A new membrane lipid, monoacyldiglucosyldiacylglycerol (MADGlcDAG), was recently discovered in Acholeplasma laidlawii strain A-EF22, demanding a new study of the biosynthetic regulation, and the phase behavior, of the glucolipids in this organism. The only liquid-crystalline phase formed by MADGlcDAG is a reversed hexagonal phase. A. laidlawii A-EF22 synthesizes four lipids that have the ability to induce the formation of reversed nonlamellar phases: MADGlcDAG, monoglucosyldiacylglycerol (MGlcDAG), monoacylmonoglucosyldiacylglycerol (MAMGlcDAG), and diacylglycerol (DAG). A Cn value of approximately 16 seems to be a critical value for the fractions of these lipids in the membrane: the fractions of MADGlcDAG and MGlcDAG are largest when the Cn values are lower than 16, while the fractions of MAMGlcDAG and DAG are largest when the Cn values are higher than 16. The fraction of nonlamellar-forming lipids was 55 mol% when the Cn value was 14.8 and the degree of unsaturation was 33 mol%. This fraction was reduced to 7 mol% when the Cn value and the degree of unsaturation were increased to 17.8 and 92 mol%, respectively, i.e., at conditions that markedly favor the formation of reversed nonlamellar phases. These observations convincingly show that a balance between lamellar- and nonlamellar-forming lipids is maintained in the membrane and strongly support the validity of the lipid regulation model proposed by us. From earlier biochemical data, obtained with short acyl chains, that were difficult to reconcile with our regulation model, it could be predicted that a lipid ought to be synthesized that assists MGlcDAG to maintain the nonlamellar-forming properties with the short chains. It is shown in the present work that this lipid is MADGlcDAG and that the regulation of the balance between lamellar- and nonlamellar-forming lipids is even more complex and sophisticated in A. laidlawii A-EF22 than previously proposed.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi960561w | DOI Listing |
Colloids Surf B Biointerfaces
April 2013
Graduate School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Kyoto University, Kyoto 606-8501, Japan.
In this work, the changes in the lateral pressure in mixed membranes of egg yolk phosphatidylcholine (EPC) and a nonlamellar-forming lipid diolein (DO) were investigated with respect to increasing DO content. Several fluorescence techniques were employed to probe transitions of EPC/DO lipid mixtures from lamellar to inverted hexagonal via bicontinuous cubic phases. Excimer fluorescence of dipyrenyl phospholipids revealed that the lateral pressure in the acyl chain region of the EPC/DO mixed membrane increased with the mole fraction of DO (X(DO)) in the lamellar phase and further increased almost linearly up to X(DO)=0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochemistry
December 2012
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry and Department of Physics, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721, USA.
Membrane biochemists are becoming increasingly aware of the role of lipid-protein interactions in diverse cellular functions. This review describes how conformational changes in membrane proteins, involving folding, stability, and membrane shape transitions, potentially involve elastic remodeling of the lipid bilayer. Evidence suggests that membrane lipids affect proteins through interactions of a relatively long-range nature, extending beyond a single annulus of next-neighbor boundary lipids.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Phys Chem B
December 2006
Graduate School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Kyoto University, Kyoto 606-8501, Japan.
The physicochemical properties of mixed membranes of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine (POPC) and a nonlamellar-forming lipid, 1-monoolein (MO), and the effects of an amphipathic alpha-helical peptide, 18A (DWLKAFYDKVAEKLKEAF), on the membranes were investigated by fluorescence measurements and 31P NMR. The intramolecular excimer formation of dipyrenylphosphatidylcholines showed that the increased lateral pressure near the bilayer center by MO is reduced by the lamellar-cubic phase transition at an MO mole fraction of 0.7, while the lateral pressure near the polar-apolar interface increases even through the phase transition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Phys Chem B
March 2005
Graduate School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Kyoto University, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto 606-8501, Japan.
An introduction of nonlamellar-forming lipids into planar bilayers generates packing stress, which is important for the biological functions of plasma membranes and is a driving force for the lamellar-nonlamellar phase transition. We have investigated the phase behavior of a binary system consisting of egg yolk phosphatidylcholine and monoolein (MO) and the changes in the local orientation order of lipids in a lamellar-bicontinuous cubic phase transition. Small-angle X-ray scattering has revealed that the lamellar-bicontinuous cubic phase transition occurs at an MO molar fraction (X(MO)) between 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Membr Biol
July 2006
Max-Planck Institute for Colloids and Interfaces, HASYLAB, Notkestrasse 85, D-22603, Hamburg, Germany.
The biological activity of farnesol (FN) and geranylgeraniol (GG) and their isoprenyl groups is related to membrane-associated processes. We have studied the interactions of FN and GG with 1,2-dielaidoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (DEPE) membranes using DSC and X-ray diffraction. Storage of samples at low temperature for a long time favors a multidomain system formed by a lamellar crystalline (Lc) phase and isoprenoids (ISPs) aggregates.
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