Pyranine (8-hydroxy-1,3,6-pyrenetrisulfonate) as a probe of internal aqueous hydrogen ion concentration in phospholipid vesicles.

The fluorescence intensity (at 510 nm) of the hydrophilic pyrene analogue 8-hydroxy-1,3,6-pyrenetrisulfonate (pyranine) is strongly dependent upon the degree of ionization of the 8-hydroxyl group (pKa = 7.2) and hence upon the medium pH, over the range pH 6--10. Because of its polyanionic character, pyranine does not bind significantly to phospholipid vesicles having a net anionic surface charge. As a result, it is possible to form vesicles in the presence of pyranine which, after removal of external probe by gel filtration, contain pyranine entrapped within the internal aqueous compartment. Once entrapped, pyranine does not readily leak out of the vesicles. Because the fluorescence properties of entrapped pyranine resemble closely the properties of bulk pyranine solution with respect to pH sensitivity, pyranine can be used as a reliable reporter of aqueous pH changes within anionic vesicles. When HCl is rapidly added to a suspension of unilamellar soybean phospholipid (asolectin) vesicles preincubated at alkaline pH, a biphasic decrease in the pH of the vesicle inner aqueous compartment is observed. An initial, very rapid and electrically uncompensated H+ influx (t 1/2 less than 1 s) results in the generation of a transmembrane electric potential opposing further H+ influx. This leads to the development of a much slower (t 1/2 approximately equal to 5 min), valinomycin-sensitive, proton--counterion exchange which continues until the proton concentration gradient is eliminated. Similar results were obtained in asolectin vesicles prepared by detergent dilution, in sonicated egg phosphatidylcholine vesicles, and in multilamellar asolectin liposomes. The rather high permeability of soybean lipid membranes to H+ is surprising in view of the widespread use of these lipids for the reconstitution of membrane proteins which are thought to generate or utilize H+ ion gradients in energy transduction reactions.

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