Abstract

Structural and functional properties of the small intestinal microvillus membrane were evaluated in the rabbit after administration of ethinyl estradiol, a synthetic estrogen with a demonstrated propensity to alter hepatic membrane lipid fluidity, and promote cholestasis. In the jejunum, no estrogen-induced changes in microvillus membrane total lipid, cholesterol or phospholipid content were observed. However, the ileal microvillus membrane in estradiol-treated animals demonstrates significant reductions vs. controls (per mg protein) in total lipid (0.55 μg vs. 0.89 μg) and phospholipid (206.7 μg vs. 304.91 μg) ( p < 0.001) content, as well as modifications in specific phospholipid species. The increase in the ileal microvillus membrane cholesterol: phospholipid molar ratio (0.65 vs. 0.51, p < 0.05) was associated with a significant decrease in membrane lipid fluidity reflected by an increase in fluorescence anisotropy measurements utilizing diphenyl hexatriene as the fluorophore ( r at 25 °C = 0.306 vs. 0.282, p < 0.05). Thermotropic lipid phase transitions, assessed by Arrhenius plots of both fluorescence data and ileal microvillus membrane p-nitrophenyl-phosphatase activity demonstrate that phase changes occur between and 24 and 28°C in both treated and untreated groups. Within the temperature range studied (40−10°C) no differences from control were observed in microvillus membrane alkaline phosphatase activity following estrogen treatment. These data therefore indicate that ethinyl estradiol-induced effects on microvillus membrane lipid composition and physical properties occur predominantly in the ileum and appear to be related, in part, to specific alterations in the availability of phospholipid following estrogen treatment.

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