首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 875 毫秒
1.
The kinetics of the thermotropic lamellar gel (L beta')/lamellar liquid crystal (L alpha) and L alpha/inverted hexagonal (HII) phase transitions in fully hydrated dihexadecylphosphatidylethanolamine (DHPE) have been studied. Measurements were made by using time-resolved x-ray diffraction (TRXRD) to monitor progress of the transitions. In these studies microwave energy at 2.5 GHz was used to increase the sample temperature rapidly and uniformly through the phase transition regions. The L beta'/L alpha and L alpha/HII transitions of DHPE were examined under active microwave heating and passive cooling. The transitions were found to be repeatable and reversible, and to have an upper bound on the time required to complete the transition of less than 3 s. Regardless of the direction of the transition, both phase transitions appeared to be two-state with no accumulation of intermediates to within the sensitivity limits of the TRXRD method. The rate and amplitude of the temperature jump can be controlled by regulating microwave radiation input power. A temperature jump rate of 29 degrees C/s was obtained at a final microwave power setting of 120 W. Comparisons between previously reported fluid flow (Caffrey, M. 1985. Biochemistry. 24:4826-4844) and microwave heating studies suggest that the determination of limiting transit times will require faster heating.  相似文献   

2.
The kinetics and mechanism of the barotropic lamellar gel (L beta')/lamellar liquid crystal (L alpha) phase transition in fully hydrated 1,2-dihexadecyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (DHPE) has been studied using time-resolved x-ray diffraction (TRXRD). The phase transition was induced by pressure jumps of varying amplitudes in both the pressurization and depressurization directions at controlled temperature (78 degrees C). Both low- and wide-angle diffracted x rays were recorded simultaneously in live time using an x-ray-sensitive image intensifier coupled to a CCD camera and Super-VHS videotape recorder. Such an arrangement allowed for the direct and quantitative characterization of the long- (lamellar repeat spacing) and short-range order (chain packing) during a kinetic experiment. The image-processed live-time x-ray diffraction data were fitted using a nonlinear least-squares model, and the parameters of the fits were monitored continuously throughout the transition. The pressure-induced transitions from the L alpha to the L beta' phase and from the L beta' to the L alpha phase was two-state (no formation of intermediates apparent during the transition) to within the sensitivity limits of the method. The corresponding transit time (the time during which both phases coexist) associated with the long- and short-range order of the pressurization-induced L alpha-to-L beta' phase transition decreased to a limiting value of approximately 50 ms with increasing pressure jump amplitude. This limiting value was close to the response time of the detector/recording system. Thus, the intrinsic transit time of this transition in fully hydrated DHPE at 78 degrees C was less than or equal to 50 ms. In contrast, the depressurization-induced L beta'-to-L alpha phase transition was slower, taking approximately 1 s to complete, and occurred with no obvious dependence of the transit time on pressure jump amplitude. In the depressurization jump experiment, the lipid responded rapidly to the pressure jump in the L beta' phase up to the rate-determining L beta'-to-L alpha transition. Such behavior was examined carefully, as it could complicate the interpretation of phase transition kinetic measurements.  相似文献   

