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1.
Large unilamellar vesicles, prepared by a petroleum ether vaporization method, were compared to multilamellar vesicles with respect to a number of physical and functional properties. Rotational correlation time approximations, derived from ESR spectra of both hydrophilic (3-doxyl cholestane) and hydrophobic (3-doxyl androstanol) steroid spin probes, indicated similar molecular packing of lipids in bilayers of multilamellar and large unilamellar liposomes. Light scattering measurements demonstrated a reduction in apparent absorbance of large unilamellar vesicles, suggesting loss of multilamellar structure which was confirmed by electron microscopy. Furthermore, large unilamellar vesicles exhibited enhanced passive diffusion rates of small solutes, releasing a greater percentage of their contents within 90 min than multilamellar vesicles, and reflecting the less restricted diffusion of a unilamellar system. The volume trapping capacity of large unilamellar vesicles far exceeded that of multilamellar liposomes, except in the presence of a trapped protein, soy bean trypsin inhibitor, which reduced the volume of the aqueous compartments of large unilamellar vesicles. Finally, measurement of vesicle diameters from electron micrographs of large unilamellar vesicles showed a vesicle size distribution predominantly in the range of 0.1–0.4 μm with a mean diameter of 0.21 μm.  相似文献   

2.
Because gallstones form so frequently in human bile, pathophysiologically relevant supersaturated model biles are commonly employed to study cholesterol crystal formation. We used cryo-transmission electron microscopy, complemented by polarizing light microscopy, to investigate early stages of cholesterol nucleation in model bile. In the system studied, the proposed microscopic sequence involves the evolution of small unilamellar to multilamellar vesicles to lamellar liquid crystals and finally to cholesterol crystals. Small aliquots of a concentrated (total lipid concentration = 29.2 g/dl) model bile containing 8.5% cholesterol, 22.9% egg yolk lecithin, and 68.6% taurocholate (all mole %) were vitrified at 2 min to 20 days after fourfold dilution to induce supersaturation. Mixed micelles together with a category of vesicles denoted primordial, small unilamellar vesicles of two distinct morphologies (sphere/ellipsoid and cylinder/arachoid), large unilamellar vesicles, multilamellar vesicles, and cholesterol monohydrate crystals were imaged. No evidence of aggregation/fusion of small unilamellar vesicles to form multilamellar vesicles was detected. Low numbers of multilamellar vesicles were present, some of which were sufficiently large to be identified as liquid crystals by polarizing light microscopy. Dimensions, surface areas, and volumes of spherical/ellipsoidal and cylindrical/arachoidal vesicles were quantified. Early stages in the separation of vesicles from micelles, referred to as primordial vesicles, were imaged 23-31 min after dilution. Observed structures such as enlarged micelles in primordial vesicle interiors, segments of bilayer, and faceted edges at primordial vesicle peripheries are probably early stages of small unilamellar vesicle assembly. A decrease in the mean surface area of spherical/ellipsoidal vesicles was correlated with the increased production of cholesterol crystals at 10-20 days after supersaturation by dilution, supporting the role of small unilamellar vesicles as key players in cholesterol nucleation and as cholesterol donors to crystals. This is the first visualization of an intermediate structure that has been temporally linked to the development of small unilamellar vesicles in the separation of vesicles from micelles in a model bile and suggests a time-resolved system for further investigation.  相似文献   

3.
The characteristics of small unilamellar, large unilamellar and large multilamellar vesicles of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine and their interaction with alpha-lactalbumin are compared at pH 4. (1) By differential scanning calorimetry and from steady-state fluorescence anisotropy data of the lipophilic probe 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene it is shown that the transition characteristics of the phospholipids in the large unilamellar vesicles resemble more those of the multilamellar vesicles than of the small unilamellar vesicles. (2) The size and composition of the lipid-protein complex formed with alpha-lactalbumin around the transition temperature of the lipid are independent of the vesicle type used. Fluorescence anisotropy data indicate that in this complex the motions of the lipid molecules are strongly restricted in the presence of alpha-lactalbumin. (3) The previous data and a comparison of the enthalpy changes, delta H, of the interaction of the three vesicle types with alpha-lactalbumin allow us to derive that the enthalpy state of the small unilamellar vesicles just below 24 degrees C is about 24 kJ/mol lipid higher than the enthalpy state of both large vesicle types at the same temperature. The abrupt transition from endothermic to exothermic delta H values around 24 degrees C for large vesicles approximates the transition enthalpy of the pure phospholipid.  相似文献   

