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1.
Single bilayer vesicles were prepared by sonication of 5 mol% 1-palmitoyl lysophosphatidylcholine and 95 mol% egg phosphatidylcholine. Incubation with lysophospholipase results in a fast hydrolysis of 80–90% of lysophosphatidylcholine. The remaining lysophosphatidylcholine is only very slowly hydrolysed. There results are interpreted as lysophosphatidylcholine being asymmetrically distributed over the two halves of the bilayer. The slow phase of lysophosphatidylcholine hydrolysis sets an upper limit to the rate of transbilayer movement of lysophosphatidylcholine. The half time of this process at 37° C is estimated to be about 100 h. Incorporation of cholesterol in the vesicles reduces the distributional asymmetry of lysophosphatidylcholine to the extent of an outside-inside ratio of 60 : 40. [14C]Lysophosphatidylcholine introduced into the outer monolayer of such vesicles by intervesicular transfer of lysophosphatidylcholine remains virtually completely available for hydrolysis by lysophospholipases, corroborating the interpretation that transbilayer movement of lysophosphatidylcholine in these vesicles is an extremely slow process.In handshaken liposomes consisting of 5 mol% 1-palmitoyl lysophosphatidylcholine and 95 mol% egg phosphatidylcholine 15–20% of lysophosphatidylcholine is readily available for exogenous lysophospholipase. This pool may represent lysophosphatidylcholine in the outer monolayer of the liposomes.  相似文献   

2.
14C-Labeled phosphatidylcholine (PC) and lysophosphatidylcholine (lysoPC) species with two homologous saturated acyl chains and of a saturated acyl chain of various lengths, respectively, were each incorporated into the outer leaflet of the membrane lipid bilayer of intact human erythrocytes, and the transbilayer movement into the inner leaflet during incubation at 37 degrees C of the lipid-loaded erythrocytes was followed. The labeled PC and lysoPC molecules present in the outer leaflet were extracted with egg-yolk PC liposome suspension and BSA solution, respectively, and the amount which moved into the inner leaflet during the incubation was measured by determining the residual amount of the labeled lipid in the membrane. Translocation of lysoPC molecules was also measured by assaying the decrease in the amount of the added labeled lysoPC in the membrane during the incubation on the basis of the previously reported fact that lysoPC molecules are all converted metabolically to PC or glycerylphosphorylcholine plus fatty acid as soon as they are translocated from the outer to the inner leaflet. Every lipid tested showed significant transbilayer movement during the course of the incubation for up to 10 h. With the C8, C10, and C12 species of PC the rate of the transbilayer movement increases with decreasing acyl chain length. The same is true with the C14, C16, and C18-lysoPC species.  相似文献   

3.
Ceramide is known to induce structural rearrangements in membrane bilayers, including the formation of ceramide-rich and -poor domains and the efflux of aqueous solutes. This report describes a novel effect of ceramide, namely the induction of transbilayer lipid movements. This effect was demonstrated in both model (large unilamellar vesicles) and cell (erythrocyte ghost) membranes in which ceramide generation took place in situ through the action of an externally added sphingomyelinase. Two different novel assays were developed to detect transbilayer lipid movement. One of the assays required the preparation of vesicles containing a ganglioside only in the outer monolayer and entrapped neuraminidase. Sphingomyelinase activity induced ganglioside hydrolysis under conditions in which no neuraminidase was released from the vesicles. The second assay involved the preparation of liposomes or erythrocyte ghosts labeled with a fluorescent energy donor in their inner leaflets. Sphingomyelin hydrolysis was accompanied by fluorescence energy transfer to an impermeable acceptor in the outer aqueous medium. Ceramide-induced transbilayer lipid movement is explained in terms of another well known property of ceramide, namely the facilitation of lamellar to non-lamellar lipid-phase transitions. Thus, sphingomyelinase generates ceramide on one side of the membrane; ceramide then induces the transient formation of non-lamellar structural intermediates, which cause the loss of lipid asymmetry in the bilayer, i.e. the transbilayer movement of ceramide together with other lipids. As direct targets for ceramide tend to be intracellular, these observations may be relevant to the mechanism of transmembrane signaling by means of the sphingomyelin pathway.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
1. Sonicated glycophorin-containing vesicles of dioleoyl phosphatidylcholine have been made. The outside-inside distributions of the lipid molecules in these vesicles was measured with NMR and was found to be comparable with that of protein-free vesicles. 2. The transbilayer distribution of palmitoyl lysophosphatidylcholine in these vesicles is such that they have a significantly higher content of the lyso-compound in the inner monolayer when compared with vesicles without glycophorin. 3. Lysophosphatidylcholine, added to pre-existing glycophorin-containing vesicles, is incorporated in the outer monolayer of these vesicles. Subsequently it is able to move to the inner monolayer with an estimated half time of about 1.5 h at 4 degrees C. This was measured with 13C-NMR using [N-13CH3]lysophosphatidylcholine. 4. Treatment of co-sonicated vesicles of phosphatidylcholine and lysophosphatidylcholine containing glycophorin with the enzyme lysophospholipase results in a complete degradation of the lyso-compound. A half time of transbilayer movement of lysophosphatidylcholine during this experiment was estimated to be about 1 h at 37 degrees C.  相似文献   