3.
M Caffrey  J Hogan    A Mencke 《Biophysical journal》1991,60(2):456-466
We present here the first study of the use of a pressure-jump to induce the ripple (P beta')/lamellar liquid crystal (L alpha) phase transition in fully hydrated 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DMPC). The transition was monitored by using time-resolved x-ray diffraction (TRXRD). Applying a pressure-jump from atmospheric to 11.3 MPa (1640 psig, 111.6 atm) in 2.5 s induces the L alpha to P beta' phase transition which takes place in two stages. The lamellar repeat spacing initially increases from a value of 66.0 +/- 0.1 A (n = 4) to a maximum value of 70.3 +/- 0.8 A (n = 4) after 10 s and after a further 100-150 s decreases slightly to 68.5 +/- 0.3 A (n = 4). The reverse transition takes place following a pressure jump in 5.5 s from 11.3 MPa to atmospheric pressure. Again, the transition occurs in two stages with the repeat spacing steadily decreasing from an initial value of 68.5 +/- 0.3 A (n = 3) to a minimum value of 66.6 +/- 0.3 A (n = 3) after 50 s and then increasing by approximately 0.5 A over a period of 100 s. The transition temperature increases linearly with pressure up to 14.1 MPa in accordance with the Clapeyron relation, giving a dT/dP value of 0.285 degrees C/MPa (28.5 degrees C/kbar) and an associated volume change of 40 microliters/g. A dynamic compressibility of 0.13 +/- 0.01 A/MPa has been determined for the L alpha phase. This value is compared with the equilibrium compressibilities of bilayer and nonbilayer phases reported in the literature. The results suggest testable mechanisms for the pressure-induced transition involving changes in periodicity, phase hydration, chain order, and orientation. A more complete understanding of the transition mechanism will require improvement in detector spatial resolution and sensitivity, and data on the pressure sensitivity of phase hydration.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of 2,4-dichlorophenol (DCP) on the structures and phase transitions of fully hydrated 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC) liposomes was studied using FT-Raman spectroscopy. Whereas the Raman frequency shifts of the most frequently investigated bands of C-C and C-H stretching regions only indicate the main phase transition (P(beta')-L(alpha)) of the pure DPPC/water system, the Raman shift of C-H scissoring vibration at 1440 cm(-1) was found to be able to reveal the pretransition (L(beta')-P(beta')) as well. Analyzing the spectral parameters of the trans band at 1128 cm(-1), which does not overlap with DCP vibrational modes, a continuous decrease of trans conformations was found with increasing DCP concentration at 26 degrees C accompanying the phase transitions L(beta')-P(beta') and P(beta')-L(alpha). The intensity ratio of the symmetrical and asymmetrical methylene stretching bands (at 2850 cm(-1) and 2880 cm(-1)), defined as the disorder parameter by Levin [Levin, I.W., 1985. Two types of hydrocarbon chain interdigitation in sphingomielin bilayers. Biochemistry 24, 6282-6286], indicated that in the interdigitated phase (L(I)) the order is markedly high and comparable with that of L(beta). Both the phase transition P(beta')-L(alpha) in the DCP/DPPC molar ratio range of 10/100-50/100 and the phase transition L(I)-L(alpha) led to a significant increase of disordered chains and the presence of DCP molecules induced a more disordered chain region than that observed in the L(alpha) phase of DPPC. Nevertheless, it was found that the L(alpha) phase with DCP contains approximately the same amount of trans conformers than that without DCP.  相似文献   

5.
Effects of ethanol on dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and distearoylphosphatidylcholine (DSPC) dispersions were investigated with an automated scanning density meter and a differential scanning calorimeter (DSC). The temperature-dependent profile of specific volume measured by the density meter clearly exhibited phase transitions of the DPPC and the DSPC dispersions as drastic changes in the thermal expansion coefficients. On increasing the ethanol concentration in the DPPC dispersions, the pretransition temperature was reduced faster than the main transition temperature was. An interdigitated gel phase (L beta I) appeared as a region of lower specific volume at the pretransition temperature when the ethanol concentration reached 40 mg/ml. The L beta I phase spread both its ends in an ethanol-dependent fashion, and the high-temperature end merged to the main transition at 50 mg/ml of ethanol. The temperature-ethanol phase diagram has been determined for DPPC. The transitions L beta' to L beta I and from L beta I to P beta' were also observed on the thermograms of DSC measurements. In the DSPC dispersions, the L beta I phase was induced between the L beta' and the P beta' phases by a lower ethanol concentration (about 20 mg/ml).  相似文献   

6.
A P Mencke  M Caffrey 《Biochemistry》1991,30(9):2453-2463
By using synchrotron radiation, a movie was made of the X-ray scattering pattern from a biological liquid crystal undergoing a phase transition induced by a pressure jump. The system studied includes the fully hydrated phospholipid dihexadecylphosphatidylethanolamine in the lamellar gel (L beta') phase at a temperature of 68 degrees C and a pressure of 9.7 MPa (1400 psig). Following the rapid release of pressure to atmospheric the L beta' phase transforms slowly into the lamellar liquid crystal (L alpha) phase. The pressure perturbation is applied with the intention of producing a sudden phase disequilibrium followed by monitoring the system as it relaxes to its new equilibrium condition. Remarkably, the proportion of sample in the L alpha phase grows linearly with time, taking 37 s to totally consume the L beta' phase. The time dependencies of radius, peak intensity, and width of the powder diffraction ring of the low-angle (001) lamellar reflections were obtained from the movie by image processing. The concept of an "effective pressure" is introduced to account for the temperature variations that accompany the phase transition and to establish that the observed large transit time is indeed intrinsic to the sample and not due to heat exchange with the environment. The reverse transformation, L alpha to L beta', induced by a sudden jump from atmospheric pressure to 9.7 MPa, is complete in less than 13 s. These measurements represent a new approach for studying the kinetics of lipid phase transitions and for gaining insights into the mechanism of the lamellar order/disorder transition.  相似文献   