4.
Preparation and some properties of giant liposomes and proteoliposomes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Optimal conditions for formation of giant liposomes and proteoliposomes were investigated. A suspension of small unilamellar vesicles made of various phospholipids in a buffer of 0-3 M KCl, 0.1 mM EDTA, and 20 mM MOPS (pH 7.0) was subjected to a freeze-thaw treatment. Giant multilamellar liposomes of diameter ranging from 10 to 60 microns were found to form from phospholipid mixtures containing phosphatidylethanolamine as a major component and phosphatidylserine as a minor component. The concentration of KCl optimal for the giant vesicle formation was 30-500 mM. By applying a patch-pipette to a giant liposome, suitable conditions for obtaining a high-resistance (giga-ohm) seal were sought. It was found that use of a patch-pipette of relatively small tip diameter (less than 1 micron), the presence of divalent metal cations in the suspension medium and inflation of vesicles in a hypotonic solution facilitated giga-seal formation. In a suspension of asolectin (soybean phospholipid) vesicles which had been subjected to the freeze-thaw treatment, giant unilamellar vesicles were found. They could be held on the tip of a suction pipette and impaled with a microelectrode filled with an EGTA solution. Small unilamellar proteoliposomes were prepared by the cholate-dialysis method from asolectin and sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles, and were subjected to a freeze-thaw cycle. When the ratio of exogenous phospholipid to protein was larger than 10, giant multilamellar vesicles were formed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
Catalyzed polymerization reactions represent a primary anabolic activity of all cells. It can be assumed that early cells carried out such reactions, in which macromolecular catalysts were encapsulated within some type of boundary membrane. In the experiments described here, we show that a template-independent RNA polymerase (polynucleotide phosphorylase) can be encapsulated in dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine vesicles without substrate. When the substrate adenosine diphosphate (ADP) was provided externally, long-chain RNA polymers were synthesized within the vesicles. Substrate flux was maximized by maintaining the vesicles at the phase transition temperature of the component lipid. A protease was introduced externally as an additional control. Free enzyme was inactivated under identical conditions. RNA products were visualized in situ by ethidium bromide fluorescence. The products were harvested from the liposomes, radiolabeled, and analyzed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Encapsulated catalysts represent a model for primitive cellular systems in which an RNA polymerase was entrapped within a protected microenvironment.Abbreviations ADP adenosine diphosphate - DMPC dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine - EDTA ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid - LUV large unilamellar vesicle - MLV multilamellar vesicle - PAGE polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - PNPase or PNP polynucleotide phosphorylase - SUV small unilamellar vesicle Correspondence to.: A.C. Chakrabarti  相似文献   

6.
Unilamellar vesicle populations having a narrow size distribution and mean radius below 100 nm are preferred for drug delivery applications. In the present work, 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC) was used to prepare giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs) by electroformation and multilamellar vesicles (MLVs) by thin film hydration. Our experiments show that in contrast to MLVs, a single-pass extrusion of GUVs through track-etched polycarbonate membranes at moderate pressure differences is sufficient to produce small liposomes having low polydispersity index. Moreover, we observe that the drug encapsulating potential of extruded liposomes obtained from GUVs is significantly higher compared to liposomes prepared by extrusion of MLVs. Furthermore, our experiments carried out for varying membrane pore diameters and extrusion pressures suggest that the size of extruded liposomes is a function of the velocity of GUV suspensions in the membrane pore.  相似文献   

