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Palabras contadas: phospholipid: 13
Dodes Traian, M.M. - Cattoni, D.I. - Levi, V. - González Flecha, F.L.
PLoS ONE 2012;7(6)
2012

Descripción: Lipid-protein interactions play an essential role in the regulation of biological function of integral membrane proteins; however, the underlying molecular mechanisms are not fully understood. Here we explore the modulation by phospholipids of the enzymatic activity of the plasma membrane calcium pump reconstituted in detergent-phospholipid mixed micelles of variable composition. The presence of increasing quantities of phospholipids in the micelles produced a cooperative increase in the ATPase activity of the enzyme. This activation effect was reversible and depended on the phospholipid/detergent ratio and not on the total lipid concentration. Enzyme activation was accompanied by a small structural change at the transmembrane domain reported by 1-aniline-8-naphtalenesulfonate fluorescence. In addition, the composition of the amphipilic environment sensed by the protein was evaluated by measuring the relative affinity of the assayed phospholipid for the transmembrane surface of the protein. The obtained results allow us to postulate a two-stage mechanistic model explaining the modulation of protein activity based on the exchange among non-structural amphiphiles at the hydrophobic transmembrane surface, and a lipid-induced conformational change. The model allowed to obtain a cooperativity coefficient reporting on the efficiency of the transduction step between lipid adsorption and catalytic site activation. This model can be easily applied to other phospholipid/detergent mixtures as well to other membrane proteins. The systematic quantitative evaluation of these systems could contribute to gain insight into the structure-activity relationships between proteins and lipids in biological membranes. © 2012 Dodes Traian et al.
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Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Ohtake, S. - Schebor, C. - Palecek, S.P. - De Pablo, J.J.
Biochim. Biophys. Acta Biomembr. 2005;1713(1):57-64
2005

Descripción: A study is presented of the role of cholesterol content on the gel-to-liquid crystalline phase transition of freeze-dried liposomes stabilized with trehalose, a well known lyoprotectant. The phospholipids considered in this work, DPPC and DPPE, belong to the two predominant phospholipid species found in numerous biological membranes. Cholesterol is found in abundance in mammalian plasma membranes. DSC measurements reveal that cholesterol-containing liposomes exhibit multiple phase transitions upon dehydration. Addition of trehalose to these systems lowers the phase transition temperature and limits the phase separation of the lipidic components upon freeze-drying. This work provides strong evidence for the effectiveness of trehalose in stabilizing cholesterol-containing membranes upon lyophilization. © 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Disalvo, E.A. - Lairion, F. - Martini, F. - Almaleck, H. - Diaz, S. - Gordillo, G.
- 2004;92(4-6):1-22
2004

Descripción: The purpose of this review is to examine and discuss the ways in which water is organized at the interface of a biological membrane. The relevance of this structure to the surface properties and to the adsorption of proteins in membranes is also analized. The approach is based on the idea that cell functions are confined to a restricted water media, the cell interior, in which the proximity of the membrane may be key to regulating the enzyme activity and the cell membrane permeability. As the lipid bilayer is the structural base of cell membranes, the distribution of water in the surface sites of a phospholipid membrane is analyzed by means of Fourier Transform spectrometry. The polarization of water at the surface was looked into through the measure of surface potentials and the dynamics of the surface hydration by cyclic voltammetry. Modification of these properties by the replacement of water by polyol molecules such as trehalose and phloretin and by the insertion of aqueous soluble enzymes, has also been investigated.
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Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Herrmann, C.K. - Bukata, L. - Melli, L. - Marchesini, M.I. - Caramelo, J.J. - Comerci, D.J.
J. Bacteriol. 2013;195(3):493-501
2013

