Abstract

Murine neuroblastoma cells (clone N-2A) grown in suspension (spinner cells) or attached on a plastic surface (monolayer cells) were used in studies of the phospholipid and cholesterol composition of whole cells, primary plasma membranes, plasma membranes internalized during phagocytosis of polystyrene latex beads, mitochondria and microsomes. Monolayer cells contained higher concentrations of total phospholipid, phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylcholine, and lower concentration of phosphatidylethanolamine than spinner cells. The cholesterol levels and the relative proportions of the various phospholipids were similar in both cell types except phosphatidylethanolamine and sphingomyelin whose proportions were lower in monolayer cells. The primary plasma membranes of the two cell types differed significantly in the relative proportions of all phospholipids, except sphingomyelin, and the phospholipid to protein and the cholesterol to protein ratios were all higher in the membranes of spinner cells. In contrast to these results, all the phospholipid to protein and the cholesterol to protein ratios of the internalized plasma membranes were higher in monolayer than in spinner cells, and the proportions of all phospholipids, except phosphatidylethanolamine, were similar in both cell types. The membrane distributions of individual phospholipids and cholesterol were inferred from comparison of the phospholipid and cholesterol compositions of primary plasma membranes and plasma membranes internalized during phagocytosis of polystyrene beads. The results are consistent with a non-random distribution of most phospholipids in both spinner and monolayer cells, but the patterns of these distributions were different in the two cell types. With regard to cholesterol the results are compatible with a random or a heterogeneous distribution. All the phospholipid to protein ratios of the mitochondrial fraction of both cell types were lower than those of the plasma membranes. However, these ratios of the microsomal fraction were higher than those of the plasma membranes of monolayer cells, whereas they were comparable, with a few exceptions, to those of spinner cell membranes. The cholesterol to phospholipid molar ratios of plasma membranes were 6.4 and 4.3 fold greater than those of the mitochondrial and microsomal fractions, respectively.

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