Abstract

We studied the transbilayer redistribution of phospholipids in bovine rod outer segment membranes on thoroughly washed, Ficoll-floated osmotically intact disc vesicles; freshly prepared membranes separated from the disc stack by osmotic shock; and intact disc stacks with a permeabilized plasma membrane (A-discs, B-discs C-discs, respectively). In all cases, spin-labelled phospholipid analogues (SL-PL) with choline, serine and ethanolamine head groups (PtdCho, PtdSer and PtdEtn, respectively) were taken up into the outer leaflet of the membranes by > 90% and within less than 30 s after SL-PL addition, as deduced from the disappearance of spin-label from the suspension medium and from the specific ESR spectrum of membrane-associated spin-label. Using BSA extraction, the amount of SL-PL in the outer leaflet of the bilayer was determined. It decreased with a mean half-time of < 5 min at 25 degrees C, indicating rapid redistribution of all spin-labelled phospholipids into the inner leaflet of the disc membranes. After 1 h, PtdCho and PtdEtn were distributed almost symmetrically, whereas PtdSer was 35 : 65% (in/out). Using subsequent incubation with BSA, the outward movement (flop) of the analogues was observed directly, demonstrating that inward and outward movements proceed in thermodynamic equilibrium. No effect of N-ethylmaleimide or ATP on the redistribution could be measured, which makes it unlikely that energy-consuming translocase or flippase processes are involved in the redistribution in the dark. We reason that the solubilization zone around the photoreceptor rhodopsin may be the locus of rapid redistribution of the highly unsaturated disc phospholipid.

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