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1.
Crane JM  Tamm LK 《Biophysical journal》2004,86(5):2965-2979
Sterols play a crucial regulatory and structural role in the lateral organization of eukaryotic cell membranes. Cholesterol has been connected to the possible formation of ordered lipid domains (rafts) in mammalian cell membranes. Lipid rafts are composed of lipids in the liquid-ordered (l(o)) phase and are surrounded with lipids in the liquid-disordered (l(d)) phase. Cholesterol and sphingomyelin are thought to be the principal components of lipid rafts in cell and model membranes. We have used fluorescence microscopy and fluorescence recovery after photobleaching in planar supported lipid bilayers composed of porcine brain phosphatidylcholine (bPC), porcine brain sphingomyelin (bSM), and cholesterol to map the composition-dependence of l(d)/l(o) phase coexistence. Cholesterol decreases the fluidity of bPC bilayers, but disrupts the highly ordered gel phase of bSM, leading to a more fluid membrane. When mixed with bPC/bSM (1:1) or bPC/bSM (2:1), cholesterol induces the formation of l(o) phase domains. The fraction of the membrane in the l(o) phase was found to be directly proportional to the cholesterol concentration in both phospholipid mixtures, which implies that a significant fraction of bPC cosegregates into l(o) phase domains. Images reveal a percolation threshold, i.e., the point where rafts become connected and fluid domains disconnected, when 45-50% of the total membrane is converted to the l(o) phase. This happens between 20 and 25 mol % cholesterol in 1:1 bPC/bSM bilayers and between 25 and 30 mol % cholesterol in 2:1 bPC/bSM bilayers at room temperature, and at approximately 35 mol % cholesterol in 1:1 bPC/bSM bilayers at 37 degrees C. Area fractions of l(o) phase lipids obtained in multilamellar liposomes by a fluorescence resonance energy transfer method confirm and support the results obtained in planar lipid bilayers.  相似文献   

2.
The effect of enzymatic generation of ceramide on phase separated bilayers with a mixture of co-existing fluid and liquid-ordered phases has been examined using a combination of atomic force microscopy (AFM) and fluorescence imaging. Supported lipid bilayers prepared from a DOPC/sphingomyelin/cholesterol mixture were imaged prior to, during and after incubation with sphingomyelinase by total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy. Enzyme treatment resulted in the growth of large dye-excluded regions. The growth kinetics for these patches are consistent with activity of a variable number of enzyme molecules in different regions of the bilayer. Correlated AFM and fluorescence imaging shows that some of the large dye-excluded patches form around the original liquid-ordered domains, which become heterogeneous in height with many raised ceramide-rich regions around their periphery. However, some of the dye-excluded patches correspond to areas of the bilayer where the initial domains have largely or partially disappeared. The dye-excluded patches observed by fluorescence are shown to be areas of increased adhesion in lateral deflection AFM images and are postulated to form by incorporation of both cholesterol and ceramide in the original fluid phase and to vary in composition throughout the bilayer. This is evident from the observation that the dye-excluded areas are all detected as areas of increased friction, but do not always show a distinct height difference in topographic images. These results highlight the utility of a multi-modal imaging approach for understanding the complex membrane restructuring that occurs upon enzymatic generation of ceramide.  相似文献   

3.
Glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored proteins are enriched in cholesterol- and sphingolipid-rich lipid rafts within the membrane. Rafts are known to have roles in cellular organization and function, but little is understood about the factors controlling the distribution of proteins in rafts. We have used atomic force microscopy to directly visualize proteins in supported lipid bilayers composed of equimolar sphingomyelin, dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine and cholesterol. The transmembrane anchored angiotensin converting enzyme (TM-ACE) was excluded from the liquid ordered raft domains. Replacement of the transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains of TM-ACE with a GPI anchor (GPI-ACE) promoted the association of the protein with rafts in the bilayers formed with brain sphingomyelin (mainly C18:0). Association with the rafts did not occur if the shorter chain egg sphingomyelin (mainly C16:0) was used. The distribution of GPI-anchored proteins in supported lipid bilayers was investigated further using membrane dipeptidase (MDP) whose GPI anchor contains distearoyl phosphatidylinositol. MDP was also excluded from rafts when egg sphingomyelin was used but associated with raft domains formed using brain sphingomyelin. The effect of sphingomyelin chain length on the distribution of GPI-anchored proteins in rafts was verified using synthetic palmitoyl or stearoyl sphingomyelin. Both GPI-ACE and MDP only associated with the longer chain stearoyl sphingomyelin rafts. These data obtained using supported lipid bilayers provide the first direct evidence that the nature of the membrane-anchoring domain influences the association of a protein with lipid rafts and that acyl chain length hydrophobic mismatch influences the distribution of GPI-anchored proteins in rafts.  相似文献   

