Thermotropic lipid and protein transitions in chinese hamster lung cell membranes: relationship to hyperthermic cell killing
- PMID: 6883171
- DOI: 10.1139/o83-057
Thermotropic lipid and protein transitions in chinese hamster lung cell membranes: relationship to hyperthermic cell killing
Abstract
Exposure of mammalian cells to hyperthermic temperatures (ca. 41-45 degrees C) appears to act as a direct or triggering effect to produce some later response such as cell death, thermotolerance, or heat-shock protein synthesis. The high activation energy of cell killing indicates that the direct effect of hyperthermia might be a thermotropic transition in some cellular component, for this particular response. Both hyperthermic survival and growth data imply that the temperature for the onset of hyperthermic cell killing is 40-41.5 degrees C for Chinese hamster lung V79 cells. Studies using the electron spin resonance label 2,2-dimethyl-5-dodecyl-5-methyloxazolidine-N-oxide and the fluorescent probe 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene show the existence of lipid transitions at approximately 7-8 and 23-36 degrees C (or a broad transition between these temperatures) in mitochondria and whole cell homogenates, that correlate well with changes in growth and hypothermic killing. No lipid transition was detected near 40-41.5 degrees C that could correlate with hyperthermic killing in either mitochondrial or plasma membranes, but measurements of intrinsic protein fluorescence and protein fluorophore to trans-paranaric acid energy transfer demonstrate the existence of an irreversible transition in protein structure or arrangement above ca. 40 degrees C in both mitochondrial and plasma membranes. This transition is due to protein rearrangement and (or) unfolding such that there is increased exposure of protein tryptophan and tyrosine residues to polar groups and to paranaric acid. The strength of the transition implies that a significant fraction of total membrane protein is involved in this transition, which may be analogous to the heat-induced denaturation of water-soluble proteins. This alteration in membrane structure above ca. 40 degrees C could cause many of the observed changes in plasma membrane and mitochondrial function, which may further be involved in cellular responses to hyperthermia.
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