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Research Article

Interaction of the Water-Soluble Protein Aprotinin with Liposomes: Gel-Filtration, Turbidity Studies, and 31P NMR Studies

, Ph.D., , , , , Ph.D., , Ph.D. & show all
Pages 213-229 | Published online: 24 Nov 2003
 

Abstract

The interactions of a water-soluble nonmembrane protein aprotinin with multilamellar vesicles (MLV) and small unilamellar vesicles (SUV) from soybean phospholipids were studied using Sephadex G-75 gel chromatography combined with different methods of the analysis of the eluate fractions (fluorescence, light-scattering, turbidity; 31P NMR spectroscopy). The composition of the liposomes mainly containing soybean phosphatidylcholine (PC) was varied by the addition of phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), phosphatidylinositol (PI) and lyso-phosphatidylcholine (lyso-PC). To evaluate the lipid-protein interactions, the amount of aprotinin in the MLV–aprotinin complexes was determined. Lipid–protein interactions were found to strongly depend on the liposome composition, medium pH and ionic strength. These dependencies point to the electrostatic nature of the aprotinin-lipid interactions. 31P NMR spectroscopy of the MLV–aprotinin complexes indicated that aprotinin influences the phospholipid structure in MLV at pH 3.0. In the case of PC:PE:PI and PC:PE:PI:lyso-PC vesicles, aprotinin induced liposome aggregation and a lamellar-to-isotropic phase transition of the phospholipids.

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