Interaction of French-pressed liposomes with isolated bovine adrenal chromaffin cells. Characterization of the cell-liposome interactions.

1985 
Abstract Small unilamellar liposomes with an average external diameter of approximately 550 A were prepared by high pressure extrusion in a French press. Liposomes, composed of phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylserine, and cholesterol at a molar ratio of 7:1:2, were incubated with suspensions of bovine adrenal chromaffin cells. The cell-liposome interactions were characterized using fluorescence and radiotracer techniques. Transfer of the liposomal contents into the cytoplasm was visualized by fluorescence microscopy, using fluorescence-labeled macromolecules, and further documented by flow cytometry with liposome-entrapped 5,6-carboxy-fluorescein. The dose dependence, time course, and temperature dependence of the cell-liposome association, as determined by radioactive labeling both the liposomal membranes and their contents, indicate saturable interaction of the cells with intact liposomes (KappM approximately 5 X 10(-7) M lipid/10(6) cells at 37 degrees C). Using nonexchangeable fluorescent phospholipid analogs, the cell-liposome interactions were characterized by fluorescence resonance energy transfer and by fluorescence recovery after photobleaching. From these latter experiments we conclude that after 1-h incubation of 10(6) cells with 1 microM lipid at 37 degrees C, 30% of the cell-associated liposomes will have fused with the plasma membranes, resulting in the delivery of the contents of approximately 1.25 X 10(5) liposomes into each cell. Thus, liposomal delivery is an effective means to gain access to the cytoplasm and can be exploited to modulate physiological responses from within intact chromaffin cells.
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