Francesco M. Megli
University of Bari
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Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2012
Piotr Jurkiewicz; Agnieszka Olżyńska; Lukasz Cwiklik; Elena Conte; Pavel Jungwirth; Francesco M. Megli; Martin Hof
This review focuses on the influence of oxidized phosphatidylcholines (oxPCs) on the biophysical properties of model membranes and is limited to fluorescence, EPR, and MD studies. OxPCs are divided into two classes: A) hydroxy- or hydroperoxy-dieonyl phospatidylcholines, B) phospatidylcholines with oxidized and truncated chains with either aldehyde or carboxylic group. It was shown that the presence of the investigated oxPCs in phospholipid model membranes may have the following consequences: 1) decrease of the lipid order, 2) lowering of phase transition temperatures, 3) lateral expansion and thinning of the bilayer, 4) alterations of bilayer hydration profiles, 5) increased lipid mobility, 6) augmented flip-flop, 7) influence on the lateral phase organisation, and 8) promotion of water defects and, under extreme conditions (i.e. high concentrations of class B oxPCs), disintegration of the bilayer. The effects of class A oxPCs appear to be more moderate than those observed or predicted for class B. Many of the abovementioned findings are related to the ability of the oxidized chains of certain oxPCs to reorient toward the water phase. Some of the effects appear to be moderated by the presence of cholesterol. Although those biophysical alternations are found at oxPC concentrations higher than the total oxPC concentrations found under physiological conditions, certain organelles may reach such elevated oxPC concentrations locally. It is a challenge for the future to correlate the biophysics of oxidized phospholipids to metabolic studies in order to define the significance of the findings presented herein for pathophysiology. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Oxidized phospholipids-their properties and interactions with proteins.
FEBS Letters | 2005
Francesco M. Megli; Luciana Russo; Karen Sabatini
The thermal behaviour of phospholipid multilamellar vesicles (MLV) made of various molar percentages of DPPC and LPPC, containing also oxidized LPPC (LPPCox), was studied by use of EPR spectroscopy and n‐DSPC spin label in order to determine variations in the membrane fluidity brought about by lipid oxidation. Experimental variables were temperature, ranging from 4 to 44 °C, and molar percentage composition of DPPC/LPPC/LPPCox ternary mixture. We found that the presence of LPPCox in a percentage higher than both normal phospholipids’ heavily hindered membrane formation, while lower percentage of the oxidized lipid with higher DPPC percentages yielded two‐components EPR spectra, showing the presence of two different fluidity domains, indicative of membrane phase separation. When LPPC was the dominant lipid in the ternary mixture, simple EPR spectra were observed, indicating homogeneity of MLV membranes. Phase separation observed in the presence of LPPCox was better visible at lower temperature (12 °C or less), and almost disappeared with increasing temperature (36 °C or more). Furthermore, the correlation time of 16‐DSPC in ternary mixture MLVs with higher LPPC percentage (homogeneous membranes) was not affected by the presence of LPPCox, while it normally increased upon DPPC percentage increase, as readily calculated from the EPR spectra featuring simple bands at 24 °C. It is concluded that oxidized lipid induces phase separation in more rigid DPPC‐rich membranes, while leaving fluidity unaffected in more fluid LPPC‐rich membranes, and at higher temperature.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1986
Francesco M. Megli; Antonino De Lisi; Aart ban Amerongen; Karel W. A. Wirtz; E. Quagliariello
In the present study we have investigated the transfer of phospholipids between vesicles and rat liver mitochondria. Transfer was measured by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy using vesicles that contained spin-labeled phospholipids. A spontaneous transfer was observed which could be strongly inhibited by treating the mitochondria with the thiol reagent mersalyl. Transfer was also greatly reduced after a saline wash of the mitochondria; the transfer activity was then recovered in the wash. This activity was inhibited by tryptic digestion and mersalyl. By gel chromatography, enzyme immunoassay and immunoblotting it was demonstrated that the activity in the wash was due to the nonspecific lipid transfer protein (sterol carrier protein 2). We could estimate that up to 85% of the spontaneous phospholipid transfer between vesicles and rat liver mitochondria was mediated by this transfer protein.