7.
Differential scanning calorimetry and freeze-fracture electron microscopy have been used to characterize the phase behavior and morphology of two types of unilamellar vesicles composed of synthetic phosphatidylcholines. The first type displayed an average diameter of roughly 100 nm and was formed by slow dilution and dialysis of octylglucoside-solubilized lipid. These large, unilamellar vesicles were termed dialyzed, octylglucoside vesicles and could be obtained as a fairly well defined and uniform population of vesicles. The second vesicle type was prepared by a unique procedure involving dialysis of deoxycholate-solubilized lipid at its pre-transition temperature. This procedure produced a much more heterogeneous distribution of vesicle sizes (500 to 4000 nm in diameter) and left some dilamellar and oligolamellar species which could not be conveniently separated from the giant, unilamellar vesicles constituting the major portion of the sample. Both populations of vesicles displayed phase behavior similar, but not identical to that of large, multilamellar vesicles (LMV). Fracture-face morphology of the gel phase was also observed to differ between the two unilamellar and the multilamellar species. LMV have previously been shown to have clear undulated or banded fracture-faces in the P beta phase, while octylglucoside vesicles are shown here to have facetted fracture-faces. Giant, unilamellar vesicles displayed a faint banded morphology similar to but less distinct than that of the LMV P beta phase. These results have demonstrated that bilayer apposition is not required to support the banded fracture-face morphology characteristic of the P beta phase but that a limiting curvature is necessary.  相似文献   

8.
Injection of DNA into liposomes by bacteriophage lambda   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Small unilamellar vesicles (75-100 nm diameter) and large liposomes (greater than 1 micron in diameter) were prepared containing the lamB protein, an outer membrane protein of Escherichia coli and Shigella which serves as the receptor for bacteriophage lambda. Bacteriophage were observed to bind to these liposomes and vesicles by their tails and in most cases the heads of the bound bacteriophage appeared empty or partially empty of DNA. The lambda DNA was usually only partially ejected from the bacteriophage head when small unilamellar liposomes were used, presumably because the vesicles are too small to contain all the DNA. The partially ejected DNA was not susceptible to DNase unless the vesicle bilayer was first disrupted suggesting that DNA injection of phage DNA into the vesicle had occurred. After disruption of these vesicles on electron microscope grids, the bacteriophage are seen to have partially empty heads and a small mass of DNA associated with their tails. Using larger liposomes prepared by the fusion of lamB bearing vesicles with polyethylene glycol and n-hexyl bromide, the heads of most of the bound bacteriophage appeared to be completely empty of DNA. Disruption of these preparations on electron microscope grids revealed circular arrays of empty-headed bacteriophage surrounding DNA which had apparently been contained within the intact liposomes. These results indicate that high molecular weight DNA can be entrapped within liposomes with high efficiency by ejection from bacteriophage lambda. The possible use of these DNA-containing liposomes to facilitate gene transfer in eukaryotic cells is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
A study has been conducted of the interaction of the lytic toxin delta-haemolysin with vesicles of phospholipid, using electron microscopy, fluorescence depolarisation and excimer fluorescence. The peptide is shown to be a fusogen towards phosphatidylcholine vesicles in fluid phases. In the presence of gel phase lipid, fusion between fluid and gel phases is not seen. Fluid phase lipid vesicles are fused together to form large multilamellar structures, and initial vesicle size does not appear to be important since small unilamellar vesicles and large unilamellar vesicles are similarly affected. Fusogenic activity of delta-haemolysin is compared to that of melittin. The former is a progressive fusogen for fluid phase lipid, while the latter causes vesicle fusion in a manner related to occurrence of a lipid phase transition.  相似文献   

10.
Summary As determined by electron microscopy, lipid sonicated in buffer initially forms large vesicles which may be multilamellar. Prolonged sonication results in a population of vesicles of smaller, but not uniform diameters. These vesicles are bounded by only one bilayer. The lipid suspension can be partially fractionated according to size by column chromatography. A fraction of the eluate has been selected for further study. The weight-average vesicle weight and average radius of gyration are obtained by lightscattering measurements. The volume of buffer enclosed by the vesicles is determined using14C- or3H-labelled sugars as a marker. These values are in reasonable agreement with the corresponding values calculated from the size distribution of the vesicle fraction obtained by electron microscopy.  相似文献   

11.
Cryoelectron microscopy has been used to study the reorganization of unilamellar cationic lipid vesicles upon the addition of DNA. Unilamellar DNA-coated vesicles, as well as multilamellar DNA lipid complexes, could be observed. Also, DNA induced fusion of unilamellar vesicles was found. DNA appears to adsorb to the oppositely charged lipid bilayer in a monolayer of parallel helices and can act as a molecular "glue" enforcing close apposition of neighboring vesicle membranes. In samples with relatively high DNA content, there is evidence for DNA-induced aggregation and flattening of unilamellar vesicles. In these samples, multilamellar complexes are rare and contain only a small number of lamellae. At lower DNA contents, large multilamellar CL-DNA complexes, often with >10 bilayers, are formed. The multilamellar complexes in both types of sample frequently exhibit partially open bilayer segments on their outside surfaces. DNA seems to accumulate or coil near the edges of such unusually terminated membranes. Multilamellar lipid-DNA complexes appear to form by a mechanism that involves the rupture of an approaching vesicle and subsequent adsorption of its membrane to a "template" vesicle or a lipid-DNA complex.  相似文献   

