Barak L S, Webb W W
J Cell Biol. 1982 Dec;95(3):846-52. doi: 10.1083/jcb.95.3.846.
Diffusion of the complex consisting of low density lipoprotein (LDL) bound to its receptor on the surface of human fibroblasts has been measured with the help of an intensely fluorescent, biologically active LDL derivative, dioctadecylindocarbocyanine LDL (dil(3)-LDL). Fluorescence photobleaching recovering and direct video observations of the Brownian motion of individual LDL-receptor complexes yielded diffusion coefficients for the slow diffusion on cell surfaces and fast diffusion on membrane blebs, respectively. At 10 degrees C, less that 20 percent of the LDL-receptor complex was measurably diffusible either on normal human fibroblasts GM-3348 or on LDL-receptor- internalization-defective J.D. cells GM-2408A. At 21 degrees and 28 degrees C, the diffusion fractions of approximately 75 and 60 percent, respectively, on both cell lines. The lipid analog nitrobenzoxadiazolephosphatidylcholine (NBD-PC) diffused in the GM-2408A cell membrane at 1.5x10(-8) cm(2)/sec at 22 degrees C. On blebs induced in GM-2408A cell membranes, the dil(3)-LDL receptor complex diffusion coefficient increased to approximately 10(-9) cm(2)/s, thus approaching the maximum theoretical predictions for a large protein in the viscous lipid bilayer. Cytoskeletal staining of blebs with NBD- phallacidin, a fluorescent probe specific for F-actin, indicated that loss of the bulk of the F-actin cytoskeleton accompanied the release of the natural constraints on later diffusion observed on blebs. This work shows that the internalization defect of J.D. is not due to immobilization of the LDL-receptor complex since its diffusibility is sufficient to sustain even the internalization rates observed in the native fibroblasts. Nevertheless, as with many other cell membrane receptors, the diffusion coefficient of the LDL-receptor complex is at least two orders of magnitude slower on native membrane than the viscous limit approached on cell membrane blebs where it is released from lateral constraints. However, LDL-receptor diffusion may not limit LDL internalization in normal human fibroblasts.
借助一种具有强烈荧光的生物活性低密度脂蛋白(LDL)衍生物——二辛基吲哚碳菁LDL(dil(3)-LDL),已对结合在人成纤维细胞表面其受体上的LDL复合物的扩散进行了测量。荧光漂白恢复以及对单个LDL-受体复合物布朗运动的直接视频观察分别得出了细胞表面缓慢扩散和膜泡上快速扩散的扩散系数。在10℃时,无论是在正常人成纤维细胞GM - 3348上还是在LDL受体内化缺陷的J.D.细胞GM - 2408A上,可测量到的可扩散LDL-受体复合物均不到20%。在21℃和28℃时,两种细胞系上的扩散分数分别约为75%和60%。脂质类似物硝基苯并恶二唑磷脂酰胆碱(NBD - PC)在22℃时以1.5×10⁻⁸ cm²/秒的速度在GM - 2408A细胞膜中扩散。在GM - 2408A细胞膜上诱导产生的膜泡上,dil(3)-LDL受体复合物扩散系数增加到约10⁻⁹ cm²/秒,从而接近粘性脂质双层中大分子蛋白质的最大理论预测值。用对F-肌动蛋白特异的荧光探针NBD-鬼笔环肽对膜泡进行细胞骨架染色表明,大部分F-肌动蛋白细胞骨架的缺失伴随着膜泡上观察到的对后期扩散的天然限制的解除。这项工作表明,J.D.的内化缺陷并非由于LDL-受体复合物的固定化,因为其扩散性足以维持甚至在天然成纤维细胞中观察到的内化速率。然而,与许多其他细胞膜受体一样,LDL-受体复合物在天然膜上的扩散系数比在从侧向限制中释放出来的细胞膜泡上接近的粘性极限至少慢两个数量级。然而,LDL-受体扩散可能不会限制正常人成纤维细胞中LDL的内化。