Chemistry and Physics of Lipids | 2003
Francesco M. Megli; Karen Sabatini
The molecular order of fatty acyl chains in oriented lipid bilayers on solid support (SPB), made of either natural or synthetic phospholipids oxidized by Fenton reagent and probed with spin labeled lecithin (5-DSPC) was studied by means of EPR spectrometry. Phospholipids (ASPC, EYPC, mitochondrial extract) were oxidized as either aqueous buffer/methanol dispersions or reverse-phase evaporation vesicles (REV) suspensions. Oxidation was preliminarily revealed both by assaying MDA and by detecting conjugated dienes. Oxidized phospholipid species was quantified by preparative TLC. The degree of order in oriented lipid bilayers of samples containing oxidized phospholipids was estimated by the loss of EPR spectral anisotropy, and an empirical index of the related bilayer disorder was calculated from the second derivative spectra. Bilayers made of each non-oxidized phospholipid species from either ethanol solutions or REV suspensions showed the highest anisotropy, while the increasing presence of oxidized lipids in the samples resulted in progressive loss of EPR spectral anisotropy. In contrast, vesicles containing 40% of the oxidized species maintained an unaltered fluidity gradient, while REV formation was hindered by oxidized phospholipid percentages higher than 45% for ASPC and EYPC, and 35% for Mitochondrial lipids (MtL). It is concluded that the early stages of lipoperoxidation bring about disordering of the phospholipid bilayer interior rather than fluidity alterations, and that prolonged oxidation may result in loss of structural and chemical properties of the bilayer until the structure no longer holds.
Lipids | 1976
Clemente Landriscina; Francesco M. Megli; E. Quagliariello
Following intraperitoneal administration of 1-14C-linoleic acid or 2-3H-acetate to rats, the specific radioactivities of both liver cardiolipin and other mitochondrial phospholipids after different time intervals were measured. Comparison of the data obtained with those from another stock of rats treated with32P-phosphate or 2-3H-glycerol showed that the fatty acids of cardiolipin, like those of other phospholipids, exhibit an independent turnover with respect to the remaining parts of the molecule. The half-life of acyl moieties of cardiolipin is ca. 20% higher than that of the same components of other mitochondrial phospholipids. Moreover, it appears that, in both cardiolipin and other phospholipids, linoleyl residues turn over faster than nonessential fatty acids. Discussion is made as to whether this characteristic can be related to the role of phospholipids in the functioning of some enzymes bound to the inner mitochondrial membrane.
FEBS Letters | 2004
Francesco M. Megli; Karen Sabatini
The purpose of this study was to investigate whether, after oxidative injury in vivo, liver mitochondrial phospholipids suffered from structural defects similar to those we have previously observed after either chemical oxidation or respiration state IV incubation of isolated mitochondria in vitro. Oxidative injury of the liver was simulated by endogastric administration of CCl4 to rats in variable amounts for different times, under various conditions. Measurements of the phospholipid bilayer packing order were carried out by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectrometry of oriented planar samples of phospholipids extracted from liver mitochondria, spin labeled with 5‐doxylstearoyl‐lecithin. Disordering of the bilayer was revealed by the anisotropy loss of EPR spectra and reached a maximum value 4.5 h after CCl4 administration, vanishing thereafter. The observed disorder also increased with the amount of CCl4 administered, showing distinct dose‐dependence, while administration of resveratrol soon after carbon tetrachloride decreased bilayer disordering by 50%. On the contrary, the order parameter S of spin labeled lecithin in isolated mitochondrial membranes from intoxicated rats revealed no change in membrane fluidity after oxidative stress. It is concluded that the phospholipid damage leading to disturbed bilayer geometry after oxidative attack already observed in model membranes and in isolated mitochondria in vitro also occurs in a simulated pathological state in vivo, indicating its possible occurrence also in real oxidative stress‐linked pathologies as a contribution to the onset/sustaining of related diseases.
