Abstract
We have previously shown that total lipid extracts from normal nervous tissues spontaneously form a structure in vitro resembling the cell membrane bilayer, but only at a critical temperature, T*, equal to the 'physiological' temperature of the original tissues. In the present study, we found T* for normal human myelin lipids was 37 degrees C, in agreement with the concept that lipid metabolic pools maintain a critical composition in vivo which permits spontaneous formation of the (myelin) membrane bilayer at normal body temperature. But T* for myelin lipids from a patient with metachromatic leukodystrophy was less than 30 degrees C. Thus, myelin lipid composition was inappropriate for normal bilayer stability at this patient's core temperature, suggesting a mechanism whereby defective lipid metabolism in this disease could produce pathological myelin. The shift in T* in this patient was unlikely to be simply secondary to myelin destruction, as myelin lipids from a patient with advanced multiple sclerosis yielded a normal value for T* of 37 degrees C, even when extracted from areas of extensive demyelination.
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