6.
The transbilayer mobility of phosphatidylcholine (PC) molecules in the membrane of homozygous reversible sickle cells (RSCs) was studied using a PC-specific exchange protein from beef liver. In deoxygenated RSCs, all of the PC present in the membrane of the intact cell is rapidly available for exchange, mediated by this protein. Since a substantial amount of the PC is present in the inner membrane leaflet of these cells, this observation implies that the PC molecules in their membranes do experience rapid transbilayer movements. To determine the actual rate of transbilayer movement of the PC, radioactive PC was introduced into the outer monolayer of oxygenated RSCs using the PC-specific exchange protein. Subsequently, the cells were incubated at 37 degrees C under oxy- and deoxygenating conditions to enable the PC to equilibrate within the bilayer. At various time intervals, samples were taken and treated with phospholipase A2, which selectively degrades the PC in the outer monolayer. Analysis of the specific radioactivities of the lyso-PC thus produced, as well as of the residual PC, enabled us to follow the fate of the radioactive PC previously introduced into the outer membrane layer. The half-time value for transbilayer equilibration of the PC in deoxygenated RSCs was determined to be 3.5 h, which is about four times lower than that for oxygenated RSCs. This increased transbilayer mobility of PC, observed in deoxygenated RSCs, is immediately restored to the normal low rate upon reoxygenation of the cells, indicating a complete reversibility of this phenomenon.  相似文献   

7.
Oxidation of erythrocyte membrane SH-groups and concomitant cross-linking of spectrin, which induce a partial loss of phospholipid asymmetry (Haest, C.W.M., Plasa, G., Kamp, D. and Deuticke, B. (1978) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 509, 21-32) are now shown to result in a remarkable increase of the rates of transbilayer reorientation of exogenously incorporated lysophospholipids. Reorientation of both, neutral lysophosphatidylcholine and of negatively charged lysophosphatidylserine is enhanced. A decrease of the activation energy of the reorientation process as well as quantitative changes of the dependence of reorientation on the lysophosphatidylcholine and cholesterol content of the membrane indicate formation of new reorientation sites or modification of existing sites. A common mechanism may underly the formation of reorientation sites and the occurrence of leaks for small solutes (Deuticke, B., Poser, B., Lütkemeier, P. and Haest, C.W.M. (1983) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 731, 196-210) subsequent to oxidation of membrane SH-groups. Whereas exogenous lysophospholipids completely equilibrate between the two lipid layers regardless of the extent of oxidation of SH-groups, endogenous inner layer phospholipids become available for reorientation in a graded way. Native phospholipid asymmetry is therefore not the result of a low transbilayer mobility of phospholipids, but probably due to a lack of access of inner layer phospholipids to the reorientation sites.  相似文献   