12.
X Cao  R Bansil  D Gantz  E W Moore  N Niu    N H Afdhal 《Biophysical journal》1997,73(4):1932-1939
Dynamic light scattering was used to follow the tracer diffusion of phospholipid/cholesterol vesicles in aqueous polyacrylamide solutions and compared with the diffusive behavior of polystyrene (PS) latex spheres of comparable diameters. Over the range of the matrix concentration examined (Cp = 0.1-10 mg/ml), the diffusivities of the PS spheres and the large multilamellar vesicles exhibited the Stokes-Einstein (SE) relation, while the diffusivity of the unilamellar vesicles did not follow the increase of the solution's viscosity caused by the presence of the matrix molecules. The difference between the diffusion behaviors of unilamellar vesicles and hard PS spheres of similar size is possibly due to the flexibility of the lipid bilayer of the vesicles. The unilamellar vesicles are capable of changing their shape to move through the entangled polymer solution so that the hindrance to their diffusion due to the presence of the polymer chains is reduced, while the rigid PS spheres have little flexibility and they encounter greater resistance. The multilamellar vesicles are less flexible, thus their diffusion is similar to the hard PS spheres of similar diameter.  相似文献   

13.
Nystatin is a membrane-active polyene antibiotic that is thought to kill fungal cells by forming ion-permeable channels. In this report we have investigated nystatin interaction with phosphatidylcholine liposomes of different sizes (large and small unilamellar vesicles) by time-resolved fluorescence measurements. Our data show that the fluorescence emission decay kinetics of the antibiotic interacting with gel-phase 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine vesicles is controlled by the mean number of membrane-bound antibiotic molecules per liposome, . The transition from a monomeric to an oligomeric state of the antibiotic, which is associated with a sharp increase in nystatin mean fluorescence lifetime from approximately 7-10 to 35 ns, begins to occur at a critical concentration of 10 nystatin molecules per lipid vesicle. To gain further information about the transverse location (degree of penetration) of the membrane-bound antibiotic molecules, the spin-labeled fatty acids (5- and 16-doxyl stearic acids) were used in depth-dependent fluorescence quenching experiments. The results obtained show that monomeric nystatin is anchored at the phospholipid/water interface and suggest that nystatin oligomerization is accompanied by its insertion into the membrane. Globally, the experimental data was quantitatively described by a cooperative partition model which assumes that monomeric nystatin molecules partition into the lipid bilayer surface and reversibly assemble into aggregates of 6 +/- 2 antibiotic molecules.  相似文献   

14.
Tannic acid induces aggregation and formation of multilamellar vesicles when added to preparations of small unilamellar vesicles, specifically those containing phosphatidylcholine. Aggregation and clustering of vesicles was demonstrated by cryo-electron microscopy of thin films and by freeze-fracture technique. Turbidity measurements revealed an approximately one-to-one molar ratio between tannic acid and phosphatidylcholine necessary for a fast and massive aggregation of the small unilamellar vesicles. When tannic acid-induced aggregates were dehydrated and embedded for conventional thin-section electron microscopy, multilamellar vesicles were retrieved in thin sections. It is concluded from morphological studies, as well as previous tracer studies, that tannic acid, at least to a great extent, prevents the extraction of phosphatidylcholine. Multilamellar vesicles were also observed in tannic acid-treated vesicles prepared from total lipid extracts from either rabbit or rat hearts. Substantially more multilamellar vesicles were retrieved in the rabbit vesicle preparation. This difference can probably be explained by the difference in the proportion of the plasmalogen phosphatidylcholine, and possibly the content of sphingomyelin, in lipid extracts of rabbit and rat hearts. It is concluded that the dual effect (reduced extraction and aggregation) of tannic acid on phosphatidylcholines should be taken into consideration when tannic acid is used in tissue preparation.  相似文献   

