Through a multiple approach, the present study on the mitochondrial membranes from mussel gills and swine heart combines some biochemical information on fatty acid composition, sterol pattern, and temperature dependence of the F1FO-ATPase activity (EC 3.6.3.14.) with fluorescence data on mitochondrial membranes and on liposomes obtained from lipid extracts of mitochondria. The physical state of mussel gills and swine heart was investigated by Laurdan steady state fluorescence. Quite surprisingly, the similar temperature dependence of the F1FO complex, illustrated as Arrhenius plot which in bothmitochondria exhibits the samediscontinuity at approximately 21 °C and overlapping activation energies above and belowthe discontinuity, is apparently compatible with a different composition and physical state of mitochondrial membranes. Accordingly, mussel membranes contain highly unsaturated fatty acids, abundant sterols, including phytosterols, while mammalian membranes only contain cholesterol and in prevalence shorter and less unsaturated fatty acids, leading to a lowermembrane unsaturationwith respect tomussel mitochondria.As suggested by fluorescence data, the likely formation of peculiar microdomains interacting with the membrane-bound enzyme complex in mussel mitochondria could produce an environment which somehow approaches the physical state of mammalian mitochondrial membranes. Thus, as an adaptive strategy, the interaction between sterols, highly unsaturated phospholipids and proteins in mussel gill mitochondria could allow the F1FO-ATPase activity to maintain the same activation energy as the mammalian enzyme.

Fiorini, R., Pagliarani, A., Nesci, S., Trombetti, F., Pirini, M., Fabbri, M., et al. (2016). Lipid unsaturation per se does not explain the physical state of mitochondrial membranes in Mytilus galloprovincialis. COMPARATIVE BIOCHEMISTRY AND PHYSIOLOGY. PART B, BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 191, 66-75 [10.1016/j.cbpb.2015.09.009].

Lipid unsaturation per se does not explain the physical state of mitochondrial membranes in Mytilus galloprovincialis

PAGLIARANI, ALESSANDRA;NESCI, SALVATORE;TROMBETTI, FABIANA;PIRINI, MAURIZIO;FABBRI, MICAELA;VENTRELLA, VITTORIA
2016

Abstract

Through a multiple approach, the present study on the mitochondrial membranes from mussel gills and swine heart combines some biochemical information on fatty acid composition, sterol pattern, and temperature dependence of the F1FO-ATPase activity (EC 3.6.3.14.) with fluorescence data on mitochondrial membranes and on liposomes obtained from lipid extracts of mitochondria. The physical state of mussel gills and swine heart was investigated by Laurdan steady state fluorescence. Quite surprisingly, the similar temperature dependence of the F1FO complex, illustrated as Arrhenius plot which in bothmitochondria exhibits the samediscontinuity at approximately 21 °C and overlapping activation energies above and belowthe discontinuity, is apparently compatible with a different composition and physical state of mitochondrial membranes. Accordingly, mussel membranes contain highly unsaturated fatty acids, abundant sterols, including phytosterols, while mammalian membranes only contain cholesterol and in prevalence shorter and less unsaturated fatty acids, leading to a lowermembrane unsaturationwith respect tomussel mitochondria.As suggested by fluorescence data, the likely formation of peculiar microdomains interacting with the membrane-bound enzyme complex in mussel mitochondria could produce an environment which somehow approaches the physical state of mammalian mitochondrial membranes. Thus, as an adaptive strategy, the interaction between sterols, highly unsaturated phospholipids and proteins in mussel gill mitochondria could allow the F1FO-ATPase activity to maintain the same activation energy as the mammalian enzyme.
2016
Fiorini, R., Pagliarani, A., Nesci, S., Trombetti, F., Pirini, M., Fabbri, M., et al. (2016). Lipid unsaturation per se does not explain the physical state of mitochondrial membranes in Mytilus galloprovincialis. COMPARATIVE BIOCHEMISTRY AND PHYSIOLOGY. PART B, BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 191, 66-75 [10.1016/j.cbpb.2015.09.009].
Fiorini, Rosamaria; Pagliarani, Alessandra; Nesci, Salvatore; Trombetti, Fabiana; Pirini, Maurizio; Fabbri, Micaela; Ventrella, Vittoria
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/535171
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