8.
Several photo-physical methods together with 31P-NMR have been used to investigate the effect of lysophosphatidylcholine on phosphatidylcholine bilayers. 31P-NMR shows that the permeability of the vesicle to Eu3+ increases sharply above approx. 40% lysophosphatidylcholine: fluorescence-quenching studies also show this type of behavior. Similar sharp changes in vesicle properties are observed via the photo-physical technique at this lysophosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylcholine composition. Fluorescence spectra of pyrene and pyrene carboxaldehyde show that increasing lysophosphatidylcholine composition increases the polarity of the environments of these probes up to 40% lysocompound. Above this composition the photo-physical properties of the probes slowly revert to those characteristic of the micellar lyso-compound. The pyrene fluorescence lifetime, the fine structure of the fluorescence, and the case of formation of pyrene excimer in these bilayer mixtures suggest that pyrene complexes weakly with the charged nitrogen of the choline group of the phosphatidylcholine and that the physical state of the system has a striking effect on this complexation process. Similar experiments with simple quaternary compounds lend strong support to this suggestion. The studies monitor in several ways the effect of bilayer composition on movement of molecules in these systems. The degree or site of solubilization of carcinogens is also uniquely affected by composition.  相似文献   

9.
In the past decade, the long-neglected ceramides (N-acylsphingosines) have become one of the most attractive lipid molecules in molecular cell biology, because of their involvement in essential structures (stratum corneum) and processes (cell signalling). Most natural ceramides have a long (16-24 C atoms) N-acyl chain, but short N-acyl chain ceramides (two to six C atoms) also exist in Nature, apart from being extensively used in experimentation, because they can be dispersed easily in water. Long-chain ceramides are among the most hydrophobic molecules in Nature, they are totally insoluble in water and they hardly mix with phospholipids in membranes, giving rise to ceramide-enriched domains. In situ enzymic generation, or external addition, of long-chain ceramides in membranes has at least three important effects: (i) the lipid monolayer tendency to adopt a negative curvature, e.g. through a transition to an inverted hexagonal structure, is increased, (ii) bilayer permeability to aqueous solutes is notoriously enhanced, and (iii) transbilayer (flip-flop) lipid motion is promoted. Short-chain ceramides mix much better with phospholipids, promote a positive curvature in lipid monolayers, and their capacities to increase bilayer permeability or transbilayer motion are very low or non-existent.  相似文献   

10.
In mechanosensitive (MS) channels, gating is initiated by changes in intra-bilayer pressure profiles originating from bilayer deformation. Here we evaluated two physical mechanisms as triggers of MS channel gating: the energetic cost of protein-bilayer hydrophobic mismatches and the geometric consequences of bilayer intrinsic curvature. Structural changes in the Escherichia coli large MS channel (MscL) were studied under nominally zero transbilayer pressures using both patch clamp and EPR spectroscopic approaches. Changes in membrane intrinsic curvature induced by the external addition of lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC) generated massive spectroscopic changes in the narrow constriction that forms the channel 'gate', trapping the channel in the fully open state. Hydrophobic mismatch alone was unable to open the channel, but decreasing bilayer thickness lowered MscL activation energy, stabilizing a structurally distinct closed channel intermediate. We propose that the mechanism of mechanotransduction in MS channels is defined by both local and global asymmetries in the transbilayer pressure profile at the lipid-protein interface.  相似文献   

11.
Glycophorin was incorporated into large unilamellar dioleoylphosphatidylcholine vesicles by either a detergent dialysis method using octylglucoside or a method avoiding the use of detergents. The vesicles were characterized and the permeability properties and transbilayer movement of lipids in both vesicles were investigated as a function of the protein concentration and were compared to protein-free vesicles. An insight in the permeability properties of the vesicles was obtained by monitoring the ratio potassium (permeant): dextran (impermeant) trap immediately after separation of the vesicles from the external medium. Glycophorin incorporated without the use of detergents in 1:300 protein:lipid molar ratio induces a high potassium permeability for the majority of the vesicles as judged from the low potassium trap (K+:dextran trap = 0.21). In contrast, the vesicles in which glycophorin is incorporated via the octylglucoside method (1:500 protein:lipid molar ratio) are much less permeable to potassium (K+:dextran trap = 0.67 and t12 of potassium efflux at 22°C is 7.5 h.). The relationship between protein-induced bilayer permeability and lipid transbilayer movement in both vesicle preparations is discussed. Addition of wheat-germ agglutinin to glycophorin-containing vesicles comprised of dioleoylphosphatidylcholine and total erythrocyte lipids caused no or just a small effect (less than 20% release of potassium) on the potassium permeability of these vesicles. Also, addition of lectin to dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine-glycophorin bilayer vesicles in a 25:1 lipid:glycophorin molar ratio had no effect on the permeability characteristics of the vesicles. In contrast, addition of wheat-germ agglutinin to bilayer vesicles made of dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine and glycophorin in a 200:1 molar ratio resulted in a release of 74% of the enclosed potassium by triggering a bilayer to hexagonal (HII) phase transition. The role of protein aggregation and the formation of defects in the lipid bilayer on membrane permeability and lipid transbilayer movement is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
R A Parente  S Nir  F C Szoka 《Biochemistry》1990,29(37):8720-8728
  相似文献   

13.
Transbilayer lipid motion in membranes may be important in certain physiological events, such as ceramide signaling. In this study, the transbilayer redistribution of lipids induced either by ceramide addition or by enzymatic ceramide generation at one side of the membrane has been monitored using pyrene-labeled phospholipid analogs. When added in organic solution to preformed liposomes, egg ceramide induced transbilayer lipid motion in a dose-dependent way. Short-chain (C6 and C2) ceramides were less active than egg ceramide, whereas dihydroceramides or dioleoylglycerol were virtually inactive in promoting flip-flop. The same results (either positive or negative) were obtained when ceramides, dihydroceramides, or diacylglycerols were generated in situ through the action of a sphingomyelinase or of a phospholipase C. The phenomenon was dependent on the bilayer lipid composition, being faster in the presence of lipids that promote inverted phase formation, e.g., phosphatidylethanolamine and cholesterol; and, conversely, slower in the presence of lysophosphatidylcholine, which inhibits inverted phase formation. Transbilayer motion was almost undetectable in bilayers composed of pure phosphatidylcholine or pure sphingomyelin. The use of pyrene-phosphatidylserine allowed detection of flip-flop movement induced by egg ceramide in human red blood cell membranes at a rate comparable to that observed in model membranes. The data suggest that when one membrane leaflet becomes enriched in ceramides, they diffuse toward the other leaflet. This is counterbalanced by lipid movement in the opposite direction, so that net mass transfer between monolayers is avoided. These observations may be relevant to the physiological mechanism of transmembrane signaling via ceramides.  相似文献   

14.
We determined whether the membrane defect in hereditary pyropoikilocytosis (HPP) is associated with thermally induced changes in the lipid bilayer, the stability of which was probed by the rate of translocation of phosphatidylcholine (PC) over the two leaflets. [14C]PC was incorporated into the outer leaflet of the lipid bilayer of the intact erythrocytes using a PC-specific phospholipid exchange protein. The transbilayer equilibration of this PC was determined by measuring the time-dependent changes in its accessibility to exogenous phospholipase A2. The rate of transbilayer equilibration of PC was increased in HPP cells at 37 degrees C when compared to normal erythrocytes (rate constants, 0.07 +/- 0.02 and 0.03 +/- 0.01 h-1, respectively). A further dramatic increase in PC transbilayer equilibration was noted in HPP cells incubated at 44 degrees C (rate constant, 0.15 +/- 0.02 h-1). A similar marked acceleration in transbilayer movement of PC was also seen in normal erythrocytes when incubated at 46 degrees C (rate constant, 0.13 +/- 0.03 h-1). Despite the enhanced transbilayer mobility of PC in HPP cells when compared to normal erythrocytes, no major alteration in the asymmetric distribution could be observed when probed with phospholipase A2. Since changes in transbilayer mobility of PC and cell morphology occur in HPP cells at lower temperature than in normal red cells, it may be concluded that the enhanced thermal sensitivity of spectrin is the major factor responsible for these changes. Our results therefore support the view that the structural integrity of the skeletal network is essential for stabilization of the lipid bilayer of the red cell membrane.  相似文献   

