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1.
J W Nichols 《Biochemistry》1988,27(11):3925-3931
The transfer of fluorescent-labeled N-(7-nitro-2,1,3-benzoxadiazol-4-yl)phosphatidylethanolamine (N-NBD-PE) between phosphatidylcholine-taurocholate mixed micelles was measured by monitoring the increase in fluorescence as N-NBD-PE, initially contained in mixed micelles at self-quenching concentrations, was diluted into unlabeled mixed micelles. The half-times for transfer of a homologous series of N-NBD-PEs differing in saturated acyl chain length from 11 to 16 carbons increased with acyl chain length from 4 to 35 s. The half-times for transfer of the same N-NBD-PEs between phosphatidylcholine vesicles without taurocholate were 200-6000 times slower than those between the mixed micelles. A kinetic analysis of initial transfer rate data was used to determine the mechanistic model that best described the data. According to this analysis, the increased rate of intermicellar phospholipid transfer relative to that of intervesicular transfer is a result of (1) exchange between micelles during transient micelle collisions which is not observed between vesicles and (2) an increased rate of monomer diffusion due to a faster rate of phospholipid dissociation from mixed micelles into the water phase than from vesicles. The relative significance of dissociation from mixed micelles into the water phase than from vesicles. The relative significance of collision-dependent versus monomer diffusion transfer increases with acyl chain length and hydrophobicity.  相似文献   

2.
J W Nichols 《Biochemistry》1986,25(16):4596-4601
The rate of 1-palmitoyl-2-[12-[(7-nitro-2,1,3-benzoxadiazol-4-yl)amino] dodecanoyl] phosphatidylcholine (P-C12-NBD-PC) transfer between dioleoylphosphatidylcholine vesicles was measured by a technique based on resonance energy transfer between P-C12-NBD-PC and N-(lissamine rhodamine B sulfonyl)dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine [Nichols, J. W., & Pagano, R. E. (1982) Biochemistry 21, 1720-1726]. Addition of bile salts at concentrations below their critical micelle concentrations increased the rate of spontaneous P-C12-NBD-PC transfer without disrupting the vesicles. The effectiveness in increasing the transfer rate was dependent on the structure of the bile salt. In general, conjugated bile salts were more effective than unconjugated, and mono- and dihydroxy bile salts were more effective than trihydroxy. The kinetics of intervesicular P-C12-NBD-PC transfer in the presence of cholate were found to be consistent with a mass action kinetic model based on the premise that bile salts bind to the vesicles, alter the dissociation and/or association rate constants for phospholipid monomer-vesicle interaction, and increase the rate of phospholipid transfer via the diffusion of soluble monomers through the aqueous phase. Temperature dependence studies indicated that cholate binding to vesicles is an entropy-driven process and that cholate binding lowers the free energy of activation for phospholipid monomer-vesicle dissociation by producing compensatory decreases in both the enthalpy and entropy of activation.  相似文献   

