phytosterols and 1-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine

phytosterols has been researched along with 1-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for phytosterols and 1-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine

ArticleYear
Differential effect of plant lipids on membrane organization: specificities of phytosphingolipids and phytosterols.
    The Journal of biological chemistry, 2015, Feb-27, Volume: 290, Issue:9

    The high diversity of the plant lipid mixture raises the question of their respective involvement in the definition of membrane organization. This is particularly the case for plant plasma membrane, which is enriched in specific lipids, such as free and conjugated forms of phytosterols and typical phytosphingolipids, such as glycosylinositolphosphoceramides. This question was here addressed extensively by characterizing the order level of membrane from vesicles prepared using various plant lipid mixtures and labeled with an environment-sensitive probe. Fluorescence spectroscopy experiments showed that among major phytosterols, campesterol exhibits a stronger ability than β-sitosterol and stigmasterol to order model membranes. Multispectral confocal microscopy, allowing spatial analysis of membrane organization, demonstrated accordingly the strong ability of campesterol to promote ordered domain formation and to organize their spatial distribution at the membrane surface. Conjugated sterol forms, alone and in synergy with free sterols, exhibit a striking ability to order membrane. Plant sphingolipids, particularly glycosylinositolphosphoceramides, enhanced the sterol-induced ordering effect, emphasizing the formation and increasing the size of sterol-dependent ordered domains. Altogether, our results support a differential involvement of free and conjugated phytosterols in the formation of ordered domains and suggest that the diversity of plant lipids, allowing various local combinations of lipid species, could be a major contributor to membrane organization in particular through the formation of sphingolipid-sterol interacting domains.

    Topics: 1,2-Dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine; Cell Line; Cell Membrane; Cholesterol; Imaging, Three-Dimensional; Lipids; Membrane Lipids; Microscopy, Confocal; Models, Molecular; Phosphatidylcholines; Phytosterols; Plants; Spectrometry, Fluorescence; Sphingolipids

2015
Effects of plant sterols on the hydration and phase behavior of DOPE/DOPC mixtures.
    Biochimica et biophysica acta, 1995, Nov-01, Volume: 1239, Issue:2

    Freeze-induced injury of protoplasts of non-acclimated rye and oat is associated with the formation of the inverted hexagonal (HII) phase in regions where the plasma membrane and various endomembranes are brought into close apposition as a result of freeze-induced dehydration. The influence of lipid composition and hydration on the propensity of mixtures of DOPE:DOPC containing either sterols or acylated steryl glucosides to form the HII phase was determined by DSC, freeze-fracture electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction. The addition of plant sterols to a mixture of DOPE/DOPC (either 1:1:1 or 1:1:2 mole ratio of DOPE/DOPC/sterols) reduced the total hydration of the mixture (expressed as wt% water) after desorption over a range of osmotic pressures of 2.8 to 286 MPa. However, most or all of the water remaining in the dehydrated lipid mixtures was associated predominantly with the phospholipids. Both sterols and acylated steryl glucosides significantly promoted both the dehydration-induced and thermally induced L alpha-->HII phase transitions in DOPE/DOPC mixtures however, acylated steryl glucosides were much more effective. In mixtures containing plant sterols, the HII phase occurred after dehydration at 20 MPa (20 degrees C), which resulted in a water content of 11.7 wt%. In contrast, mixtures containing acylated steryl glucosides were in the HII phase in excess water, i.e., they did not require dehydration to effect the L alpha-->HII phase transition. The results indicate that genotypic differences in the lipid composition of the plasma membrane of rye and oat leaves have a significant influence on the propensity for formation of the HII phase during freeze-induced dehydration.

    Topics: Acylation; Calorimetry, Differential Scanning; Cell Membrane; Freeze Fracturing; Glucosides; Phosphatidylcholines; Phosphatidylethanolamines; Phytosterols; Water; X-Ray Diffraction

1995