Abstract

In this study the effects of experimental modifications of plasma membrane lipid lateral mobility on the electrical membrane properties and cation transport of mouse neuroblastoma cells, clone Neuro-2A, have been studied. Short-term supplementation of a chemically defined growth medium with oleic acid or linoleic acid resulted in an increase in the lateral mobility of lipids as inferred from fluorescence recovery after photobleaching of the lipid probe 3,3′-dioctadecylindocarbocyanide iodide. These changes were accompanied by a marked depolarization of the membrane potential from −51 mV to −36 mV, 1.5 h after addition, followed by a slow repolarization. Tracer flux studies, using 86Rb + as a radioactive tracer for K +, demonstrated that the depolarization was not caused by changes in (Na + + K +)-ATPase-mediated K + influx or in the transmembrane K + gradient. The permeability ratio ( P Na P K ), determined from electrophysiological measurements, however, increased from 0.10 to 0.27 upon supplementation with oleic acid or linoleic acid. This transient rise of P Na P K was shown by 24Na + and 86Rb + flux measurements to be due to both an increase of the Na + permeability and a decrease of the K + permeability. None of these effects occurred upon supplementation of the growth medium with stearic acid.

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