RESUMEN
The phospholipid compostition of LM cells grown in tissue culture was altered by substituting ethanolamine for choline in the growth medium. The plasma membrane isolated from cells grown in medium conatining ethanolamine for 83 h had a sixfold increase in the ratio of phosphatidylethanolamine to phosphatidylcholine, the two major phospholipid classes. This was accompanied by small changes in other lipid components of the membrane. There was also a sixfold increase in the amount of triacylglycerols and alkyldiacylglycerols which were not associated with the membrane fraction of the cell. No significant changes occurred in the lipid composition of cells during growth in choline containing medium. The viscosity of plasma membranes was studied in whole cells and isolated membranes using the fluorescent probe 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene. Plasma membranes isolated from ethanolamine-supplemented cells had greater viscosities than membranes isolated from choline-supplemented cells. When whole cells were labeled with the fluorescent probe, the opposite trend in the apparent membrane viscosity was observed. This was due primarily to the probe penetrating into nonmembranous neutral lipids rather than remaining localized in the surface membrane of the cells. Since the enthanolamine-supplemented cells contained more low viscosity neutral lipids, the whole cells gave an apparently lower viscosity as compared with choline-supplemented cells, thus, measurements carried out on whole cells gave an inaccurate determination of the viscosity of the surface membrane.