Abstract

Protein-lipid complexes in organic solvents can be used as the starting material in the reassembly of functional planar and spherical bilayers (Montal, M., Darszon, A. and Schindler, H. (1981) Q. Rev. Biophys. 14, 1–79). The transfer of three enzymes of the inner mitochondrial membrane into organic solvents as protein-lipid complexes has been studied to understand better the extraction process. The enzymes studied were cytochrome c oxidase, ATPase and succinate dehydrogenase. These enzymes were transferred into hexane and diethyl ether in an active state, however, the activities extracted varied quantitatively, depending on the amount of protein of the starting preparation, the concentration of phospholipids and the cation employed. In all conditions cytochrome c oxidase was extracted with the highest yield and specific activity, and it was actually enriched in the organic extract. The values for succinate dehydrogenase and ATPase were lower, but their specific activities were similar to those of the starting material. This indicates that some membrane proteins are preferentially extracted into organic solvents in a functional state. The enzymes, as protein-lipid complexes, are fairly stable in organic solvents; in a month of storage at 4°C in hexane some enzymes loose less than 50% of their activity.

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