3.
The equilibrium of bile salt between aqueous phase and mixed micelle was studied in solutions of pure bile salt and lecithin comparing taurocholate and taurochenodeoxycholate. The relationship between bile salt concentration in the aqueous phase and the ratio of bile salt/lecithin in the mixed micelle was determined by equilibrium dialysis on serial dilutions of these solutions. Extrapolation of this relationship to zero mixed-micellar bile salt permitted calculation of the critical micelle concentration (CMC) of the mixed micelle. For taurocholate, taurochenodeoxycholate, and an equimolar mix of these two bile salts, the mixed micelle CMC's were 3.1 mM, 0.47 mM, and 0.89 mM respectively. In the most concentrated solutions, aqueous phase bile salt concentration surpassed the CMC of the simple bile salt micelle by more than four-fold indicating the presence of simple micelles as well as mixed micelles. At all dilutions taurochenodeoxycholate had a much greater affinity for the mixed micelle than did taurocholate. This last finding may be the reason for the superior cholesterol solubilizing capacity of taurochenodeoxycholate-lecithin solutions compared to taurocholate-lecithin solutions.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of bile salts and other surfactants on the rate of incorporation of cholesterol into isolated brush-border membranes was tested. At constant cholesterol concentration, a stimulatory effect of taurocholate was noticed which increased as the bile salt concentration was raised to 20 mM. Taurodeoxycholate was as effective as taurocholate at concentrations of up to 5 mM and inhibited at higher concentrations. Glycocholate was only moderately stimulatory whereas cholate was nearly as effective as taurocholate at concentrations above 5 mM. Other surfactants such as sodium lauryl sulfate and Triton X-100 were very inhibitory at all concentrations tried whereas cetyltrimethyl ammonium chloride was stimulatory only at a very low range of concentrations. These micellizing agents all caused some disruption of the membranes and the greater effectiveness of taurocholate in stimulating sterol uptake was partly relatable to the weaker membrane solubilizing action of this bile salt. Preincubation of membranes with 20 mM taurocholate followed by washing and exposure to cholesterol-containing lipid suspensions lacking bile salt, did not enhance the incorporation of the sterol. In the absence of bile salt the incorporation of cholesterol was unaffected by stirring of the incubation mixtures. Increasing the cholesterol concentration in the mixed micelle while keeping the concentration of bile salt constant caused an increase in rate of sterol incorporation. This increased rate was seen whether the cholesterol suspension was turbid, i.e., contained non-micellized cholesterol, or whether it was optically-clear and contained only monomers and micelles. When the concentration of taurocholate and cholesterol were increased simultaneously such that the concentration ratio of these two components was kept constant, there resulted a corresponding increase in rate of cholesterol uptake. The initial rates of cholesterol incorporation from suspensions containing micellar and monomer forms of cholesterol were much larger than from solutions containing only monomers of the same concentration. The rates of incorporation of cholesterol and phosphatidylethanolamine from mixed micelles containing these lipids in equimolar concentrations were very different. The results as a whole suggest at least for those experimental conditions specified in this study, that uptake of cholesterol by isolated brush-border membranes involves both the monomer and micellar phases of the bulk lipid and that the interaction of the micelles with membrane does not likely involve a fusion process.  相似文献   

5.
Lipid exchange between mixed micelles of phospholipid and triton X-100   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
If phospholipase catalyzed hydrolysis of phospholipid dissolved in a detergent mixed micelle is limited to the phospholipid carried by a single micelle, then hydrolysis ceases upon exhaustion of that pool. However, if the rate of phospholipid exchange between micelles exceeds the catalytic rate then all of the phospholipid is available for hydrolysis. To determine phospholipid availability we studied the exchange of 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine between mixed micelles of phospholipid and non-ionic Triton detergents by both stopped-flow fluorescence-recovery and nuclear magnetic resonance-relaxation techniques. Stopped-flow analysis was performed by combining mixed micelles of Triton and phospholipid with mixed micelles that contained the fluorescent phospholipid 1-palmitoyl-2-(12-[{7-nitro-2-1, 3-benzoxadiazo-4-yl}amino]dodecanoyl)-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (P-2-NBD-PC). The concentration dependence of fluorescence recovery suggested a second-order exchange mechanism that was saturable. The true second-order rate constant depends on the specific mechanism for exchange, which was not determined in this study, but the rate constant will be on the order of 106 to 107 M-1s-1. Incorporation of 1-palmitoyl-2-(16-doxylstearoyl)phosphatidylcholine into micelles increased the rate of proton relaxation and gave a limiting relaxation time of 1.3 ms. The results demonstrate that phospholipid exchange was rapid and that the phospholipid content of a single micelle did not limit the rate of phospholipid hydrolysis by phospholipases.  相似文献   

6.
The solubilization of multilamellar egg yolk lecithin liposomes by sodiumtaurodeoxycholate in aqueous phase was studied by ultrafiltration as a function of time, bile salt and cholesterol concentration. The corresponding equilibrium states were analysed. Complete solubilization was achieved at total bile salt/lecithin molar mixing ratios of approximately 5. The minimum ratio to start solubilization was 0.1, corresponding to a free bile salt concentration of only 5% of the critical micelle concentration (CMC). Mean equilibrium constants for the partition of bile salts between non-filterable aggregates and filterable mixed micelles and also the free bile salt concentration were determined. Sodiumtaurodeoxycholate had a higher affinity for small mixed micelles than for lamellar mixed aggregates especially in the presence of cholesterol, which reduces the degree and rate of the solubilization process. A non-homogeneous distribution of bile salts in the lipid phase was detected at low bile salt concentrations.  相似文献   

