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Title: Electron spin resonance studies of the effects of lipids on the environment of proteins in mitochondrial membranes. Author: Lenaz G, Curatola G, Mazzanti L, Zolese G, Ferretti G. Journal: Arch Biochem Biophys; 1983 Jun; 223(2):369-80. PubMed ID: 6190436. Abstract: The physical state of mitochondrial membranes has been investigated by means of stearic acid spin labels and of a maleimide spin label covalently bound to protein sulfhydryl groups. Stearic acid spin labels 5-NS and 16-NS show that n-butanol enhances the lipid fluidity of mitochondrial membranes in the whole temperature range between 4 and 37 degrees C; the effects in the hydrophobic membrane core, probed by 16-NS, are already apparent at 10 mM butanol. In liposomes formed of mitochondrial phospholipids, a fluidizing effect appears only at much higher concentration. Such results are compatible with the idea that butanol destabilizes lipid-protein interactions. On the other hand, the ratio between weakly and strongly immobilized SH groups probed by maleimide spin label is only slightly affected in the temperature range of 4-37 degrees C by addition of high concentrations of n-butanol, indicating that the environments probed are stable to agents inducing fluidity changes in the lipids. There are, however, indications that the environment probed by maleimide is affected by lipids, since the spin label, when bound to lipid-depleted mitochondria, becomes more immobilized, reconstitution of such lipid-depleted membranes with phospholipids restores the original spectra.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]