Temperature dependence of the fluorescence of pyrene labeled crab nerve membranes
โ Scribed by D. Georgescauld; J. P. Desmazes; H. Duclohier
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1979
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 453 KB
- Volume
- 27
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0300-8177
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โฆ Synopsis
A method, using albumin-pyrene complexes, has been developed for labeling, in a controlled manner, crab leg nerves whose excitability was preserved. The excimer-to-monomer fluorescence intensity ratio of pyrene, embedded in nerve membrane lipids and in their crude lipid extracts, is a fluidity parameter which displayed the following features with temperatures. a--a temperature-dependent increase of fluidity b--three breaks (6 degrees, 19 degrees and 37 degrees C) in the physiological medium c--In Ca++-depleted sea water, the 37 degrees characteristic temperature vanished. These breaks may reflect some lateral phase separations of the lipid components of nerve membranes. The calcium dependent temperature break may involve a segregation of acidic phospholipids while the other two breaks (6 degrees and 19 degrees C) may be due to neutral lipids phase separation. The relationship of these findings to nerve function is discussed.
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We have used a fluorescence assay to measure the binding of Acanthamoeba profilin to monomeric Acanthamoeba and rabbit skeletal muscle actin labeled on cysteine-374 with pyrene iodoacetamide. The wavelengths of the pyrene excitation and emission maxima are constant at 346 and 386 nm, but the fluores