4.
Lipid rafts are membrane structures enriched in cholesterol, sphingomyelin and glycolipids. In majority raft-mimicking model systems high contents of cholesterol and sphingomyelin (approximately 30 mol%) are used. Existence of raft-like structures was, however, reported also in model and natural membranes containing low levels of cholesterol and sphingomyelin. In the present work differential scanning calorimetry and fluorescence spectroscopy with the use of Laurdan probe was employed to demonstrate the existence of phase separation in model systems containing DPPC with addition of 5 mol% or 10 mol% of both cholesterol and sphingomyelin. Additionally, the influence of three phenothiazine derivatives on phase separation in mixed DPPC/cholesterol/sphingomyelin bilayers was investigated. Chlorpromazine, thioridazine and trifluoperazine were able to induce phase separation in DPPC and DPPC/cholesterol/sphingomyelin bilayers in temperatures below lipid main phase transition. However, only trifluoperazine induced phase separation in temperatures close to or above main phase transition. Trifluoperazine also induced phase separation in bilayers composed of egg yolk PC or DOPC mixed with cholesterol and sphingomyelin. We concluded that presence of lipid domains can be observed in model membranes containing low levels of cholesterol and sphingomyelin. Among three phenothiazine derivatives studied, only trifluoperazine was able to induce a permanent phase separation in phosphatidylcholine/cholesterol/sphingomyelin systems.  相似文献   

5.
Glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored proteins are enriched in cholesterol- and sphingolipid-rich lipid rafts within the membrane. Rafts are known to have roles in cellular organization and function, but little is understood about the factors controlling the distribution of proteins in rafts. We have used atomic force microscopy to directly visualize proteins in supported lipid bilayers composed of equimolar sphingomyelin, dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine and cholesterol. The transmembrane anchored angiotensin converting enzyme (TM-ACE) was excluded from the liquid ordered raft domains. Replacement of the transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains of TM-ACE with a GPI anchor (GPI-ACE) promoted the association of the protein with rafts in the bilayers formed with brain sphingomyelin (mainly C18:0). Association with the rafts did not occur if the shorter chain egg sphingomyelin (mainly C16:0) was used. The distribution of GPI-anchored proteins in supported lipid bilayers was investigated further using membrane dipeptidase (MDP) whose GPI anchor contains distearoyl phosphatidylinositol. MDP was also excluded from rafts when egg sphingomyelin was used but associated with raft domains formed using brain sphingomyelin. The effect of sphingomyelin chain length on the distribution of GPI-anchored proteins in rafts was verified using synthetic palmitoyl or stearoyl sphingomyelin. Both GPI-ACE and MDP only associated with the longer chain stearoyl sphingomyelin rafts. These data obtained using supported lipid bilayers provide the first direct evidence that the nature of the membrane-anchoring domain influences the association of a protein with lipid rafts and that acyl chain length hydrophobic mismatch influences the distribution of GPI-anchored proteins in rafts.  相似文献   

6.
The fluorescent sterol dehydroergosterol (DHE) is often used as a marker for cholesterol in cellular studies. We show by vesicle fluctuation analysis that DHE has a lower ability than cholesterol to stiffen lipid bilayers suggesting less efficient packing with phospholipid acyl chains. Despite this difference, we found by fluorescence and atomic force microscopy, that DHE induces liquid-ordered/-disordered coexistent domains in giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs) and supported bilayers made of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC), dioleylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC) and DHE or cholesterol. DHE-induced phases have a height difference of 0.9-1 nm similar as known for cholesterol-containing domains. DHE not only promotes formation of liquid-liquid immiscibility but also shows strong partition preference for the liquid-ordered phase further supporting its suitability as cholesterol probe.  相似文献   

