Abstract

Sarcolemma membrane lipid phase of skeletal muscles of hyperthyroid animals was compared to that of control (euthyroid) ones. Hyperthyroidism caused 15% decrease in cholesterol and 70% increase in the phospholipid content of the membrane. This was accompanied by the alterations in proportions between individual phospholipid classes, and was followed by changes in the composition of phospholipid fatty acids. The calculated fatty acid unsaturation index was higher for membrane lipid phase of hyperthyroid animals than of euthyroid ones. Thyroxine-induced alterations in the lipid composition of sarcolemma caused changes in the membrane fluidity and the activity of calmodulin-stimulated (Ca 2+-Mg 2+)-ATPase. Measurements of the steady-state fluorescence polarization of 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene indicated that the lipid phase transition of membrane vesicles occurred at 25.9°C and at 28.9°C for preparations isolated from hyperthyroid and euthyroid rabbits, respectively. Arrhenius plot break-point temperature for CaM-stimulated (Ca 2+-Mg 2+)-ATPase activity was lower in membrane preparations isolated from hyperthyroid (26.9°C) than from euthyroid ones (30.0°C). Thus, the increase of the membrane fluidity presumably caused that the enzyme was characterized by the lower activation energy value. This phenomenon may be viewed as a supplementary mechanism for activation of the enzyme by thyroid hormones to previously reported elevation of the amount of (Ca 2+-Mg 2+)-ATPase protein exerted by hyperthyroidism (Famulski et al. (1988) Eur. J. Biochem., 171, 363–368; Famulski and Wrzosek (1988) in The Ion Pumps-Structure, Function and Regulation (Stein, W.D., ed.), pp. 355–360, Alan R. Liss, New York).

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