The molecular organization of nerve membranes

Abstract
The lipid content and composition from an axolemma-rich preparation isolated from squid retinal axons was analyzed. The lipids, which accounted for 45.5% of the dry weight of this membrane, were composed of 22% cholesterol, 66.7% phospholipids and 5.2% free fatty acids. The negatively charged species phosphatidyl ethanolamine (37%), phosphatidyl serine (10%) and lysophosphatidyl ethanolamine (4%) made up 51% of the phospholipids. The amphoteric phosphatidyl choline and sphingomyelin accounted for 39% and 4%, respectively. The relative distribution of fatty acids in each of the isolated phospholipids was studied. The most remarkable feature of these phospholipids was the large proportion of long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids. The 22∶6 acyl chain accounted for 37% in phosphatidyl ethanolamine, 21.7% in phosphatidyl choline, 17.5% on phosphatidyl serine and 20.3% in sphingomyelin (all expressed as area %). The molar fraction of unsaturated fatty acids reached 65% in phosphatidyl ethanolamine and 42.0 and 44.8% in phosphatidyl choline and phosphatidyl serine, respectively. The double bond index in these species varied between 1.0 and 2.6. The lipid composition of the axolemma-rich preparation isolated from squid retinal axons appears to be similar to other excitable plasma membranes in two important features: (a) a low cholesterol/phospholipid molar ratio of 0.61; and (b) the polyunsaturated nature of the fatty acid of their phospholipids. This particular chemical composition may contribute a great deal to the molecular unstability of excitable membranes.

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