15.
The abilities of Sepharose 2b (Pharmacia), Controlled Pore Glass (Electro-Nucleonics) and Bio-Gel A150m (Bio-Rad) to purify small unilamellar vesicles prepared by sonication and the ethanol-injection methods were compared. The Bio-Gel causes complete aggregation of the sonicated vesicles and partial aggregation of the ethanol-injection vesicles. Both Sepharose and Controlled Pore Glass are acceptable for purifying vesicles from multilamellar liposomes; however, neither will separate the vesicles from sonication by-products which might be formed.  相似文献   

16.
K M Eum  G Riedy  K H Langley  M F Roberts 《Biochemistry》1989,28(20):8206-8213
Small unilamellar vesicles which form when gel-state long-chain phosphatidylcholines are mixed with micellar short-chain lecithins undergo an increase in size as the long-chain species melts to its liquid-crystalline form. Analysis of the vesicle population with quasi-elastic light scattering shows that the particle size increases from 90-A radius to greater than 5000-A radius. Resonance energy transfer experiments show total mixing of lipid probes with unlabeled vesicles only when the Tm of the long-chain phosphatidylcholine is exceeded. This implies that the large size change represents a fusion process. Aqueous compartments are also mixed during this transition. 31P NMR analysis of the vesicle mixtures above the phase transition shows a great degree of heterogeneity with large unilamellar particles coexisting with oligo- and multilamellar structures. Upon cooling the vesicles below the Tm, the original size distribution (e.g., small unilamellar vesicles) is obtained, as monitored by both quasi-elastic light scattering and 31P NMR spectroscopy. This temperature-induced fusion of unilamellar vesicles is concentration dependent and can be abolished at lower total phospholipid concentrations. It occurs over a wide range of long-chain to short-chain ratios and occurs with 1-palmitoyl-2-stearoylphosphatidylcholine and dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine as well. Characterization of this fusion event is used to understand the anomalous kinetics of water-soluble phospholipases toward these unusual vesicles.  相似文献   

17.
Efficient functioning of enzymes inside liposomes would open new avenues for applications in biocatalysis and bioanalytical tools. In this study, the entrapment of amyloglucosidase (AMG) (EC 3.2.1.3) from Aspergillus niger into dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) multilamellar vesicles (MLVs) and large unilamellar vesicles (LUVs) was investigated. Negative-stain, freeze-fracture, and cryo-transmission electron microscopy images verified vesicle formation in the presence of AMG. Vesicles with entrapped AMG were isolated from the solution by centrifugation, and vesicle lamellarity was identified using fluorescence laser confocal microscopy. The kinetics of starch hydrolysis by AMG was modeled for two different systems, free enzyme in aqueous solution and entrapped enzyme within vesicles in aqueous suspension. For the free enzyme system, intrinsic kinetics were described by a Michaelis-Menten kinetic model with product inhibition. The kinetic constants, V max and K m , were determined by initial velocity measurements, and K i was obtained by fitting the model to experimental data of glucose concentration-time curves. Predicted concentration-time curves using these kinetic constants were in good agreement with experimental measurements. In the case of the vesicles, the time-dependence of product (glucose) formation was experimentally determined and simulated by considering the kinetic behavior of the enzyme and the permeation of substrate into the vesicle. Experimental results demonstrated that entrapped enzymes were much more stable than free enyzme. The entrapped enzyme could be recycled with retention of 60% activity after 3 cycles. These methodologies can be useful in evaluating other liposomal catalysis operations.  相似文献   

