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Journal ArticleDOI

The fluid mosaic model of the structure of cell membranes.

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TLDR
Results strongly indicate that the bivalent antibodies produce an aggregation of the surface immunoglobulin molecules in the plane of the membrane, which can occur only if the immunoglOBulin molecules are free to diffuse in the membrane.
Abstract
A fluid mosaic model is presented for the gross organization and structure of the proteins and lipids of biological membranes. The model is consistent with the restrictions imposed by thermodynamics. In this model, the proteins that are integral to the membrane are a heterogeneous set of globular molecules, each arranged in an amphipathic structure, that is, with the ionic and highly polar groups protruding from the membrane into the aqueous phase, and the nonpolar groups largely buried in the hydrophobic interior of the membrane. These globular molecules are partially embedded in a matrix of phospholipid. The bulk of the phospholipid is organized as a discontinuous, fluid bilayer, although a small fraction of the lipid may interact specifically with the membrane proteins. The fluid mosaic structure is therefore formally analogous to a two-dimensional oriented solution of integral proteins (or lipoproteins) in the viscous phospholipid bilayer solvent. Recent experiments with a wide variety of techniqes and several different membrane systems are described, all of which abet consistent with, and add much detail to, the fluid mosaic model. It therefore seems appropriate to suggest possible mechanisms for various membrane functions and membrane-mediated phenomena in the light of the model. As examples, experimentally testable mechanisms are suggested for cell surface changes in malignant transformation, and for cooperative effects exhibited in the interactions of membranes with some specific ligands. Note added in proof: Since this article was written, we have obtained electron microscopic evidence (69) that the concanavalin A binding sites on the membranes of SV40 virus-transformed mouse fibroblasts (3T3 cells) are more clustered than the sites on the membranes of normal cells, as predicted by the hypothesis represented in Fig. 7B. T-here has also appeared a study by Taylor et al. (70) showing the remarkable effects produced on lymphocytes by the addition of antibodies directed to their surface immunoglobulin molecules. The antibodies induce a redistribution and pinocytosis of these surface immunoglobulins, so that within about 30 minutes at 37 degrees C the surface immunoglobulins are completely swept out of the membrane. These effects do not occur, however, if the bivalent antibodies are replaced by their univalent Fab fragments or if the antibody experiments are carried out at 0 degrees C instead of 37 degrees C. These and related results strongly indicate that the bivalent antibodies produce an aggregation of the surface immunoglobulin molecules in the plane of the membrane, which can occur only if the immunoglobulin molecules are free to diffuse in the membrane. This aggregation then appears to trigger off the pinocytosis of the membrane components by some unknown mechanism. Such membrane transformations may be of crucial importance in the induction of an antibody response to an antigen, as well as iv other processes of cell differentiation.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular Organization and Dynamics in Polymersome Membranes: A Lateral Diffusion Study

TL;DR: In this article, the lateral diffusion properties of diblock and triblock copolymers based on poly(2-methyl-2-oxazoline) and poly(dimethylsiloxane), with thicknesses between 6 and 21 nm, were systematically investigated.
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Organization of proteins in the native and reformed outer membrane of Escherichia coli

TL;DR: A buffer system is described which permits reproducible resolution of three proteins which do not resolve on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis using conventional phosphate-sodium dodecyl sulfate buffer systems and an asymmetric arrangement of proteins within the membrane is suggested.
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Acid sphingomyelinase, cell membranes and human disease: Lessons from Niemann–Pick disease

TL;DR: This review will focus on the role of ASM in membrane biology, with a specific emphasis on what a rare genetic disorder (NPD) has taught us about more common events.
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Fluorescence spectroscopic investigations of the dynamic properties of proteins, membranes and nucleic acids

TL;DR: Fluorescence spectroscopy indicates that both proteins and membranes fluctuate rapidly on the nanosecond and subnanosecond timescale, and base pairs in double-helical DNA appear to be immobile on this timescale.
Journal ArticleDOI

Diversity and versatility of lipid–protein interactions revealed by molecular genetic approaches

TL;DR: The development of strains of microorganisms in which membrane lipid composition can be genetically manipulated in viable cells has provided a set of reagents to probe lipid functions and these mutants have uncovered previously unrecognized roles for lipids and provided in vivo verification for putative functions described in vitro.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

Some factors in the interpretation of protein denaturation.

TL;DR: The chapter reviews that the denaturation is a process in which the spatial arrangement of the polypeptide chains within the molecule is changed from that typical of the native protein to a more disordered arrangement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Redistribution and Pinocytosis of Lymphocyte Surface Immunoglobulin Molecules Induced by Anti-Immunoglobulin Antibody

TL;DR: A possible mechanism for lymphocyte triggering by antigen is suggested and questions about cell membrane structure are raised.
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