Abstract: | The lipid composition and fluidity of microvillus (luminal) membranes isolated from the small intestines of Fisher 344 rats aged 6, 17, and 117 weeks were compared. Lipid fluidity, as assessed by the fluorescence anisotropy of 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene, was significantly greater in rats aged 6 weeks as compared to 17 or 117 weeks. A lipid thermotropic transition was observed at 17.5 +/- 1.3 degrees C in the membranes of the youngest group, approx. 5-6 degrees C lower than that of the older animals. The differences in lipid composition which account for the higher fluidity of the youngest preparations include a decreased cholesterol/phospholipid molar ratio in both the proximal and distal halves of the small intestine and, in the proximal half alone, increases in the lipid/protein ratio and double bond index. The foregoing reduction in cholesterol/phospholipid ratio derives mainly from a higher content of total phospholipid, and the increment in double bond index results from an increase in arachidonic acid residues. The results demonstrate an age-dependent decrease in fluidity of intestinal microvillus membranes in the early post-weaning period in the rat. This pattern was unlike that of the microvillus membrane p-nitrophenylphosphatase, whose specific activity declined progressively in the older age groups. |