7.
The effects of ceramide incorporation in supported bilayers prepared from ternary lipid mixtures which have small nanoscale domains have been examined using atomic force and fluorescence microscopy. Both direct ceramide incorporation in vesicles used to prepare the supported bilayers and enzymatic hydrolysis of SM by sphingomyelinase were compared for membranes prepared from 5:5:1 DOPC/sphingomyelin/cholesterol mixtures. Both methods of ceramide incorporation resulted in enlargement of the initial small ordered domains. However, enzymatic ceramide generation led to a much more pronounced restructuring of the bilayer to give large clusters of domains with adjacent areas of a lower phase. The individual domains were heterogeneous with two distinct heights, the highest of which is assigned to a ceramide-rich phase which is hypothesized to occur via ceramide flip-flop to the lower leaflet with formation of a raised domain due to negative membrane curvature. A combination of AFM and fluorescence showed that the bilayer restructuring starts rapidly after enzyme addition, with formation of large clusters of domains at sites of high enzyme activity. The clustering of domains is accompanied by redistribution of fluid phase to the periphery of the domain clusters and there is a continued slow evolution of the bilayer over a period of an hour or more after the enzyme is removed. The relevance of the observed clustering of small nanoscale domains to the postulated coalescence of raft domains to form large signaling platforms is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
The effects of ceramide incorporation in supported bilayers prepared from ternary lipid mixtures which have small nanoscale domains have been examined using atomic force and fluorescence microscopy. Both direct ceramide incorporation in vesicles used to prepare the supported bilayers and enzymatic hydrolysis of SM by sphingomyelinase were compared for membranes prepared from 5:5:1 DOPC/sphingomyelin/cholesterol mixtures. Both methods of ceramide incorporation resulted in enlargement of the initial small ordered domains. However, enzymatic ceramide generation led to a much more pronounced restructuring of the bilayer to give large clusters of domains with adjacent areas of a lower phase. The individual domains were heterogeneous with two distinct heights, the highest of which is assigned to a ceramide-rich phase which is hypothesized to occur via ceramide flip-flop to the lower leaflet with formation of a raised domain due to negative membrane curvature. A combination of AFM and fluorescence showed that the bilayer restructuring starts rapidly after enzyme addition, with formation of large clusters of domains at sites of high enzyme activity. The clustering of domains is accompanied by redistribution of fluid phase to the periphery of the domain clusters and there is a continued slow evolution of the bilayer over a period of an hour or more after the enzyme is removed. The relevance of the observed clustering of small nanoscale domains to the postulated coalescence of raft domains to form large signaling platforms is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Biomembranes are not homogeneous, they present a lateral segregation of lipids and proteins which leads to the formation of detergent-resistant domains, also called “rafts”. These rafts are particularly enriched in sphingolipids and cholesterol. Despite the huge body of literature on raft insolubility in non-ionic detergents, the mechanisms governing their resistance at the nanometer scale still remain poorly documented. Herein, we report a real-time atomic force microscopy (AFM) study of model lipid bilayers exposed to Triton X-100 (TX-100) at different concentrations. Different kinds of supported bilayers were prepared with dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC), sphingomyelin (SM) and cholesterol (Chol). The DOPC/SM 1:1 (mol/mol) membrane served as the non-resistant control, and DOPC/SM/Chol 2:1:1 (mol/mol/mol) corresponded to the raft-mimicking composition. For all the lipid compositions tested, AFM imaging revealed that TX-100 immediately solubilized the DOPC fluid phase leaving resistant patches of membrane. For the DOPC/SM bilayers, the remaining SM-enriched patches were slowly perforated leaving crumbled features reminiscent of the initial domains. For the raft model mixture, no holes appeared in the remaining SM/Chol patches and some erosion occurred. This work provides new, nanoscale information on the biomembranes' resistance to the TX-100-mediated solubilization, and especially about the influence of Chol.  相似文献   