15.
(1) Treatment of erythrocytes with phospholipase A2 from bee venom cleaves about 55% of the phosphatidylcholine in the outer membrane lipid layer without changing the discoid shape of the cells. All of the fatty acids and 80% of the lysophosphatidylcholine produced under this conditions can be sequentially extracted by bovine serum albumin without hemolysis of the cells. (2) The cells remain discoid up to extraction of all of the fatty acids and 15% of the lysophosphatidylcholine. Removal of a higher fraction of lysophosphatidylcholine induces formation of stomatocytes and sphero-stomatocytes, probably going along with an internalization of membrane vesicles. Stomatocytosis can be explained on the basis of the ‘bilayer couple hypothesis’ (Sheetz, M.P. and Singer, S.J. (1974) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 71, 4457–4461). The shape change will compensate for the differences in surface pressure between the two leaflets induced by selective removal of material from the outer leaf of the bilayer. (3) Increasing the shear modulus of the membrane by diamide prevents this compensatory shape change even after extraction of up to 80% of the lysophosphatidylcholine, which amounts to a loss of 34% of the phospholipids of the outer membrane layer or 22% of its area. This leads to the interesting situation of a membrane possibly having a strikingly diminished ratio of the numbers of phospholipid molecules in the outer to that in the inner lipid layer. A marked difference in surface pressures should arise in this situation, unless other compensatory mechanisms become operative. Evidence for a compensation for outer lipid loss by a constriction of the inner layer has been obtained. A compensation by transbilayer reorientation of phospholipids could not be demonstrated. This latter observation supports the concept of a stabilisation of the asymmetric phospholipid arrangement by proteins such as spectrin.  相似文献   

16.
J Storch  A M Kleinfeld 《Biochemistry》1986,25(7):1717-1726
Movement of free fatty acids (ffa) between small unilamellar vesicles (SUV) was studied by measuring the transfer of fluorescent n-(9-anthroyloxy)-labeled analogues (AOffa) between donor and acceptor vesicles. Donors were composed of egg phosphatidylcholine (PC) loaded with 1-2 mol % AOffa, and acceptors were egg PC containing 10-12 mol % N-(7-nitro-2,1,3-benzoxadiazol-4-yl)phosphatidylethanolamine (NBD-PE). The fluorescence of AO added directly to acceptor SUV was greater than 98% quenched by energy transfer to NBD. Thus, AOffa movement from donor to acceptor was monitored by the time-dependent decrease in AO fluorescence. The transfer of the short-chain AOffa, although too fast to be resolved by the methods used here, is consistent with studies that find transfer rates on the order of milliseconds and kinetics which are first order. In contrast, transfer rates for the long-chain AOffa are more than 2 orders of magnitude slower, and the kinetics of the transfer process are best described by the sum of two exponentials plus a constant. The ffa ionization state was also found to be an important determinant of transfer rate. The charged species transferred an average of 10-fold faster than the protonated ffa. The ffa pKa in the membrane is 9, as calculated from the pH dependence of transfer. Similar to results found for other lipids, long-chain AOffa are transferred via water rather than a collision-mediated process. The aqueous phase route of AOffa intermembrane transfer is indicated by the lack of effect on transfer of large alterations in the product of donor and acceptor phospholipid concentrations. Moreover, the transfer rate is decreased as [NaCl] is increased from 0.1 to 4 M. This effect of ionic strength is probably due not only to a decrease in the aqueous phase partition of the AOffa but also to an alteration in bilayer structure, as measured by fluorescence polarization of 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene. The observed kinetics are consistent with a model in which the transfer involves two steps: transbilayer movement between the inner and outer bilayer leaflets, followed by transfer from the outer leaflet to the aqueous phase (off rate). Within the framework of this model, the observed slow rate is primarily determined by the rate of transbilayer movement, and the observed fast rate is approximately equal to the off rate. The off rate is about 10-fold faster than the rate of transbilayer movement.  相似文献   

17.
The present studies describe the distribution of phosphatidylinositol (PI) within the membrane bilayer of the human red blood cell (RBC) as well as its transbilayer mobility. The membrane bilayer distribution was determined by measuring the hydrolysis of PI in the exterior leaflet of the RBC membrane using a PI-specific phospholipase C and by extraction of PI from the exterior leaflet using bovine serum albumin. The transbilayer mobility of PI was measured by following the fate of radiolabeled PI which was first incorporated into the outer leaflet of the RBC membrane. Our results indicate that PI is asymmetrically distributed in the membrane, with approximately 80% located in the inner and 20% in the outer leaflet of the bilayer. The rate of transbilayer mobility of PI is similar to that for certain molecular species of phosphatidylcholine and much slower than that reported for the aminophospholipids in the RBC membrane.  相似文献   

