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Freeze-fracture identification of sterol-digitonin complexes in cell and liposome membranes

To advance our understanding of the organization of cholesterol within cell membranes, we used digitonin in freeze-fracture investigations of model lipid vesicles and tissues. Cholesterol suspensions or multilamellar liposomes composed of phosphatidylcholine with and without cholesterol were exposed...

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Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1978
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2110113/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/690180
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description To advance our understanding of the organization of cholesterol within cell membranes, we used digitonin in freeze-fracture investigations of model lipid vesicles and tissues. Cholesterol suspensions or multilamellar liposomes composed of phosphatidylcholine with and without cholesterol were exposed to digitonin. Freeze-fracture replicas of those multilamellar liposomes containing cholesterol displayed either 50--60-nm wide intramembrane corrugations or extramembrane tubular complexes. Comparable intramembrane hemitubular scallops and extra-cellular free tubular complexes were observed in thin sections. Exposure of sperm, erythrocytes (whole and ghosts), and intact tissues (skin, liver, adrenal gland, epididymis) to digitonin produced the same types of intra- and extramembrane complexes or furrows as were formed in liposomes. The plasma membrane of guinea pig serum tail had two unfurrowed regions: the annulus and the zipper. Incubating erythrocyte membranes with digitonin resulted in rapid displacement of cholesterol, accompanied by intramembrane particle clustering and membrane faceting, a feature which we did not see in the intact epithelia studied. In freeze-fractured epithelia, we found that plasma membranes, lysosomes, and some vesicular organelles commonly furrowed, but that mitochondrial membranes and nuclear envelopes were generally spared, correlating well with their known cholesterol content. Finally, plasma membrane corrugations approached but did not impinge on either gap or tight junctions, or on coated vesicles. We conclude that freeze-fracture of membranes exposed to digitonin: (a) reveals distinctive cholesterol- digitonin structural complexes; (b) distinguishes cholesterol-rich and - poor organelle membranes; and (c) demonstrates membrane domains rich or poor in cholesterol.
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spelling pubmed-21101132008-05-01 Freeze-fracture identification of sterol-digitonin complexes in cell and liposome membranes J Cell Biol Articles To advance our understanding of the organization of cholesterol within cell membranes, we used digitonin in freeze-fracture investigations of model lipid vesicles and tissues. Cholesterol suspensions or multilamellar liposomes composed of phosphatidylcholine with and without cholesterol were exposed to digitonin. Freeze-fracture replicas of those multilamellar liposomes containing cholesterol displayed either 50--60-nm wide intramembrane corrugations or extramembrane tubular complexes. Comparable intramembrane hemitubular scallops and extra-cellular free tubular complexes were observed in thin sections. Exposure of sperm, erythrocytes (whole and ghosts), and intact tissues (skin, liver, adrenal gland, epididymis) to digitonin produced the same types of intra- and extramembrane complexes or furrows as were formed in liposomes. The plasma membrane of guinea pig serum tail had two unfurrowed regions: the annulus and the zipper. Incubating erythrocyte membranes with digitonin resulted in rapid displacement of cholesterol, accompanied by intramembrane particle clustering and membrane faceting, a feature which we did not see in the intact epithelia studied. In freeze-fractured epithelia, we found that plasma membranes, lysosomes, and some vesicular organelles commonly furrowed, but that mitochondrial membranes and nuclear envelopes were generally spared, correlating well with their known cholesterol content. Finally, plasma membrane corrugations approached but did not impinge on either gap or tight junctions, or on coated vesicles. We conclude that freeze-fracture of membranes exposed to digitonin: (a) reveals distinctive cholesterol- digitonin structural complexes; (b) distinguishes cholesterol-rich and - poor organelle membranes; and (c) demonstrates membrane domains rich or poor in cholesterol. The Rockefeller University Press 1978-08-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2110113/ /pubmed/690180 Text en This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Articles
Freeze-fracture identification of sterol-digitonin complexes in cell and liposome membranes
title Freeze-fracture identification of sterol-digitonin complexes in cell and liposome membranes
title_full Freeze-fracture identification of sterol-digitonin complexes in cell and liposome membranes
title_fullStr Freeze-fracture identification of sterol-digitonin complexes in cell and liposome membranes
title_full_unstemmed Freeze-fracture identification of sterol-digitonin complexes in cell and liposome membranes
title_short Freeze-fracture identification of sterol-digitonin complexes in cell and liposome membranes
title_sort freeze-fracture identification of sterol-digitonin complexes in cell and liposome membranes
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2110113/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/690180