10.
The toxicity of Loxosceles spider venom has been attributed to a rare enzyme, sphingomyelinase D, which transforms sphingomyelin to ceramide-1-phosphate. The bases of its inflammatory and dermonecrotic activity, however, remain unclear. In this work the effects of ceramide-1-phosphate on model membranes were studied both by in situ generation of this lipid using a recombinant sphingomyelinase D from the spider Loxosceles laeta and by pre-mixing it with sphingomyelin and cholesterol. The systems of choice were large unilamellar vesicles for bulk studies (enzyme kinetics, fluorescence spectroscopy and dynamic light scattering) and giant unilamellar vesicles for fluorescence microscopy examination using a variety of fluorescent probes. The influence of membrane lateral structure on the kinetics of enzyme activity and the consequences of enzyme activity on the structure of target membranes containing sphingomyelin were examined. The findings indicate that: 1) ceramide-1-phosphate (particularly lauroyl ceramide-1-phosphate) can be incorporated into sphingomyelin bilayers in a concentration-dependent manner and generates coexistence of liquid disordered/solid ordered domains, 2) the activity of sphingomyelinase D is clearly influenced by the supramolecular organization of its substrate in membranes and, 3) in situ ceramide-1-phosphate generation by enzymatic activity profoundly alters the lateral structure and morphology of the target membranes.  相似文献   

11.
Ceramide-induced alterations in the lateral organization of membrane proteins can be involved in several biological contexts, ranging from apoptosis to viral infections. In order to investigate such alterations in a simple model, we used a combined approach of atomic force microscopy, scanning fluorescence correlation spectroscopy and confocal fluorescence imaging to study the partitioning of different membrane components in sphingomyelin/dioleoyl-phosphatidylcholine/cholesterol/ceramide supported bilayers. Such model membranes exhibit coexistence of liquid-disordered, liquid-ordered (raft-like) and ceramide-rich lipid phases. Our results show that components with poor affinity toward the liquid-ordered phase, such as several fluorescent lipid analogues or the synaptic protein Synaptobrevin 2, are excluded from ceramide-rich domains. Conversely, we show for the first time that the raft-associated protein placental alkaline phosphatase (GPI-PLAP) and the ganglioside GM1 are enriched in such domains, while exhibiting a strong decrease in lateral diffusion. Analogue modulation of the local concentration and dynamics of membrane proteins/receptors by ceramide can be of crucial importance for the biological functions of cell membranes.  相似文献   

12.
Ceramide-induced alterations in the lateral organization of membrane proteins can be involved in several biological contexts, ranging from apoptosis to viral infections. In order to investigate such alterations in a simple model, we used a combined approach of atomic force microscopy, scanning fluorescence correlation spectroscopy and confocal fluorescence imaging to study the partitioning of different membrane components in sphingomyelin/dioleoyl-phosphatidylcholine/cholesterol/ceramide supported bilayers. Such model membranes exhibit coexistence of liquid-disordered, liquid-ordered (raft-like) and ceramide-rich lipid phases. Our results show that components with poor affinity toward the liquid-ordered phase, such as several fluorescent lipid analogues or the synaptic protein Synaptobrevin 2, are excluded from ceramide-rich domains. Conversely, we show for the first time that the raft-associated protein placental alkaline phosphatase (GPI-PLAP) and the ganglioside GM1 are enriched in such domains, while exhibiting a strong decrease in lateral diffusion. Analogue modulation of the local concentration and dynamics of membrane proteins/receptors by ceramide can be of crucial importance for the biological functions of cell membranes.  相似文献   

13.
We report here on an in situ atomic force microscopy study of the interaction of indolicidin, a tryptophan-rich antimicrobial peptide, with phase-segregated zwitterionic DOPC/DSPC supported planar bilayers. By varying the peptide concentration and bilayer composition through the inclusion of anionic lipids (DOPG or DSPG), we found that indolicidin interacts with these model membranes in one of two concentration-dependent manners. At low peptide concentrations, indolicidin forms an amorphous layer on the fluid domains when these domains contain anionic lipids. At high peptide concentrations, indolicidin appears to initiate a lowering of the gel-phase domains independent of the presence of an anionic lipid. Similar studies performed using membrane-raft mimetic bilayers comprising 30mol% cholesterol/1:1 DOPC/egg sphingomyelin revealed that indolicidin does not form a carpet-like layer on the zwitterionic DOPC domains at low peptide concentrations and does not induce membrane lowering of the liquid-ordered sphingomyelin/cholesterol-rich domains at high peptide concentration. Simultaneous AFM-confocal microscopy imaging did however reveal that indolicidin preferentially inserts into the fluid-phase DOPC domains. These data suggest that the indolicidin-membrane association is influenced greatly by specific electrostatic interactions, lipid fluidity, and peptide concentration. These insights provide a glimpse into the mechanism of the membrane selectivity of antibacterial peptides and suggest a powerful correlated approach for characterizing peptide-membrane interactions.  相似文献   

