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Merck

Effect of agents that produce membrane disorder on lysis of erythrocytes by complement.

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (1981-04-01)
M L Shin, G Hänsch, M M Mayer
RESUMEN

To evaluate the effect of membrane lipid acyl-chain packing on the efficiency of cell lysis by complement, we have studied membrane modulation by 2-(2-methoxy)-ethoxyethyl-8-(cis-2-n-octylcyclopropyl)-octanoate (A2C) and by myristoleyl alcohol, the cis isomer of a C14:1 aliphatic alcohol. These substances are known to increase the membrane lipid disorder by virtue of the bend in their acyl chains, which is believed to loosen the phospholipid acyl-chain packing. We have found that both of these compounds markedly enhance the lysis of erythrocytes by the terminal complement proteins C5b-9. The enhancing effect by A2C is operative in the formation of erythrocytes carrying complement components C5b, C6, and C7, as well as in the subsequent reactions with complement components C8 and C9. We have also found that A2C-treated erythrocytes bind C5b6 to a measurable extent, whereas untreated erythrocytes do not. We attribute this to a shift in the partition equilibrium of C5b6 toward membrane association, which would improve lytic efficiency. The increase of membrane lipid disorder by these agents would also be expected to increase insertion of hydrophobic peptides from C7, C8, and C9, with consequent gain in lytic efficiency. Treatment of erythrocytes with sublytic doses of NaDodSO4, or Triton X-100 did not enhance lysis by C5b-9 appreciably, suggesting that enhancement of lysis by C5b-9 is not a general property of amphiphiles.