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Fluorescent probe studies of normal, persistently infected, rous sarcoma virus-transformed, and trypsinized rat cells
Authors:Gary R Burleson  Charles F Kulpa  Haydn E Edwards  J Kerry Thomas
Institution:1. Lobound Laboratory, Department of Microbiology, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN, USA
Abstract:The fluorescent probes pyrene, pyrene butyric acid and N-phenyl 1-naphthylamine were used to study membranes of normal cells, RSV-transformed cells, cells treated with a proteolytic enzyme, and cells persistently infected with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus. The lifetimes of excited pyrene and pyrene butyric acid showed only minor changes when these probes were in normal, transformed, trypsinized or persistently infected cells. However, pyrene, but not pyrene butyric acid, lifetimes are shorter in cell membranes than in homogeneous solvents. The quenching of excited pyrene in cells by quencher molecules was slower than corresponding reactions in homogeneous solutions indicating that the probe was screened from the quenchers by the membrane. However, quenching reactions with the pyrene butyric acid probe were similar in cells and homogeneous solvents. This indicates that pyrene and pyrene butyric acid reside in different lipid regions of the membrane. Transformed and trypsinized cells showed increased membrane fluidity compared to normal and persistently infected cells. Membrane fluidity was determined from the excimer/monomer fluorescence ratios of pyrene, and by the polarization of N-phenyl 1-naphthylamine fluorescence. Several techniques distinguished between normal and transformed or trypsinized cells; however, the only parameter unique to viral transformation was a blue shift of the fluorescence maxima of N-phenyl 1-naphthylamine. This shift reflected a less polar environment for N-phenyl 1-naphthylamine in virus-transformed cells.
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