14.
Physical characteristics of binding of protein kinase C with sphingomyelin/cholesterol lipid bilayers were analysed using three complementary approaches: acrylodan fluorescence, fluorescence energy transfer and quenching of tryptophan fluorescence. It was demonstrated that sphingomyelin/cholesterol lipid membranes were available for protein kinase C binding. The intensity of the binding was dependent on the sphingomyelin content. The results of quenching of intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence showed that the enzyme molecule penetrated the sphingomyelin/cholesterol lipid bilayer to the C-16 position of labeled fatty acid probes. Our results also showed sphingomyelin itself restrains protein kinase C activity. A possible explanation for our results is that caveolae function as signaling storage devices.  相似文献   

15.
Biomembranes are not homogeneous, they present a lateral segregation of lipids and proteins which leads to the formation of detergent-resistant domains, also called "rafts". These rafts are particularly enriched in sphingolipids and cholesterol. Despite the huge body of literature on raft insolubility in non-ionic detergents, the mechanisms governing their resistance at the nanometer scale still remain poorly documented. Herein, we report a real-time atomic force microscopy (AFM) study of model lipid bilayers exposed to Triton X-100 (TX-100) at different concentrations. Different kinds of supported bilayers were prepared with dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC), sphingomyelin (SM) and cholesterol (Chol). The DOPC/SM 1:1 (mol/mol) membrane served as the non-resistant control, and DOPC/SM/Chol 2:1:1 (mol/mol/mol) corresponded to the raft-mimicking composition. For all the lipid compositions tested, AFM imaging revealed that TX-100 immediately solubilized the DOPC fluid phase leaving resistant patches of membrane. For the DOPC/SM bilayers, the remaining SM-enriched patches were slowly perforated leaving crumbled features reminiscent of the initial domains. For the raft model mixture, no holes appeared in the remaining SM/Chol patches and some erosion occurred. This work provides new, nanoscale information on the biomembranes' resistance to the TX-100-mediated solubilization, and especially about the influence of Chol.  相似文献   

16.
Long-chain saturated ceramides possess the ability to form gel domains in fluid bilayer membranes. Such domains may also contain sphingomyelin, but generally exclude cholesterol. We studied the effect of N-acyl chain methylations on the ability of ceramide to form ceramide- and sphingomyelin-containing gel domains that displace sterol. Fluorescence quenching of probes displaying different lateral partitioning in heterogeneous lipid bilayers showed that the methyl branches induced position-dependent changes in the lateral distribution of the ceramides. Distally monomethylated ceramides interacted with sphingomyelin and displaced sterol, whereas proximally monomethylated and polymethylated ceramides appeared to be located outside of sterol/sphingomyelin-enriched domains. The branched ceramides also markedly reduced the bilayer affinity for sterol as determined from the equilibrium partitioning of sterol between lipid vesicles and cyclodextrin. Altogether, alterations in intermolecular interactions induced by the methyl branches markedly affected the molecular properties of ceramide in artificial bilayers.  相似文献   