FEBS Letters | 2003
Francesco M. Megli; Karen Sabatini
The aim of the present study was to detect defective structural properties in bilayers of mitochondrial phospholipids after oxidative stress of isolated mitochondria in vitro, reportedly during respiration state IV. The structural behaviour of extracted phospholipids was studied by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectrometry in oriented phospholipid bilayers spin‐labelled with 5‐doxyl‐lecithin, by detecting of the degree of EPR spectral anisotropy loss, indicative of the phospholipid bilayer packing order. Bilayers of phospholipids from untreated mitochondria showed the highest spectral anisotropy, hence highly ordered structure, while chemically oxidised phospholipid yielded almost completely disordered supported phospholipid bilayers. Samples from mitochondria after respiration state IV showed bilayer disorder increasing with oxidation time, while inclusion of the antioxidant resveratrol in the respiration medium almost completely prevented bilayer disordering. On the other hand, β‐n‐doxylstearoyl‐lecithin spin‐labelled mitochondria showed unchanged order parameter S at C positions 5, 12 and 16 after respiration state IV, confirming the insensitivity of this parameter to phospholipid oxidative stress. It is concluded that reactive oxygen species attack to the membrane affects lipid packing order more than fluidity, and that EPR anisotropy loss reveals oxidative damage to the bilayer better than the order parameter.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2009
Francesco M. Megli; Luciana Russo; Elena Conte
This study aims at characterizing the structure and some properties of phospholipid multi-lamellar vesicles (MLVs) containing the oxidized species gamma-palmitoyl-beta-(9-hydroperoxy-10,12-octadecanedienoyl)-lecithin (HPPLPC), gamma-palmitoyl-beta-(9-hydroxy-10,12-octadecanedienoyl)-lecithin (HOPLPC), gamma-palmitoyl-beta-glutaroyl-lecithin (GlPPC) and gamma-palmitoyl-beta-azelaoyl-lecithin (AzPPC). Sepharose 4B gel-chromatography was used to ensure and check that only MLVs are used in EPR measurements. Gel-solid to gel-liquid transition temperature (Tm), lateral phase separation, fluidity gradient and polarity profile were studied by use of EPR spectroscopy of enclosed n-doxylstearoyl lecithin spin labels. Contrarily to conjugate dienes and normal phospholipids, pure carboxyacyl species yielded aqueous suspensions showing gel-chromatography elution profile resembling that of lysolecithin micelles. Conjugate dienes/DPPC MLVs showed lateral phase separation at room temperature and Tm value lower than pure DPPC MLVs. Pure conjugate dienes MLVs resembled more PLPC MLVs and displayed free miscibility with PLPC in mixed MLVs. Pure HPPLPC MLV bilayer appeared to be slightly more rigid, while that of HOPLPC and the polarity profile of MLVs made of the pure conjugate dienes species were similar to those of normal PLPC. It is concluded that carboxyacyl lecithins in MLVs tend to disrupt vesicle structure, while conjugated dienes lecithins are more able to affect some physical properties of the bilayer, and that DPPC in MLVs enhances these effects while PLPC shows a better compatibility with the lipoperoxides.
Lipids | 2015
Ilario Losito; Elena Conte; Tommaso R. I. Cataldi; Nicola Cioffi; Francesco M. Megli; Francesco Palmisano
Abstract The phospholipidomic signatures of human blood microparticles and platelets, evaluated by hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography coupled to electrospray ionization—mass spectrometry, were compared. The phospholipidome of platelet-derived microparticles, obtained by platelets stimulation with a mixture of Ca(II), thrombin and collagen, was also considered for the comparison. Platelets, blood microparticles and platelet-derived microparticles displayed qualitatively similar phospholipidomes, all based on eight major phospholipid classes, namely: phosphatidylcholines, diacyl- and plasme(a)nyl-phosphatidylethanolamines, phosphatidylserines, phosphatidylinositols, sphingomyelins and lyso forms of phosphatidylcholines and phosphatidylethanolamines. However, while the phospholipidomes of platelets and platelet-derived microparticles were found to be generally similar also from a quantitative point of view, a higher relative incidence of species bearing polyunsaturated side chains, especially in phospholipid classes sharing the choline head (i.e. phosphatidylcholines and lyso-phosphatidylcholines), was observed in the case of blood microparticles. As a further peculiar feature, never reported before, the relative abundance of lyso-phosphatidylcholines among the eight identified phospholipid classes was found to be significantly higher in the lipid extracts of blood microparticles.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1981
Francesco M. Megli; Clemente Landriscina; E. Quagliariello
ESR spectrometry has been used to study fatty acid spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine exchange from single bilayer donor vesicles to various acceptor systems, such as intact or differently treated mitochondria, phospholipid multilamellar vesicles or single bilayer vesicles. This exchange is catalyzed by soluble non-specific rat liver protein, first investigated by Bloj and Zilversmit in 1977 (J. Biol. Chem. 252, 1613--1619). Non-catalyzed phosphatidylcholine exchange has also been studied. Full inhibition of both mechanisms occurs with lipid-depleted acceptor mitochondria, while N-ethylmaleimide-treated mitochondria behave as good acceptors during catalyzed exchange but are in no way effective during spontaneous exchange. Non-catalyzed exchange does not take place with phospholipase D-treated mitochondria as acceptors, while the pure catalyzed mechanism is inhibited by 28%. Neither multilamellar nor single bilayer phospholipid vesicles exchange spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine in the absence of protein, the former being a poorer acceptor system than the latter during catalyzed exchange, when this activity is 31 and 80%, respectively, of that of intact mitochondria. The hypothesis is made that the spontaneous mechanism is active among intact natural membranes and could be of some importance in vivo. Furthermore, the biomembrane protein moiety is assumed to be involved in the catalyzed exchange more as a phospholipid spacer than as a binder between the exchange protein and the membrane involved. Phospholipids, on the contrary, appear to be important for both functions.