18.
Properties of large unilamellar vesicles (LUV), composed of phosphatidylcholine and prepared by reverse-phase evaporation and subsequent extrusion through Unipore polycarbonate membranes, have been investigated and compared with those of small unilamellar vesicles (SUV) and of multilamellar vesicles (MLV). The unilamellar nature of the LUV is shown by 1H-NMR using Pr3+ as a shift reagent. The gel to liquid-crystalline phase transition of LUV composed of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) monitored by differential scanning calorimetry, fluorescence polarization of diphenylhexatriene and 90 degrees light scattering, occurs at a slight lower temperature (40.8 degrees C) than that of MLV (42 degrees C) and is broadened by about 50%. The phase transition of SUV is shifted to considerably lower temperatures (mid-point, 38 degrees C) and extends over a wide temperature range. In LUV a well-defined pretransition is not observed. The permeability of LUV (DPPC) monitored by leakage of carboxyfluorescein, increases sharply at the phase transition temperature, and the extent of release is greater than that from MLV. Leakage from SUV occurs in a wide temperature range. Freeze-fracture electron microscopy of LUV (DPPC) reveals vesicles of 0.1-0.2 micron diameter with mostly smooth fracture faces. At temperatures below the phase transition, the larger vesicles in the population have angled faces, as do extruded MLV. A banded pattern, seen in MLV at temperatures between the pretransition and the main transition, is not observed in the smaller LUV, although the larger vesicles reveal a dimpled appearance.  相似文献   

19.
We studied the interaction of positively and negatively charged unilamellar and multilamellar phospholipid vesicles (liposomes) with rat-liver parenchymal cells in primary monolayer culture. Radioactive liposomal phosphatidylcholine was taken up more rapidly and to a larger extent from unilamellar than from multilamellar vesicles. No significant difference in uptake characteristics was observed between vesicles of different charge. The presence of serum greatly reduced uptake of liposomal phosphatidylcholine of both unilamellar and multilamellar vesicles. This serum effect was independent of surface charge of the vesicles. When cells were allowed to take up radioactive liposomal phospholipid and then incubated further in absence of vesicles, part of the radioactivity associated with the cells was released into the medium, most of it as water soluble degradation products. When cells were preincubated with vesicles containing horseradish peroxidase and then, after removal of the vesicles, further incubated, peroxidase activity could be demonstrated in the culture medium, part of it only after addition of Triton X-100. These observations were taken to indicate that part of the phospholipid taken up the cells represented vesicles binding to the cell surface rather than having been internalized. Vesicle-entrapped [125I]albumin was taken up by the cells and rapidly hydrolyzed as indicated by the appearance of radioactivity soluble in trichloroacetic acid within minutes after starting the incubation. No uptake of free albumin could be demonstrated. The kinetics of albumin uptake and release of trichloroacetic acid-soluble radioactivity from the cells suggest that, initially, liposomes are internalized predominantly by endocytosis, while during prolonged incubation fusion of the liposomal membrane with the plasma membrane gradually contributes more substantially to the overall uptake process. The significance of these findings is emphasized with special reference to the use of liposomes as intravenous carriers of enzymes or drugs.  相似文献   

20.
A prodrug (Fig. 1(IV)) is synthesized consisting of the beta-blocker bupranolol which is covalently linked to 1, 3-dipalmitoyl-2-succinyl-glycerol. The resulting lipid-like prodrug is amphipathic and surface active. It disperses readily in H2O above 30 degrees C forming a smectic lamellar phase. This prodrug bears one positive charge at neutral pH and hence the swelling behaviour of dispersions in H2O is similar to that of charged phospholipids: the dispersions show continuous swelling with increasing water content and consequently in the excess H2O region of the phase diagram the thermodynamically most stable structure is the unilamellar vesicle. This includes oligomeric vesicles which may be defined as unilamellar vesicles containing smaller, also unilamellar vesicles entrapped in their internal aqueous compartment. The prodrug dispersions in H2O are polydisperse with vesicle sizes ranging from 0.1 micron to several micron. Sonication of these dispersions produce small unilamellar vesicles of an average size and size distribution similar to sonicated egg phosphatidylcholine dispersions. Unsonicated dispersions of the prodrug in H2O undergo reversibly sharp order-disorder transitions at 32 degrees C with an enthalpy change of delta H = 10 kcal/mol. In sonicated aqueous dispersions this phase transition is asymmetric and significantly broadened indicating that the cooperativity is markedly reduced. The peak temperature and enthalpy change of this broad transition are reduced compared to the transition observed with unsonicated dispersions. The temperature dependence of the electron spin resonance (ESR) hyperfine splitting and order parameter also reflects the order-disorder transition. From ESR spin labeling it is concluded that in sonicated dispersions the prodrug molecule is more mobile and its anisotropy of motion is reduced compared to unsonicated dispersions. This result indicates that the molecular packing in the highly curved bilayers of small unilamellar prodrug vesicles is significantly perturbed compared to bilayers of unsonicated dispersions.  相似文献   

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