Calcium- and magnesium-induced fusion of mixed phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine vesicles: effect of ion binding.
The Journal of membrane biology
confidence
Key findings
In vitro study of Ca2+ and Mg2+ induced fusion of PS/PC vesicles; no clinical or biological endpoints reported.
View source on PubMed (PMID 7241577) ↗
- Sample size
- Not reported
- Population
- In vitro mixed phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine vesicles
- Dosing
- Variable Ca2+ and Mg2+ concentrations; 100 mM NaCl
- Duration
- Minutes to 1 min
- Route
- In vitro
- Blinding
- not_reported
- Controls
- none
- Drug class
- mineral supplement
Full abstract
The aggregation, leakage, and fusion of pure PS (phosphatidylserine) and mixed PS/PC (phosphatidylcholine) sonicated vesicles were studied by light scattering, the release of encapsulated carboxyfluorescein, and a new fusion assay which monitors the mixing of the internal compartments of fusing vesicles. On a time scale of 1 min the extent of fusion was considerably greater than leakage. The Ca2+ and Mg2+ concentrations required to induce fusion increased when the PS content of the vesicles was decreased, and/or when the NaCl concentration was increased. Calculations employing a modified Gouy-Chapman equation and experimentally determined intrinsic binding constants of Na+ and Ca2+ to PS were shown to predict correctly the amount of Ca2+ bound in mixed PS/PC vesicles. For vesicles composed of either pure PS or of mixtures with PC in 100 mM NaCl (4:1 and 2:1 PS/PC); the induction of fusion (on a time scale of minutes) occurred when the amount of Ca or Mg bound/PS molecule exceeded 0.35-0.39. The induction of fusion for both pure PS and PS/PC mixed vesicles (with PS exceeding 50%) can be explained by assuming that destabilization of these vesicles requires a critical binding ratio of divalent cations to PS.