Volume 11, Issue 4 pp. 477-483
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Cholesterol levels and plasma membrane fluidity in 3T3 and SV101-3T3 cells

Carl J. Scandella

Carl J. Scandella

Department of Biochemistry, State University of New York, Stony Brook, New York, 11794

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James A. Hayward

James A. Hayward

Department of Biochemistry, State University of New York, Stony Brook, New York, 11794

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Nancy Lee

Nancy Lee

Department of Biochemistry, State University of New York, Stony Brook, New York, 11794

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First published: 1979
Citations: 3

Abstract

Polyene antibiotics such as filipin selectively inhibit wheat germ agglutinin-induced agglutination of transformed and malignant cells compared to normal cells (Hatten ME, Burger MM: Biochemistry 18:739, 1979). Since filipin binds specifically to cholesterol, we measured cholesterol levels in 3T3 cells and SV101-3T3 cells. SV101-3T3 cells contained 50-100% more cholesterol per cell than 3T3 cells. Both cell types were starved for cholesterol by growth in lipid-depleted medium plus 25-hydroxycholesterol. The cholesterol level of SV101-3T3 cells decreased by 30-50%, while the level in 3T3 cells remained constant. Filipin-stained SV101–3T3 cells revealed bright patches of filipin under fluorescence microscopy. These patches were absent in 3T3 cells and in SV101–3T3 and 3T3 cells starved for cholesterol. We selectively labeled plasma membranes of these cells with a spin label analog of phosphatidylcholine. The spin label indicated differences in plasma membrane fluidity that may be related to the different cholesterol levels in 3T3 and SV101–3T3 cells.

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