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Membrane fusion, nonlamellar phases

Proposed more than 20 years ago, the stalk intermediate—a highly curved lipid stmcture— provides the most plausible description of the initial fusion stage currently available. The related stalk-pore mechanism (23-25) of fusion is viewed favorably by most researchers. It shows the close relation between fusion and the transition from lamellar into bilayer cubic and hexagonal phases (see Fig. 4 in the section entitled Formation of nonlamellar phases in membrane lipids ). Studies on the rhombohedral phase formed in partially dehydrated lipids provide another insight into the possible structure of fusion stalks (26). [Pg.892]

The lamellar phase represents the structure of cell membrane lipids under steady-state conditions. However in certain circumstances, particularly in membrane fusion events (e.g. in egg fertilization, or cell infection by some viruses), membrane lipids abandon transiently the lamellar disposition, adopting nonlamellar architectures, of which the best known is the so-called inverted hexagonal , or Hn, phase. Nonlamellar structures are at the origin of the lipid stalk , a structural intermediate that connects two bUayers in the membrane fusion process. Only certain lipids, or lipid mixtures, can undergo the Lo(-Hii thermotropic transition, and the latter can be detected by DSC. Hu, like other nonlamellar phases, has received particular attention lately because of its possible implication in important phenomena such as cell membrane fusion, or protein insertion into membranes. High-sensitivity DSC instruments allow the detection of La-Hn transitions with phospholipid suspensions of concentration 5 him or even less. [Pg.60]


See other pages where Membrane fusion, nonlamellar phases is mentioned: [Pg.79]    [Pg.87]    [Pg.127]    [Pg.42]    [Pg.51]    [Pg.46]    [Pg.53]    [Pg.138]    [Pg.78]    [Pg.892]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.133 ]




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