Abstract

The ESR spectra of six different positional isomers of a stearic acid and three of a phosphatidylcholine spin label have been studied as a function of temperature in chromaffin granule membranes from the bovine adrenal medulla, and in bilayers formed by aqueous dispersion of the extracted membrane lipids. Only minor differences were found between the spectra of the membranes and the extracted lipid, indicating that the major portion of the membrane lipid is organized in a bilayer arrangement which is relatively unperturbed by the presence of the membrane protein. The order parameter profile of the spin label lipid chain motion is less steep over the first half of the chain than over the section toward the terminal methyl end of the chain. This ‘stiffening’ effect is attributed to the high proportion of cholesterol in the membrane and becomes less marked as the temperature is raised. The isotropic hyperfine splitting factors of the various positional isomers display a profile of decreasing polarity as one penetrates further into the interior of the membrane. No marked differences are observed between the effective polarities in the intact membranes and in bilayers of the extracted membrane lipids. The previously observed temperature-induced structural change occurring in the membranes at approx. 35°C was found also in the extracted lipid bilayers, showing this to be a result of lipid-lipid interactions and not lipid-protein interactions in the membrane. A steroid spin label indicated a second temperature-dependent structural change occurring in the lipid bilayers at lower temperatures. This corresponds to the onset of a more rapid rotation about the long axis of the lipid molecules at a temperature of approx. 10°C. The lipid bilayer regions probed by the spin labels used in this study may be involved in the fusion of the chromaffin granule membrane leading to hormone release by exocytosis.

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