W B Van Winkle
Baylor College of Medicine
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Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1984
Leo G. Herbette; J.K. Blasie; Paul H. DeFoor; Sidney Fleischer; Roger J. Bick; W B Van Winkle; Charlotte A. Tate; Mark L. Entman
The total phospholipid content and distribution of phospholipid species between the outer and inner monolayers of the isolated sarcoplasmic reticulum membrane was measured by phospholipase A2 activities and neutron diffraction. Phospholipase measurements showed that specific phospholipid species were asymmetric in their distribution between the outer and inner monolayers of the sarcoplasmic reticulum lipid bilayer; phosphatidylcholine (PC) was distributed 48/52 +/- 2% between the outer and inner monolayer of the sarcoplasmic reticulum bilayer, 69% of the phosphatidyl-ethanolamine (PE) resided mainly in the outer monolayer of the bilayer, 85% of the phosphatidylserine (PS) and 88% of the phosphatidylinositol (PI) were localized predominantly in the inner monolayer. The total phospholipid distribution determined by these measurements was 48/52 +/- 2% for the outer/inner monolayer of the sarcoplasmic reticulum lipid bilayer. Sarcoplasmic reticulum phospholipids were biosynthetically deuterated and exchanged into isolated vesicles with both a specific lecithin and a general exchange protein. Neutron diffraction measurements directly provided lipid distribution profiles for both PC and the total lipid content in the intact sarcoplasmic reticulum membrane. The outer/inner monolayer distribution for PC was 47/53 +/- 1%, in agreement with phospholipase measurements, while that for the total lipid was 46/54 +/- 1%, similar to the phospholipase measurements. These neutron diffraction results regarding the sarcoplasmic reticulum membrane bilayer were used in model calculations for decomposing the electron-density profile structure (10 A resolution) of isolated sarcoplasmic reticulum previously determined by X-ray diffraction into structures for the separate membrane components. These structure studies showed that the protein profile structure within the membrane lipid bilayer was asymmetric, complementary to the asymmetric lipid structure. Thus, the total phospholipid asymmetry obtained by two independent methods was small but consistent with a complementary asymmetric protein structure, and may be related to the highly vectorial functional properties of the calcium pump ATPase protein in the sarcoplasmic reticulum membrane.
Experimental Cell Research | 1976
W B Van Winkle; Lois K. Lane; Arnold Schwartz
The ultrastructural features of a purified fraction of Na+,K+-adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) isolated from dog kidney medulla were compared with those of the initial crude microsomal fraction in the purification sequence. Although both fractions consist of vesicular structures, the purified fraction is more homogeneous with respect to overall size and intramembrane protein particle size and distribution. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis profiles of both fractions reveal multiple proteins in the microsomal fraction but only two in the final purified fraction. The membranes of the pure fraction comprised one class of particles roughly 95–120 A in diameter which represent the in vitro configuration of Na+,K+-ATPase.
Life Sciences | 1979
W B Van Winkle; Mark L. Entman
Abstract While differing in numerous physiological and biochemical parameters, mammalian cardiac and skeletal muscles exhibit many common ultrastructural characteristics. General subcellular organization is similar with longitudinal disposition and organization of the myofibrils as well as subcellular organelles such as mitochondria, sarcoplasmic reticulum and transverse tubules. Significant differences are more readily discerned in terms of degree, not only with respect to relative amounts of various organelles, but also in regard to membrane composition. It is these macromolecular variations in membrane components which may, at least in part, provide the basis for differences in overall functional characteristics in the muscles. In cardiac, as well as skeletal muscle, the concentration of Ca2+ ions at specific intracellular sites regulates the contractile state of the muscle. The differences in mechanism and sources of Ca2+ for contraction in cardiac and skeletal muscle are but a few of the unsolved areas which are now being addressed. We shall focus primarily on research advances involving cardiac and skeletal SR emphasizing the contrasting features related to their functional roles in control of contraction and metabolic events.
Micron | 1981
W B Van Winkle; Mark L. Entman
Abstract A rapid, accurate method is described by which geometrical analysis (surface area, volume) as well as density of intramembrane particles in isolated vesicular fractions can be carried out on freeze-fracture preparations. These two parameters are essential for morphological quantitation and subsequent comparison of biochemical or transport phenomena.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1980
Mark L. Entman; S S Keslensky; A Chu; W B Van Winkle
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1981
W B Van Winkle; Charlotte A. Tate; Roger J. Bick; Mark L. Entman
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1978
W B Van Winkle; Barry J.R. Pitts; Mark L. Entman
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1981
Charlotte A. Tate; A Chu; Jeanie B. McMillin-Wood; W B Van Winkle; Mark L. Entman
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1985
John B. Massey; Quein Pao; W B Van Winkle; Henry J. Pownall
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1983
A Chu; Charlotte A. Tate; Roger J. Bick; W B Van Winkle; Mark L. Entman