7.
The critical micelle concentrations of 1, 2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine-N-[monomethoxy poly(ethylene glycol) (5000)] (PEG-DPPE) and its distearoyl analogue (PEG-DSPE) were 70 and 9 microM, respectively, in buffer solutions ([Tris] = 20 mM, [NaCl] = 140 mM, pH 7.4) at 37 degrees C. When these PEG-lipid micelle dispersions were mixed with the dispersions of phospholipid vesicles comprised of a C16 membrane, of which the carbon number is 16, or a C18 membrane, the PEG-lipid micelles were dissociated into monomers and then spontaneously incorporated into the surface of the preformed vesicles. The incorporation rates and the enthalpy changes during incorporation were measured with an isothermal titration microcalorimeter. The incorporation rate of PEG-DPPE was faster than that of PEG-DSPE, because the dissociation rate of the PEG-DPPE micelles was faster than that of PEG-DSPE micelles. The incorporation equilibrium constant of PEG-DSPE was larger than that of PEG-DPPE due to its slow dissociation rate from the membrane, caused by the stronger hydrophobic interaction. The combination of PEG-DSPE and the C18 membrane was the most thermodynamically stabilized pair. Furthermore, the dispersion stability of the surface-modified vesicles prepared by this spontaneous incorporation was analyzed by using the critical molecular weight of the polymer for the aggregation of vesicles. The aggregation of the vesicles was successfully supressed with an increase in the molecular weight of the PEG in the PEG-lipid and its incorporation ratio.  相似文献   

8.
Multinuclear (1H and 31P) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and quasi-elastic light scattering have been used to characterize molecular aggregates formed in dilute sodium taurocholate--egg lecithin solutions. When mixed micelles (1.25 g/dL) are diluted with 150 mM aqueous sodium chloride, light-scattering measurements suggest a transformation from mixed micelles to unilamellar vesicle species. Decreased 1H NMR line widths for bile salt resonances are consistent with predominance of a monomer form. The concurrent appearance of a second phospholipid choline methyl resonance indicates two types of phospholipid environment in slow chemical exchange: this behavior is consistent with small unilamellar vesicles. The appearance of bilayer vesicles in dilute model bile solutions is confirmed by addition of a lanthanide shift reagent (Pr3+), which splits the 1H or 31P head-group peak into two components with distinct chemical shift sensitivities. These mixed micelle and vesicle aggregates are also distinguished by their susceptibility to the lipolytic enzyme phospholipase A2 from cobra venom.  相似文献   

9.
Phospholipase C catalyzed hydrolysis of dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine (DMPC) in phospholipid-bile salt mixed micelles was studied with particular attention on the relationship between interfacial enzyme activity and the physicochemical properties of substrate aggregates. Steady state kinetics is observed and it is argued that conditions for steady state exist because the enzyme encounters a steady supply of substrate by hopping between micelles at a rate faster than the chemical reaction rate. An existing kinetic model is reformulated to a more usable form. This presents a new approach to treating the kinetic data and allows extraction of the kinetic parameters of the model from the activity dependence on micellar lipid substrate surface concentration. The kinetic parameters were found to depend on the physicochemical properties of substrate aggregates, but remain constant over a range of lipid and bile salt concentrations. The substrate aggregates were characterized by time-resolved fluorescence quenching (TRFQ). The activity values and the micelle sizes group into two sets: (i) larger micelles for bile salt/lipid 5 with lower activity and longer steady state ( approximately 10 min). At least two sets of parameters, for bile salt/lipid 5, characterize the kinetics. Higher enzyme-micelle dissociation constant and lower catalytic rate are found for the group of smaller micelles. An explanation supporting our finding is that as micelles become smaller the overlap area for enzyme-micelle binding decreases, leading to weaker binding. Consequently the enzyme dissociation constant increases. Extension of the present approach to other phospholipases and substrates to establish its generality and correlation between micelle size and the catalytic rate are areas for future investigations.  相似文献   