18.
The interaction of a spin-labeled lysophosphatidylcholine analog with intact and bromelain-treated influenza viruses as well as with the bromelain-solubilized hemagglutinin ectodomain has been studied. The inhibition of fusion of influenza viruses with erythrocytes by the lysophosphatidylcholine analog was similar to that observed for non-labeled lysophosphatidylcholine. Only a weak interaction of the lysophosphatidylcholine analog with the hemagglutinin ectodomain was observed even upon triggering the conformational change of the ectodomain at a low pH. A significant interaction of spin-labeled lysophosphatidylcholine with the hemagglutinin ectodomain of intact viruses was observed neither at neutral nor at low pH, whereas a strong interaction of the lipid analog with the viral lipid bilayer was evident. We suggest that the high number of lipid binding sites of the virus bilayer and their affinity compete efficiently with binding sites of the hemagglutinin ectodomain. We conclude that the inhibition of influenza virus fusion by lysolipids is not mediated by binding to the hemagglutinin ectodomain, preventing its interaction with the target membrane. The results unambiguously argue for an inhibition mechanism based on the action of lysolipid inserted into the lipid bilayer.  相似文献   

19.
The curvature, cholesterol content,and transbilayer distribution of phospholipids significantly influence the functional properties of cellular membranes, yet little is known of how these parameters interact. In this study, the transbilayer distribution of phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) is determined in vesicles with large (98 nm) and small (19 nm)radii of curvature and with different proportions of PE, phosphatidylcholine, and cholesterol. It was found that the mean diameters of both types of vesicles were not influenced by their lipid composition, and that the amino-reactive compound 2,4,6-trinitrobenzenesulphonic acid (TNBS) was unable to cross the bilayer of either type of vesicle. When large vesicles were treated with TNBS, ~40% of the total membrane PE was derivatized; in the small vesicles 55% reacted. These values are interpreted as representing the percentage of total membrane PE residing in the outer leaflet of the vesicle bilayer. The large vesicles likely contained ~20% of the total membrane lipid as internal membranes. Therefore, in both types of vesicles, PE as a phospholipid class was randomly distributed between the inner and outer leaflets ofthe bilayer. The proportion oftotal PE residing in the outer leaflet was unaffected by changes in either the cholesterol orPE content of the vesicles. However, the transbilayer distributions of individual molecular species of PE were not random, and were significantly influenced by radius of curvature, membrane cholesterol content, or both. For example, palmitate and docosahexaenoate-containing species of PE were preferentially located in the outer leaflet of the bilayer. Membrane cholesterol content affected the transbilayer distributions of stearate-, oleate-, and linoleate-containing species. The transbilayer distributions ofpalmitate-, docosahexaenoate-, and stearate-containing species were significantly influenced by membrane curvature, but only in the presence of high levels of cholesterol. Thus, differences in membrane curvature and cholesterol content alter the array of PE molecules present on the surfaces of phospholipid bilayers. In cells and organelles, these differences could have profound effects on a number of critical membrane functions and processes.  相似文献   

20.
Observations over extended times of a lipid microtube (tether) formed from a lecithin vesicle have shown that under constant external loads the tether exhibits a continuous slow growth. It is considered that this growth is a consequence of the net transbilayer movement of phospholipid molecules in a direction which relieves the membrane strain resulting from the elastic deformation of the vesicle. The elastic deformation mode responsible for this effect is identified as the relative expansion of the two membrane layers reflecting the non-local contribution to membrane bending. An equation for the consequent rate of transbilayer movement of phospholipid molecules is derived. The dynamic behavior of the system is modeled by including frictional contributions due to interlayer slip and Stokes drag on the glass bead used to form the tether. The general numerical solution reveals a complex dependence of the tether growth rate on the system parameters and a continuous increase in the rate of tether growth at long times. Closed form expressions approximating the system behavior are derived and the conditions under which they can be applied are specified. Modeling the mechanically-driven lipid transport as a simple, stochastic, thermal process, allows the rate of lipid translocation to be related to the equilibrium transbilayer exchange rate of phospholipid molecules. Consideration of experimental results shows that the time constant for mechanically-driven translocation is shorter than the time for diffusion-driven translocation by approximately two orders of magnitude, indicating that lipid translocation is not a simple diffusive process. Received: 29 November 1996 / Revised version: 1 December 1997 / Accepted: 9 January 1998  相似文献   

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