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J Biol Chem, Vol. 274, Issue 50, 35359-35366, December 10, 1999
-Cyclodextrins Greatly Enhance Translocation of Hydrophobic
Fluorescent Phospholipids from Vesicles to Cells in Culture
From the Institute of Biomedicine, Department of Medical Chemistry,
University of Helsinki, Siltavuorenpenger 10 A,
00014 Helsinki, Finland
Short-chain, fluorescent derivatives are commonly
used to investigate intracellular phospholipid trafficking. However,
their use can yield misleading results because they, unlike the native species, can rapidly distribute between organelles due to their low
hydrophobicity. On the other hand, hydrophobic derivatives are very
difficult to introduce to cells and thus have hardly been used. Here we
show that carboxyethylated
-cyclodextrin (CE-
-CD) greatly
enhances transfer of a variety of hydrophobic fluorescent phospholipid
derivatives from vesicles to cultured cells. Several lines of evidence
indicate that CE-
-CD enhances transfer of lipid molecules by
increasing their effective concentration in the aqueous phase, rather
than by inducing membrane fusion or hemifusion. Incubation with
CE-
-CD and donor lipid vesicles does not extract cholesterol or
phospholipids from the cells or compromise plasma membrane intactness
or long term cell viability. Using CE-
-CD-mediated transfer, we
introduced hydrophobic pyrene-labeled phosphatidylserine to the plasma
membrane of fibroblast cells and followed their distribution with time.
In contrast to what has been previously observed for other, less
hydrophobic species, transport of this lipid to the Golgi apparatus or
mitochondria was not detected. Rather, much of this fluorescent PS
remained in the plasma membrane or was incorporated to various
endocytotic compartments. These findings indicate that the
native, typically hydrophobic phosphatidylserine molecules
efflux only very slowly via the cytoplasm to intracellular organelles.
This helps to explain how cells can maintain a very high concentration
of phosphatidylserine in the inner leaflet of their plasma membrane.
Furthermore, the present results underline the importance of using
hydrophobic analogues when studying intracellular trafficking of many
phospholipid classes.
To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel.: 358-9-191-8216;
Fax: 358-9-191-8276; E-mail: pentti.somerharju@helsinki.fi.
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