10.
Precipitation of calcium palmitate from bile salt-containing dispersions   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Addition of calcium chloride to mixed micellar systems composed of sodium salts of palmitic acid and high concentrations of different bile acids results in precipitation of Ca(palmitate)2 only when the palmitate concentration exceeds a critical value, which is dependent on the concentrations of Ca2+, Na+ and bile salt, and on the type of bile salt used. All these dependencies, as well as the complex and interrelated effects of the various parameters on the kinetics of Ca(palmitate)2 precipitation are consistent with the following mechanism: (i) calcium binds to palmitate-bile salt mixed micelles and promotes their aggregation, at a rate governed by the concentration ratio between bound calcium and micelles (here denoted "binding ratio"). (ii) Ca(palmitate)2 precipitation occurs within the aggregate of micelles only if those micelles include sufficient amounts of Ca2+ and palmitate to allow for the formation of large enough crystal units of Ca(palmitate)2 which can serve as nucleation "seeds". Both the concentrations of micelles and Na+ have dual effects on the rate of precipitation. Increasing micelle concentration, by itself, accelerates aggregation but at the same time leads to a decrease of the binding ratio, thus reducing the rate of precipitation. Na+ which reduces the binding ratio through competitive binding also reduces the surface charge, thus assisting micelle aggregation. Our model also explains the facilitation of precipitation observed when phosphatidylcholine is contained in the palmitate-bile salt mixed micelles and the inhibitory effect of the water soluble bovine serum albumin.  相似文献   

11.
A nonmicellar, bile salt-independent mode of cholesterol transport in human bile involving phospholipid vesicles was recently reported by our group. In the present study, we have investigated the relative contribution of the phospholipid vesicles and mixed bile salt-phospholipid micelles to cholesterol transport in human hepatic and gallbladder biles. The vesicles (ca 800 A diameter) were demonstrated by quasi-elastic light scattering (QELS) in fresh bile and after chromatography. Gel filtration under conditions that preserved micellar integrity demonstrated that biliary cholesterol was associated with both vesicles and micelles. At low bile salt concentration, the vesicular phase was predominant and most of the cholesterol was transported by it. With increasing bile salt concentrations, a progressive solubilization of the vesicles occurred with a concomitant increase in the amount of cholesterol transported by micelles. The vesicular carrier may be of particular biological significance for cholesterol solubilization in supersaturated biles.  相似文献   

12.
The intermicellar bile salt concentration in equilibrium with the bile salt-lecithin-cholesterol mixed-micelle has been studied in human bile. Equilibrium-dialysis, used to measure the biliary intermicellar bile salt concentration, has been validated as an applicable method by studying the cholate-lecithin mixed-micelle, for which intermicellar bile salt concentration values have previously been reported. The intermicellar bile salt concentration of bile was essentially independent of ionic strength in the range 0.05-0.15 M chloride. Simple dilution of bile lowered the intermicellar bile salt concentration (about 2/3 reduction for each two-fold dilution). This reduction occurred because of a simultaneous decrease in the molar ration of bile salt/phospholipid in the micelle. Dilution of micelles with micellar bile salt/phospholipid held constant did not affect the intermicellar bile salt concentration. The relationship between intermicellar bile salt concentration and micellar bile salt/phospholipid, defined in the dilution studies, was linear in the range of study. For a composite of five biles, this relationship was described by the equation: intermicellar bile salt concentration = 1.27 (bile salt/phsopholipid) + 0.538. Data obtained on an artificial bile agreed closely with the results obtained on bile suggesting that the other constituents of bile did not affect this analysis. These findings may be helpful in understanding the process of micellar cholesterol solubilization in bile.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Micelles of lysomyristoylphosphatidylcholine (LMPC) and mixed micelles of LMPC with anionic detergent sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) have been characterized by spin-probe-partitioning electron paramagnetic resonance (SPPEPR) and time-resolved fluorescence quenching (TRFQ) experiments. SPPEPR is a novel new method to study structure and dynamics in lipid assemblies successfully applied here for the first time to micelles. Several improvements to the computer program used to analyze SPPEPR spectra have been incorporated that increase the precision in the extracted parameters considerably from which micelle properties such as effective water concentration and microviscosity may be estimated. In addition, with this increased precision, it is shown that it is feasible to study the rate of transfer of a small spin probe between micelles and the surrounding aqueous phase by SPPEPR. The rate of transfer of the spin probe di-tert-butyl nitroxide (DTBN) and the activation energy of the transfer process in LMPC and LMPC-SDS micelles have been determined with high precision. The rate of transfer increases with temperature and SDS molar fraction in mixed micelles, while it remains constant with LMPC concentration in pure LMPC micelles. The activation energy of DTBN transfer in pure lysophospholipid micelles does not change with LMPC concentration while it decreases with the increasing molar fraction of SDS in mixed LMPC-SDS micelles. Both this decrease in activation energy and the increase in the rate of transfer are rationalized in terms of an increasing micelle surface area per molecule (decreasing compactness) as SDS molecules are added. This decreasing compactness as a function of SDS content is confirmed by TRFQ measurements showing an aggregation number that decreases from 122 molecules for pure LMPC micelles to 80 molecules for pure SDS micelles. The same increase in surface area per molecule is predicted to increase the effective water concentration in the polar shell of the micelles. This increase in hydration with SDS molar fraction is confirmed by measuring the effective water concentration in the polar shell of the micelles from the hyperfine spacing of DTBN. This work demonstrates the potential to design mixed lysophospholipid surfactant micelles with variable physicochemical properties. Well-defined micellar substrates, in terms of their physicochemical properties, may improve the studies of protein structure and enzyme kinetics.  相似文献   