Descripción: Phosphatidylcholine (PC), a common phospholipid of the eukaryotic cell membrane, is present in the cell envelope of the intracellular pathogen Brucella abortus, the etiological agent of bovine brucellosis. In this pathogen, the biosynthesis of PC proceeds mainly through the phosphatidylcholine synthase pathway; hence, it relies on the presence of choline in the milieu. These observations imply that B. abortus encodes an as-yet-unknown choline uptake system. Taking advantage of the requirement of choline uptake for PC synthesis, we devised a method that allowed us to identify a homologue of ChoX, the high-affinity periplasmic binding protein of the ABC transporter ChoXWV. Disruption of the choX gene completely abrogated PC synthesis at low choline concentrations in the medium, thus indicating that it is a high-affinity transporter needed for PC synthesis via the PC synthase (PCS) pathway. However, the synthesis of PC was restored when the mutant was incubated in media with higher choline concentrations, suggesting the presence of an alternative low-affinity choline uptake activity. By means of a fluorescence-based equilibrium- binding assay and using the kinetics of radiolabeled choline uptake, we show that ChoX binds choline with an extremely high affinity, and we also demonstrate that its activity is inhibited by increasing choline concentrations. Cell infection assays indicate that ChoX activity is required during the first phase of B. abortus intracellular traffic, suggesting that choline concentrations in the early and intermediate Brucella-containing vacuoles are limited. Altogether, these results suggest that choline transport and PC synthesis are strictly regulated in B. abortus. © 2013, American Society for Microbiology.
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Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

Ohtake, S. - Schebor, C. - de Pablo, J.J.
Biochim. Biophys. Acta Biomembr. 2006;1758(1):65-73
2006

Descripción: A systematic study is presented of the effects of trehalose on the physical properties of extruded DPPC-cholesterol unilamellar vesicles. Particular emphasis is placed on examining how the interactions present in the hydrated state translate into those in the dehydrated state. Observations from HSDSC and DSC are used to examine the phase behavior of hydrated and dehydrated vesicles, respectively. The concentration of trehalose inside and outside the vesicles is manipulated, and is shown to affect the relative stability of the membranes. Our results show for the first time that a combination of high inner and low outer trehalose concentration is able to decrease the gel-to-liquid crystalline phase temperature (Tm), while any other combination will not. Upon dehydration, the Tm of all lipid mixtures increases. The extent of the increase depends on the trehalose distribution across the bilayer. The Tm changes in the same direction with trehalose concentration for both freeze-dried and fully hydrated samples, suggesting that the trehalose distribution across the vesicle membrane, as well as the trehalose-phospholipid interaction, is maintained upon lyophilization. The results presented in this work may aid in the formulation of systems to be used in the lyophilization of liposomes for drug delivery applications. © 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo

López, C.S. - Alice, A.F. - Heras, H. - Rivas, E.A. - Sánchez-Rivas, C.
Microbiology 2006;152(3):605-616
2006

Descripción: The importance of the content of anionic phospholipids [cardiolipin (CL) and phosphatidylglycerol (PG)] in the osmotic adaptation and in the membrane structure of Bacillus subtilis cultures was investigated. Insertion mutations in the three putative cardiolipin synthase genes (ywiE, ywnE and ywjE) were obtained. Only the ywnE mutation resulted in a complete deficiency in cardiolipin and thus corresponds to a true clsA gene. The osmotolerance of a clsA mutant was impaired: although at NaCl concentrations lower than 1.2 M the growth curves were similar to those of its wild-type control, at 1 .5 M NaCl (LBN medium) the lag period increased and the maximal optical density reached was lower. The membrane of the clsA mutant strain showed an increased PG content, at both exponential and stationary phase, but no trace of CL in either LB or LBN medium. As well as the deficiency in CL synthesis, the clsA mutant showed other differences in lipid and fatty acids content compared to the wild-type, suggesting a cross-regulation in membrane lipid pathways, crucial for the maintenance of membrane functionality and integrity. The biophysical characteristics of membranes and large unilamellar vesicles from the wild-type and clsA mutant strains were studied by Laurdan's steady-state fluorescence spectroscopy. At physiological temperature, the clsA mutant showed a decreased lateral lipid packing in the protein-free vesicles and isolated membranes compared with the wild-type strain. Interestingly, the lateral lipid packing of the membranes of both the wild-type and clsA mutant strains increased when they were grown in LBN. In a conditional IPTG-controlled pgsA mutant, unable to synthesize PG and CL in the absence of IPTG, the osmoresistance of the cultures correlated with their content of anionic phospholipids. The transcriptional activity of the clsA and pgsA genes was similar and increased twofold upon entry to stationary phase or under osmotic upshift. Overall, these results support the involvement of the anionic phospholipids in the growth of B. subtilis in media containing elevated NaCl concentrations. © 2006 SGM.
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Tipo de documento: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo