Sterol carrier protein-2 alters high density lipoprotein-mediated cholesterol efflux. (33/347)

Although sterol carrier protein-2 (SCP-2) participates in the uptake and intracellular trafficking of cholesterol, its effect on "reverse cholesterol transport" has not been explored. As shown herein, SCP-2 expression inhibited high density lipoprotein (HDL)-mediated efflux of [(3)H]cholesterol and fluorescent 22-(N-(7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1, 3-diazol-4-yl)amino)-23,24-bisnor-5-cholen-3b-ol (NBD-cholesterol) up to 61 and 157%, respectively. Confocal microscopy of living cells allowed kinetic analysis of two intracellular pools of HDL-mediated NBD-cholesterol efflux: the highly fluorescent lipid droplet pool and the less fluorescent pool outside the lipid droplets, designated the cytoplasmic compartment. Both the whole cell and the cytoplasmic compartment exhibited two similar kinetic pools, the half-times of which were consistent with protein (t(b)(12) near 1 min) and vesicular (t(d)(12) = 10-20 min) mediated sterol transfer. Although SCP-2 expression did not alter cytoplasmic sterol pool sizes, the rapid t(b)(12) decreased 36%, while the slower t(d)(12) increased 113%. Lipid droplets also exhibited two kinetic pools of NBD-cholesterol efflux but with half-times over 200% shorter than those of the cytoplasmic compartment. The lipid droplet slower effluxing pool size and t(d)(12) were increased 48% and 115%, respectively, in SCP-2-expressing cells. Concomitantly, the level of the lipid droplet-specific adipose differentiation-related protein decreased 70%. Overall, HDL-mediated sterol efflux from L-cell fibroblasts reflected that of the cytoplasmic rather than lipid droplet compartment. SCP-2 differentially modulated sterol efflux from the two cytoplasmic pools. However, net efflux was determined primarily by inhibition of the slowly effluxing pool rather than by acceleration of the rapid protein-mediated pool. Finally, SCP-2 expression also inhibited sterol efflux from lipid droplets, an effect related to decreased adipose differentiation-related protein, a lipid droplet surface protein that binds cholesterol with high affinity.  (+info)

Pulmonary surfactant protein A interacts with gel-like regions in monolayers of pulmonary surfactant lipid extract. (34/347)

Epifluorescence microscopy was used to investigate the interaction of pulmonary surfactant protein A (SP-A) with spread monolayers of porcine surfactant lipid extract (PSLE) containing 1 mol % fluorescent probe (NBD-PC) spread on a saline subphase (145 mM NaCl, 5 mM Tris-HCl, pH 6.9) containing 0, 0.13, or 0.16 microg/ml SP-A and 0, 1.64, or 5 mM CaCl(2). In the absence of SP-A, no differences were noted in PSLE monolayers in the absence or presence of Ca(2+). Circular probe-excluded (dark) domains were observed against a fluorescent background at low surface pressures (pi approximately 5 mN/m) and the domains grew in size with increasing pi. Above 25 mN/m, the domain size decreased with increasing pi. The amount of observable dark phase was maximal at 18% of the total film area at pi approximately 25 mN/m, then decreased to approximately 3% at pi approximately 40 mN/m. The addition of 0.16 microg/ml SP-A with 0 or 1.64 mM Ca(2+) in the subphase caused an aggregation of dark domains into a loose network, and the total amount of dark phase was increased to approximately 25% between pi of 10-28 mN/m. Monolayer features in the presence of 5 mM Ca(2+) and SP-A were not substantially different from those spread in the absence of SP-A, likely due to a self-association and aggregation of SP-A in the presence of higher concentrations of Ca(2+). PSLE films were spread on a subphase containing 0.16 microg/ml SP-A with covalently bound Texas Red (TR-SP-A). In the absence of Ca(2+), TR-SP-A associated with the reorganized dark phase (as seen with the lipid probe). The presence of 5 mM Ca(2+) resulted in an appearance of TR-SP-A in the fluid phase and of aggregates at the fluid/gel phase boundaries of the monolayers. This study suggests that SP-A associates with PSLE monolayers, particularly with condensed or solid phase lipid, and results in some reorganization of rigid phase lipid in surfactant monolayers.  (+info)

Do membrane-bound enzymes access their substrates from the membrane or aqueous phase: interfacial versus non-interfacial enzymes. (35/347)

For membrane-bound enzymes that act on substrates that partition between the membrane and aqueous phases, it is possible to imagine two fundamentally different mechanisms. Interfacial enzymes must access their substrate from the membrane phase, in other words substrate in the membrane binds directly to the active site of the enzyme at the membrane without mixing with substrate molecules in the aqueous phase. On the other hand, non-interfacial enzymes, either bound to membranes or present in the aqueous phase, must access their substrates from the aqueous phase, i.e. substrate in the aqueous phase binds directly to the enzyme without mixing with substrates in the membrane phase. An interfacial mechanism for some enzymes including secreted and cytosolic phospholipase A(2) and phosphoinositide 3'-hydroxykinase was rigorously proven by demonstrating that these enzymes processively hydrolyze many phospholipids without desorbing from the surface of vesicles (scooting mode). The non-interfacial mechanism is more difficult to establish because it cannot be addressed by steady-state kinetics. Using a pre-steady-state method in which the enzymatic velocity is measured during the time it takes for substrate to exchange between vesicles, a non-interfacial mechanism was proven for vesicle-bound plasma platelet activating factor acetylhydrolase. This enzyme prefers more water-soluble phospholipids such as those with sn-2 acetyl or oxidatively truncated fatty acyl chains, and this is readily explained by the mandatory access of substrate from the aqueous phase.  (+info)

Adipose differentiation related protein: expression, purification of recombinant protein in Escherichia coli and characterization of its fatty acid binding properties. (36/347)

Adipose differentiation related protein (ADRP) is a 53 kDa protein encoded by a cDNA originally cloned by differential hybridization from murine adipocytes. ADRP is induced during the early onset of the adipose differentiation program and is expressed at high level in mature adipocytes. We have demonstrated that ADRP stimulated the uptake of fatty acids thereby providing evidence for a functional role of ADRP in lipid metabolism. In the present paper, the murine ADRP has been expressed as a recombinant histidine-tagged protein in Escherichia coli, and purified from expressing cultures in order to examine its biochemical properties. We report here that the purified recombinant ADRP binds fatty acids and exhibits stoichiometric saturable binding of NBD-stearic acid with a K(d)=0.145+/-0.003 microM and a B(max)=0.99+/-0.05. Analysis of fluorescence emission spectra indicates that the polarity of the ADRP binding site is near epsilon approximately 23, close to that observed for fatty acid binding sites in other lipid binding proteins such as the liver fatty acid binding protein. The data presented here provide evidence that isolated ADRP purified in the experimental conditions described here can be used for functional studies.  (+info)

Acceleration of phospholipid flip-flop in the erythrocyte membrane by detergents differing in polar head group and alkyl chain length. (37/347)

The detergents, alkyltrimethylammonium bromide, N-alkyl-N, N-dimethyl-3-ammonio-1-propanesulfonate (zwittergent), alkane sulfonate, alkylsulfate, alkyl-beta-D-glucopyranoside, alkyl-beta-D-maltoside, dodecanoyl-N-methylglucamide, polyethylene glycol monoalkyl ether and Triton X-100, all produce a concentration-dependent acceleration of the slow passive transbilayer movement of NBD-labeled phosphatidylcholine in the human erythrocyte membrane. Above a threshold concentration, which was well below the CMC and characteristic for each detergent, the flip rate increases exponentially upon an increase of the detergent concentration in the medium. The detergent-induced flip correlates with reported membrane-expanding effects of the detergents at antihemolytic concentrations. From the dependence of the detergent concentration required for a defined flip acceleration on the estimated membrane volume, membrane/water partition coefficients for the detergents could be determined and effective detergent concentrations in the membrane calculated. The effective membrane concentrations are similar for most types of detergents but are 10-fold lower for octaethylene glycol monoalkyl ether and Triton X-100. The effectiveness of a given type of detergent is rather independent of its alkyl chain length. Since detergents do not reduce the high temperature dependence of the flip process the detergent-induced flip is proposed to be due to an enhanced probability of formation of transient hydrophobic structural defects in the membrane barrier which may result from perturbation of the interfacial region of the bilayer by inserted detergent molecules.  (+info)