15.
Pancreatic porcine phospholipase A2 catalyzed hydrolysis of phosphatidylcholine in bile salt lecithin mixed micelles has been studied, utilizing a series of assay mixtures for which the micellar size, weight, and composition had been experimentally determined. Under these conditions the enzymatic hydrolysis is dependent on the phosphatidylcholine-to-sodium cholate molar ratio within the mixed micelle rather than the bulk concentration of the phospholipid in the mixture: at 5 mM phosphatidylcholine, variation of the NPC/NNaCh ratio from 0.2 to 2.0 increases the enzymatic activity from 82 to 933 mumol/min/mg protein. The initial rates are linear throughout the entire series of assay mixtures, the activity vs micellar concentration curves exhibit saturation behavior, and treatment of the data according to the "surface-as-cofactor" theory provides linear double-reciprocal plots which intersect in one point. The assay system should be applicable for detailed kinetic studies of lipolytic enzymes, including mammalian phospholipases which exhibit rather low activities toward lecithin-Triton X-100 mixed micelles. The system should also provide a convenient basis for mechanistic studies involving the use of inhibitory phospholipid substrate analogs.  相似文献   

16.
The ABC transporters bile salt export pump (BSEP; encoded by the ABCB11 gene), MDR3 P-glycoprotein (ABCB4), and sterolin 1 and 2 (ABCG5 and ABCG8) are crucial for the excretion of bile salt, phospholipid, and cholesterol, respectively, into the bile of mammals. The current paradigm is that phospholipid excretion mainly serves to protect membranes of the biliary tree against bile salt micelles. Bile salt composition and cytotoxicity, however, differ greatly between species. We investigated whether biliary phospholipid and cholesterol excretion occurs in a primitive species, the little skate, which almost exclusively excretes the sulphated bile alcohol scymnolsulphate. We observed no phospholipid and very little cholesterol excretion into bile of these animals. Conversely, when scymnolsulphate was added to the perfusate of isolated mouse liver perfusions, it was very well capable of driving biliary phospholipid and cholesterol excretion. Furthermore, in an erythrocyte cytolysis assay, scymnolsulphate was found to be at least as cytotoxic as taurocholate. These results demonstrate that the little skate does not have a system for the excretion of phospholipid and cholesterol and that both the MDR3 and the two half-transporter genes, ABCG5 and ABCG8, have evolved relatively late in evolution to mediate biliary lipid excretion. Little skate plasma membranes may be protected against bile salt micelles mainly by their high sphingomyelin content.  相似文献   

17.
Human bile contains a factor with cholesterol nucleation-promoting activity that binds to concanavalin A-Sepharose. In this study we have investigated the effect of this activity on the dynamics of lipid solubilization in supersaturated model bile. A concanavalin A binding protein fraction of human bile was mixed with model bile and the effect on the distribution of cholesterol and phospholipid between mixed micelles and phospholipid/cholesterol vesicles was studied by means of density gradient ultracentrifugation. The nucleation-promoting activity containing fraction induced a transfer of cholesterol and phospholipid from the micellar to the vesicular phase. This led to a decrease in the density of the vesicular fraction. We have also studied the effect of promoting activity on the nucleation time of an isolated vesicle fraction. A decrease of the nucleation time of 10.7 +/- 1.3 to 2.3 +/- 0.3 days was observed. In conclusion, a concanavalin A binding protein fraction from human bile stimulated cholesterol nucleation via a double effect; it increased the amount of vesicular cholesterol and phospholipid, and it also directly induced nucleation of cholesterol from the vesicles.  相似文献   

