Abstract

Spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine was incorporated into the membrane of isolated “inner membrane+matrix” particles of rat liver mitochondria by incubation with sonicated spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine vesicles at 22°C. When the spin label was on the acyl chain the incorporation of phosphatidylcholine into the membrane was stimulated by the presence of the phosphatidylcholine exchange protein extracted from rat or beef liver. On the other hand no stimulation was observed when the nitroxide was on the polar head-group. When spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine was incorporated into the mitochondrial membrane in the absence of phosphatidylcholine exchange protein, ascorbate treatment at O°C reduced the EPR signal of the spin-labeled membranes by approximately 50%, indicating that fusion incorporates molecules equally on both sides of the membrane. On the other hand when spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine was incoporated in the presence of the exchange protein most of the EPR signal could be destroyed by the ascorbate treatment at 0°C, indicating that the spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine had been selectively incorporated in the outer layer of the membrane. Finally when the label is on the polar head-group the inner content of mitochondria reduces the label facing the matrix, thus creating again an anisotropy of the labeling. The anisotropic distribution of spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine in the mitochondrial membrane was found to be stable at 25°C for more than 2 h. It is therefore concluded that the rate of outside-inside and inside-outside transitions are extremely slow (half-life greater than 24 h).

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