Control of a redox reaction on lipid bilayer surfaces by membrane dipole potential. (38/347)

Nitro-2,1,3-benzoxadiazol-4-yl (NBD) group is a widely used, environment-sensitive fluorescent probe. The negatively charged dithionite rapidly reduces the accessible NBD-labeled lipids in liposomes to their corresponding nonfluorescent derivatives. In this study both the phospholipid headgroup and acyl chain NBD-labeled L-alpha-1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phospho-[N-(4-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazole)-e thanolamine] (DPPN) and 1-acyl-2-[12-[(7-nitro-2,1,3-benzoxadiazol-4-yl)amino]dodecanoyl]-sn-glycero-3-ph osphocholine (NBD-PC), respectively, were employed. The correlation of both the rate coefficient k(1) of the redox reaction and the fluorescence properties of the two probes with the membrane dipole potential Psi in fluid dipalmitoylglycerophosphocholine (DPPC) liposomes is demonstrated. When Psi of the bilayer was varied (decreased by phloretin or increased by 6-ketocholestanol), the value for k1 decreased for both DPPN and NBD-PC with increasing Psi. For both fluorophores a positive correlation to Psi was evident for the relative fluorescence emission intensity (RFI, normalized to the emission of the fluorophore in a DPPC matrix). The relative changes in emission intensity as a function of Psi were approximately equal for both NBD derivatives. Changes similar to those caused by phloretin were seen when dihexadecylglycerophosphocholine (DHPC) was added to DPPC liposomes, in keeping with the lower dipole potential for the former lipid compound compared with DPPC. These effects of Psi on NBD fluorescence should be taken into account when interpreting data acquired using NBD-labeled lipids as fluorescent probes.  (+info)

Dynamics of membrane penetration of the fluorescent 7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazol-4-yl (NBD) group attached to an acyl chain of phosphatidylcholine. (39/347)

Location and dynamic reorientation of the fluorophore 7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazol-4-yl (NBD) covalently attached to a short (C6) or a long (C12) sn2 acyl chain of a phosphatidylcholine molecule was investigated by fluorescence and solid-state NMR spectroscopy. 2H NMR lipid chain order parameters indicate a perturbation of the phospholipid packing density in the presence of NBD. Specifically, a decrease of molecular order was found for acyl chain segments of the lower, more hydrophobic region. Molecular collision probabilities determined by 1H magic angle spinning nuclear Overhauser enhancement spectroscopy indicate a highly dynamic reorientation of the probe in the membrane due to thermal fluctuations. A broad distribution of the fluorophore in the lipid bilayer is observed with a preferential location in the upper acyl chain/glycerol region. The distribution of the NBD group in the membrane is quite similar for both the long- and the short-chain analog. However, a slight preference of the NBD group for the lipid-water interface is found for C12-NBD-PC in comparison with C6-NBD-PC. Indeed, as shown by dithionite fluorescence assay, the long-chain analog reacts more favorably with dithionite, indicating a better accessibility of the probe by dithionite present in the aqueous phase. Forces determining the location of the fluorophore in the lipid water interface are discussed.  (+info)

Calmodulin levels are dynamically regulated in living vascular smooth muscle cells. (40/347)

The total unbound calmodulin (i.e., not bound to target proteins) level in living smooth muscle cells from the ferret portal vein was monitored with a low-affinity, calmodulin-binding peptide tagged with an environmentally sensitive fluorophore. GS17C, a previously characterized peptide, from the calmodulin-binding domain of caldesmon was tagged with iodoacetyl nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazole (NBD) or, as a negative control, with iodoacetylfluorescein isothiocyanate. Increases in NBD-GS17C fluorescence were detected by using confocal microscopy when chemically loaded cells were stimulated with solutions of elevated [K(+)] or the calcium ionophore 4-bromoA-23187 to elicit increases in intracellular Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) quantified by fura 2. Increases in peptide fluorescence were detected in response to a phorbol ester in the absence of changes in [Ca(2+)](i). These changes were blocked by the addition of the calmodulin antagonist calmidazolium. These results suggest that the total unbound intracellular calmodulin levels may be sufficient to regulate the activity of caldesmon and, furthermore, that phosphorylation of protein kinase C substrates may increase the level of available calmodulin in living smooth muscle cells.  (+info)