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Comparative Study
. 1980 Nov 18;602(3):491-505.
doi: 10.1016/0005-2736(80)90328-4.

Influence of lipids with branched-chain fatty acids on the physical, morphological and functional properties of Escherichia coli cytoplasmic membrane

Comparative Study

Influence of lipids with branched-chain fatty acids on the physical, morphological and functional properties of Escherichia coli cytoplasmic membrane

S Legendre et al. Biochim Biophys Acta. .

Abstract

Escherichia coli cells (unsaturated fatty acid auxotroph) have been adapted to grow on branched-chain fatty acids. Membrane vesicles were isolated from cells grown on a mixture of branched-chain fatty acids isolated from the lipids of Bacillus subtilis (E. coli (B. subtilis) membranes) and on a pure synthetic anti-isononadecanoic acid (E. coli (aC19) membranes). We have shown, using wide-angle X-ray diffraction and differential scanning calorimetry, that the ordered state of the lipids is perturbed in the case of E. coli (B. subtilis) membranes but is unperturbed in the case of E. coli (aC19) membranes. The perturbation leads to the presence of a large wide-angle X-ray diffraction at 4.25--4.3 A, as opposed to the presence of a sharp 4.2 A reflection in unperturbed systems. We have shown, using freeze-fracture electron microscopy, that a protein segregation exists in the case of E. coli (aC19) membranes (at low temperature the integral membrane proteins aggregate in the membrane domains containing the disordered lipids); we do not observe such segregation in the case of E. coli (B. subtilis) membranes. We conclude that in cases where the branching of the fatty acids introduces a perturbation of the lipid order, the integral membrane proteins can still be accommodated in membrane domains containing the 'perturbed' ordered lipids. Finally, we have determined the rate of beta-galactoside transport in E. coli (aC19) and E. coli (B. subtilis) membranes as a function of temperature. We have shown that, in both cases, the Arrhenius representations display an increased slope in the region of the disorder-to-order transition. We conclude that such an increased slope may have different origins. In the case of E. coli (aC19) membranes, it is the result of the aggregation of the beta-galactoside carriers together with other integral membrane proteins which may lead to the inactivation of the carriers; in the case of E. coli (B. subtilis) membranes, it is the result of the partial immobilisation of the carriers embedded in a lipid environment, of which the fluidity, despite the perturbation of its lipid order, is still much less than that associated with lipids in a totally disordered state.

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