17.
One key tenet of the raft hypothesis is that the formation of glycosphingolipid- and cholesterol-rich lipid domains can be driven solely by characteristic lipid-lipid interactions, suggesting that rafts ought to form in model membranes composed of appropriate lipids. In fact, domains with raft-like properties were found to coexist with fluid lipid regions in both planar supported lipid layers and in giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs) formed from 1) equimolar mixtures of phospholipid-cholesterol-sphingomyelin or 2) natural lipids extracted from brush border membranes that are rich in sphingomyelin and cholesterol. Employing headgroup-labeled fluorescent phospholipid analogs in planar supported lipid layers, domains typically several microns in diameter were observed by fluorescence microscopy at room temperature (24 degrees C) whereas non-raft mixtures (PC-cholesterol) appeared homogeneous. Both raft and non-raft domains were fluid-like, although diffusion was slower in raft domains, and the probe could exchange between the two phases. Consistent with the raft hypothesis, GM1, a glycosphingolipid (GSL), was highly enriched in the more ordered domains and resistant to detergent extraction, which disrupted the GSL-depleted phase. To exclude the possibility that the domain structure was an artifact caused by the lipid layer support, GUVs were formed from the synthetic and natural lipid mixtures, in which the probe, LAURDAN, was incorporated. The emission spectrum of LAURDAN was examined by two-photon fluorescence microscopy, which allowed identification of regions with high or low order of lipid acyl chain alignment. In GUVs formed from the raft lipid mixture or from brush border membrane lipids an array of more ordered and less ordered domains that were in register in both monolayers could reversibly be formed and disrupted upon cooling and heating. Overall, the notion that in biomembranes selected lipids could laterally aggregate to form more ordered, detergent-resistant lipid rafts into which glycosphingolipids partition is strongly supported by this study.  相似文献   

18.
The ability of membrane components to arrange themselves heterogeneously within the bilayer induces the formation of microdomains. Much work has been devoted to mimicking domain-assembly in artificial bilayers and characterizing their physico-chemical properties. Ternary lipid mixtures composed of unsaturated phospholipids, sphingomyelin and cholesterol give rise to large, round domains. Here, we replaced the unsaturated phospholipid in the ternary mixture with sphingomyelin and cholesterol by saturated glycero-phospholipids of different chain length and characterized the critical role of cholesterol in sorting these lipids by confocal imaging and fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS). More cholesterol is needed to obtain phase segregation in ternary mixtures, in which the unsaturated phospholipid is replaced by a saturated one. Finally, lipid dynamics in distinct phases is very low and astonishingly similar, thereby suggesting the poor ability of cholesterol in sorting short-chain saturated glycero-phospholipids and sphingomyelin.  相似文献   

19.
Understanding drug-biomembrane interactions at high resolution is a key issue in current biophysical and pharmaceutical research. Here we used real-time atomic force microscopy (AFM) imaging to visualize the interaction of the antibiotic azithromycin with lipid domains in model biomembranes. Various supported lipid bilayers were prepared by fusion of unilamellar vesicles on mica and imaged in buffer solution. Phase-separation was observed in the form of domains made of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC), sphingomyelin (SM), or SM/cholesterol (SM/Chl) surrounded by a fluid matrix of dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC). Time-lapse images collected following addition of 1 mM azithromycin revealed progressive erosion and disappearance of DPPC gel domains within 60 min. We attribute this effect to the disruption of the tight molecular packing of the DPPC molecules by the drug, in agreement with earlier biophysical experiments. By contrast, SM and SM-Chl domains were not modified by azithromycin. We suggest that the higher membrane stability of SM-containing domains results from stronger intermolecular interactions between SM molecules. This work provides direct evidence that the perturbation of lipid domains by azithromycin strongly depends on the lipid nature and opens the door for developing new applications in membrane biophysics and pharmacology.  相似文献   

20.
Understanding drug-biomembrane interactions at high resolution is a key issue in current biophysical and pharmaceutical research. Here we used real-time atomic force microscopy (AFM) imaging to visualize the interaction of the antibiotic azithromycin with lipid domains in model biomembranes. Various supported lipid bilayers were prepared by fusion of unilamellar vesicles on mica and imaged in buffer solution. Phase-separation was observed in the form of domains made of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC), sphingomyelin (SM), or SM/cholesterol (SM/Chl) surrounded by a fluid matrix of dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC). Time-lapse images collected following addition of 1 mM azithromycin revealed progressive erosion and disappearance of DPPC gel domains within 60 min. We attribute this effect to the disruption of the tight molecular packing of the DPPC molecules by the drug, in agreement with earlier biophysical experiments. By contrast, SM and SM-Chl domains were not modified by azithromycin. We suggest that the higher membrane stability of SM-containing domains results from stronger intermolecular interactions between SM molecules. This work provides direct evidence that the perturbation of lipid domains by azithromycin strongly depends on the lipid nature and opens the door for developing new applications in membrane biophysics and pharmacology.  相似文献   

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