18.
Biliary lipids, water and cholesterol gallstones   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Cholesterol supersaturation, hydrophobic bile salts, pronucleating proteins and impaired gall-bladder motility may contribute to gallstone pathogenesis. We here show that both gallstone-susceptible C57L and gallstone-resistant AKR male inbred mice exhibit supersaturated gall-bladder biles during early lithogenesis, whereas bile-salt composition becomes hydrophobic only in susceptible C57L mice. In vitro, cholesterol crystallization occurs depending on relative amounts of lipids; excess cholesterol may exceed solubilizing capacity of mixed bile salt-phospholipid micelles, whereas excess bile salts compared with phospholipids leads to deficient cholesterol-storage capacity in vesicles. In vivo, bile lipid contents are mainly determined at the level of the hepatocyte canalicular membrane, where specific transport proteins enable lipid secretion [ABCG5/G8 (ATP-binding cassette transporter G5/G8) for cholesterol, MDR3 (multi-drug resistant 3) for phospholipid, BSEP (bile salt export pump)]. These transport proteins are regulated by farnesoid X and liver X nuclear receptors. After nascent bile formation, modulation of bile water contents in biliary tract and gall-bladder exerts critical effects on cholesterol crystallization. During progressive bile concentration (particularly in the fasting gall-bladder), cholesterol and, preferentially, phospholipid transfer occurs from cholesterol-unsaturated vesicles to emerging mixed micelles. The remaining unstable cholesterol-enriched vesicles may nucleate crystals. Various aquaporins have recently been discovered throughout the biliary tract, with potential relevance for gallstone formation.  相似文献   

19.
Micellization of sodium chenodeoxycholate (NaCDC) was studied for the critical micelle concentration (CMC), the micelle aggregation number, and the degree of counterion binding to micelle at 288.2, 298.2, 308.2, and 318.2 K. They were compared with those of three other unconjugated bile salts; sodium cholate (NaC), sodium deoxycholate (NaDC), and sodium ursodeoxycholate (NaUDC). The I(1)/I(3) ratio of pyrene fluorescence and the solubility dependence of solution pH were employed to determine the CMC values. As the results, a certain concentration range for the CMC and a stepwise molecular aggregation for micellization were found reasonable. Using a stepwise association model of the bile salt anions, the mean aggregation number (n) of NaCDC micelles was found to increase with the total anion concentration, while the n values decreased with increasing temperature; 9.1, 8.1, 7.4, and 6.3 at 288.2, 298.2, 308.2, and 318.2 K, respectively, at 50 mmol dm(-3). The results from four unconjugated bile salts indicate that the number, location, and orientation of hydroxyl groups in the steroid nucleus are quite important for growth of the micelles. Activity of the counterion (Na(+)) was determined by a sodium ion selective electrode in order to confirm the low counterion binding to micelles. The solubilized amount of cholesterol into the aqueous bile salt solutions increased in the order of NaUDC相似文献   

20.
M D Bazzi  G L Nelsestuen 《Biochemistry》1987,26(16):5002-5008
The phospholipid selectivity of protein kinase C (PKC) activation was examined by using two substrates, histone and a random copolymer of lysine and serine [poly(lysine, serine)] (PLS), plus phospholipids provided as vesicles or as Triton-mixed micelle preparations. The results indicated that substrate-phospholipid interaction was an essential component of PKC activation and that many in vitro properties of PKC activation are attributable to this interaction. The substrate histone interacted with phospholipid-Triton mixed micelles containing phosphatidylserine (PS), but not with those containing phosphatidylinositol (PI) or phosphatidylglycerol (PG). In direct correlation, only PS-Triton mixed micelles were effective in supporting PKC activity. Also, the minimum PS composition (4 mol % in Triton) required to induce significant histone-PS interaction coincided with the minimum composition required for phosphorylation of histones. Moreover, the PS composition required for maximum activity varied with the histone concentration of the reaction. In contrast to histone, PLS interacted with phospholipid-Triton mixed micelles containing either PS, PI, or PG, and all these mixed micelles supported the phosphorylation of PLS. In fact, by selection of appropriate experimental conditions (e.g., concentration of substrate and phospholipid), any of the three mixed micelles could appear the most effective in supporting PKC activity. Phospholipid vesicles containing PS, PG, or PI were found to interact with both histone and PLS and to support the activity of PKC. Physical properties of the solution and conditions used for preparation of phospholipid vesicles had considerable influence on PKC activation. At high phospholipid concentrations, vesicles containing PS, PI, or PG supported the activity of PKC to essentially the same level, provided that the physical differences among the phospholipid vesicles were minimized.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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