Filaments of surfactant protein A specifically interact with corrugated surfaces of phospholipid membranes.
Am J Physiol
; 276(4): L631-41, 1999 04.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-10198361
ABSTRACT
Pulmonary surfactant, a mixture of lipids and surfactant proteins (SPs), plays an important role in respiration and gas exchange. SP-A, the major SP, exists as an octadecamer that can self-associate to form elongated protein filaments in vitro. We have studied here the association of purified bovine SP-A with lipid vesicle bilayers in vitro with negative staining with uranyl acetate and transmission electron microscopy. Native bovine surfactant was also examined by transmission electron microscopy of thinly sectioned embedded material. Lipid vesicles made from dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine and egg phosphatidylcholine (11 wt/wt) generally showed a smooth surface morphology, but some large vesicles showed a corrugated one. On the smooth-surfaced vesicles, SP-As primarily interacted in the form of separate octadecamers or as multidirectional protein networks. On the surfaces of the striated vesicles, SP-As primarily formed regularly spaced unidirectional filaments. The mean spacing between adjacent striations and between adjacent filaments was 49 nm. The striated surfaces were not essential for the formation of filaments but appeared to stabilize them. In native surfactant preparations, SP-A was detected in the dense layers. This latter arrangement of the lipid bilayer-associated SP-As supported the potential relevance of the in vitro structures to the in vivo situation.
Full text:
1
Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Phosphatidylcholines
/
Proteolipids
/
Pulmonary Surfactants
/
Lipid Bilayers
Limits:
Animals
Language:
En
Journal:
Am J Physiol
Year:
1999
Document type:
Article