natural phospholipids was studied by using a monolayer technique. Incorporation of the peptide into phospholipid monolayers was measured as surface area increase at constant surface pressure. The peptide was readily soluble in aqueous buffer, yet spontaneously inserted from an aqueous subphase into phospholipid monolayers up to limiting pressures of 30-40 mN/m. The incorporation of the positively charged peptide was strongly enhanced by the presence of negatively charged phospholipids. The molecular area of the signal peptide in monolayers was determined with a 14C-labeled signal peptide and was 560 +/- 170 A2. This is consistent with a 25-residue alpha-helical peptide incorporating with its long axis parallel to the plane of the monolayer. Incorporation isotherms into synthetic phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylglycerol monolayers at different charge densities were analyzed in terms of a simple incorporation/binding model, involving partitioning of the peptide into the monolayer and an in-plane binding reaction of the negatively charged phospholipids to the partitioned peptide.  相似文献   

19.
20.
The neutron reflectivity technique is applied to determine the adsorptive interaction of the 13.5-kDa actin-binding protein hisactophilin from Dictyostelium discoideum with lipid monolayers at a lateral pressure of 21 mN/m < or = pi < or = 25 mN/m at the air-water interface. We compare binding of natural hisactophilin exhibiting a myristic acid chain membrane anchor at the N-terminus (DIC-HIS) and a fatty acid-deficient genetic product expressed in Escherichia coli (EC-HIS). It is demonstrated that only the natural hisactophilin DIC-HIS is capable of mediating the strong binding of monomeric actin to the monolayer, where it forms a layer of about 40 A thickness corresponding to the average diameter of actin monomers. Monolayers composed of pure dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine with fully deuterated hydrocarbon tails and headgroup (DMPC-d67) and 1:1 mixtures of this lipid with chain deuterated dimyristoyl phosphatidylglycerol (DMPG-d54) are studied on subphases consisting either of fully deuterated buffer (D2O) or of a 9:1 H2O/D2O buffer that matches the scattering length density of air (CMA buffer). The reflectivity data are analyzed in terms of layer models, consisting of one to three layers, depending on the contrast of the buffer and the system. We show that both protein species bind tightly to negatively charged 1:1 DMPC-d67/DMPG-d54 monolayers, thereby forming a thin and most probably monomolecular protein layer of 12-15 A thickness. We find that the natural protein (DIC-HIS) partially penetrates into the lipid monolayer, in contrast to chain-deficient species (EC-HIS), which forms only an adsorbed layer. The coverage of the monolayer with DIC-HIS strongly depends on the presence of anionic DMPG in the monolayer. At a bulk protein concentration of 1.5 micrograms/ml, the molar ratio of bound protein to lipid is about 1:45 for the 1:1 lipid mixture but only 1:420 for the pure DMPC.  相似文献   

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