Abstract

Changes in the thermal phase transition temperature of membrane lipids were studied by X-ray wide-angle diffraction during adaptation of Tetrahymena pyriformis to a lower growth temperature. After a shift in growth temperature from 39 to 15°C, the phase transition temperature was lowered gradually in microsomal and pellicular phospholipids, whereas that in mitochondrial phospholipids was unchanged for 10 h after the temperature shift. Only a small decrease in the transition temperature of mitochondrial phospholipids was observed, even after 24 h following the shift. Transition temperatures of microsomal, pellicular and mitochondrial phospholipids reached the growth temperature (15°C) about 6, 10 and 24 h after the temperature shift. The temperature dependence of the solid phase in membrane phospholipids was estimated from the 4.2 Å peak of the X-ray diffraction pattern. In the case of the phospholipids extracted from cells grown at 39°C, the solid phase was increased upon lowering temperature in a similar manner in all three membrane fractions: mitochondria, pellicles and microsomes. However, in the case of the phospholipids from cells exposed to a lower growth temperature (15°C) for 10 h, the increase in the solid phase was significantly smaller in mitochondrial phospholipids than in two other membrane fractions. The difference in the thermal behaviour of mitochondrial lipid from pellicular and microsomal lipids is discussed in terms of phase transition and phase separation.

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