J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 260, Issue 5, 2617-2620, Mar, 1985
Effect of bilayer cholesterol content on reconstituted human erythrocyte sugar transporter activity
TJ Connolly, A Carruthers and DL Melchior
The influence of altered bilayer cholesterol content on the catalytic
activity of the human red cell hexose transporter was examined by
reconstitution of the transport protein (band 4.5) into bilayers of large
unilamellar vesicles formed from dipalmitoyl lecithin and varying amounts
of cholesterol. The physical state of the bilayers was characterized by
differential scanning calorimetry. The major findings are as follows:
changes in bilayer phase behavior occur at membrane cholesterol levels of
15 to 20 mol % and 30 to 40 mol %; and the catalytic activity of the
reconstituted transporter (Vmax/transporter) correlates with bilayer phase
behavior. In crystalline bilayers, this is seen as an abrupt, stimulation
of activity at 15 mol % cholesterol (which is reversed at 17.5 mol %) and a
gradual acceleration of activity between 30 to 40 mol % cholesterol. In
fluid bilayers (where activity is high), activity is unaffected by 10, 20,
and 30 mol % cholesterol. However, 12.5 and 17.5 mol % cholesterol reduce
activity by 100-fold. These studies demonstrate that small changes in
bilayer cholesterol content result in drastic alterations in transporter
activity. Transporter sensitivity to cholesterol is a complex rather than
monotonic function of bilayer cholesterol content and appears to be
primarily determined by bilayer composition rather than by bilayer
"fluidity."