Affiliation:
1. School of Molecular and Medical Biosciences, PO Box 911, Cardiff CF1 3US, U.K.
2. Microbiology Group, School of Pure and Applied Biology, University of Wales College of Cardiff, PO Box 911, Cardiff CF1 3US, U.K.
Abstract
The relationship between temperature-dependent changes in phagocytotic activity of Acanthamoeba castellanii and the fatty acid composition and physical properties of plasma membrane-enriched fractions were determined in cultures acclimated to 30 degrees C and 15 degrees C. Chilling (from 30 degrees C to 15 degrees C) had a very pronounced short-term inhibitory effect on phagocytosis only in stationary-phase cultures, which displayed a low degree of fatty acid unsaturation. A subsequent increase in phagocytosis by these cells was correlated with a low-temperature-induced increase in fatty acid unsaturation (shown previously [Jones, Lloyd and Harwood (1993) Biochem. J. 296, 183-188] to be due to n-6 desaturase induction). Plasma membrane-enriched fractions from 15 degrees C-acclimated cells also showed a marked increase in the relative proportion of polyunsaturated fatty acids. Steady-state fluorescence depolarization studies, using the membrane probe diphenylhexatriene, revealed increases in plasma membrane order with decreasing assay temperature. Over the upper assay-temperature range (25-40 degrees C), fluorescence anisotropy values were higher in membranes from 30 degrees C-acclimated cells; a 3.3 degrees C relative displacement of plots indicated that temperature-induced changes in membrane lipid composition compensated for approx. 22% of the ordering effect of low temperature. Changes in the temperature-dependence of fluorescence anisotropy, possibly corresponding to lateral phase separations or alterations in other bulk physical properties of membranes, occurred between 20 and 25 degrees C in membranes from 30 degrees C-acclimated cells and between 15 and 20 degrees C in membranes from 15 degrees C-acclimated cells. Fluorescence anisotropy plots were superimposed at assay temperatures between 5 and 15 degrees C. Short-term phagocytotic rates in whole cells decreased with assay temperature. Arrhenius discontinuities in rates of phagocytosis occurred at approx. 25.0 degrees C and 17.5 degrees C in 30 degrees C- and 15 degrees C-acclimated cells respectively, and in each case were thus within the temperature ranges of slope-change in the corresponding fluorescence anisotropy plots. The results show a direct correlation between plasma membrane fatty acid unsaturation, membrane physical properties and phagocytotic activity in A. castellanii. Therefore, a specific integrated physiological process has been correlated with fatty acid desaturase induction for the first time.
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry
Cited by
61 articles.
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