Abstract

Dietary saturated fatty acids, especially lauric (12:0), myristic (14:0) and palmitic (16:0) acids, which are hypercholesterolemic, influence cell membrane fatty acid composition and affect LDL receptor function. When membrane phospholipid fatty acids in Chinese hamster ovary cells, containing the human LDL receptor, were modified (Hannah J. S. et al., 1995 Metabolism 44, 1428–1434), LDL receptor function was affected, but correlations with DPH-determined membrane fluidity were weak. The role of fluidity in various membrane domains with respect to the LDL receptor is examined here. Membrane fluidity was assessed by measuring steady-state fluorescence polarization of diphenylhexatriene (DPH) and its polar propionic acid (DPH-PA) and trimethylammonium (TMA-DPH) derivatives from 38 to 4°C in fatty acid modified Chinese hamster ovary cells. Fatty acid changes modulated mid-bilayer fluidity as determined with DPH, but fluidity in phospholipid headgroup domains, assessed with DPH-PA and TMA-DPH, was independent of fatty acyl composition. The DPH fluidity was related to membrane unsaturation ( P < 0.02), oleate contents ( P < 0.009) in particular, but inversely related ( P < 0.0002) to the longer chain (≥ 20 C atoms) unsaturated fatty acids with from four to six double bonds. The LDL binding was independent of fluidity, but there were weak relations between LDL internalization and DPH-PA anisotropy and between LDL degradation and TMA-DPH anisotropy. It was concluded that LDL binding was not related to mid-bilayer fluidity, but the results with the polar probes suggest a role of fluidity in modulating vertical displacement of the LDL/LDL receptor complex across the plasma membrane.

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