7.
The bilayer phase transitions of palmitoylstearoyl-phosphatidylcholine (PSPC), diheptadecanoyl-PC (C17PC) and stearoylpalmitoyl-PC (SPPC) which have the same total carbon numbers in the two acyl chains were observed by differential scanning calorimetry and high-pressure optical method. As the temperature increased, these bilayers exhibited four phases of the subgel (Lc), lamellar gel (L beta'), ripple gel (P beta') and liquid crystal (L alpha), in turn. The Lc phase was observed only in the first heating scan after cold storage. The temperatures of the phase transitions were almost linearly elevated by applying pressure. The temperature-pressure phase diagrams and the thermodynamic quantities associated with the phase transitions were compared among the lipid bilayers. For all the bilayers studied, the pressure-induced interdigitated gel (L beta I) phase appeared above the critical interdigitation pressure (CIP) between the L beta' and P beta' phases. The CIPs for the PSPC, C17PC and SPPC bilayers were found to be 50.6, 79.1 and 93.0 MPa, respectively. Contribution of two acyl chains to thermodynamic properties for the phase transitions of asymmetric PSPC and SPPC bilayers was not even. The sn-2 acyl chain lengths of asymmetric PCs governed primarily the bilayer properties. The fluorescence spectra of Prodan in lipid bilayers showed the emission maxima characteristic of bilayer phases, which were dependent on the location of Prodan in the bilayers. Second derivative of fluorescent spectrum exhibited the original emission spectrum of Prodan to be composed of the distribution of Prodan into multiple locations in the lipid bilayer. The F'497/F'430 value, a ratio of second derivative of fluorescence intensity at 497 nm to that at 430 nm, is decisive evidence whether bilayer interdigitation will occur. With respect to the L beta'/L beta I phase transition in the SPPC bilayer, the emission maximum of Prodan exhibited the narrow-range red-shift from 441 to 449 nm, indicating that the L beta I phase in the SPPC bilayer has a less polar "pocket" formed by a space between uneven terminal methyl ends of the sn-1 and sn-2 chains, in which the Prodan molecule remains stably.  相似文献   

8.
J Shah  R I Duclos  Jr    G G Shipley 《Biophysical journal》1994,66(5):1469-1478
The structural and thermotropic properties of 1-stearoyl-2-acetyl-phosphatidylcholine (C(18):C(2)-PC) were studied as a function of hydration. A combination of differential scanning calorimetry and x-ray diffraction techniques have been used to investigate the phase behavior of C(18):C(2)-PC. At low hydration (e.g., 20% H2O), the differential scanning calorimetry heating curve shows a single reversible endothermic transition at 44.6 degrees C with transition enthalpy delta H = 6.4 kcal/mol. The x-ray diffraction pattern at -8 degrees C shows a lamellar structure with a small bilayer periodicity d = 46.3 A and two wide angle reflections at 4.3 and 3.95 A, characteristic of a tilted chain, L beta' bilayer gel structure. Above the main transition temperature, a liquid crystalline L alpha phase is observed with d = 53.3 A. Electron density profiles at 20% hydration suggest that C(18):C(2)-PC forms a fully interdigitated bilayer at -8 degrees C and a noninterdigitated, liquid crystalline phase above its transition temperature (T > Tm). Between 30 and 50% hydration, on heating C(18):C(2)-PC converts from a highly ordered, fully interdigitated gel phase (L beta') to a less ordered, interdigitated gel phase (L beta), which on further heating converts to a noninterdigitated liquid crystalline L alpha phase. However, the fully hydrated (> 60% H2O) C(18):C(2)-PC, after incubation at 0 degrees C, displays three endothermic transitions at 8.9 degrees C (transition I, delta H = 1.6 kcal/mol), 18.0 degrees C (transition II), and 20.1 degrees C (transition III, delta HII+III = 4.8 kcal/mol). X-ray diffraction at -8 degrees C again showed a lamellar gel phase (L beta') with a small periodicity d = 52.3 A. At 14 degrees C a less ordered, lamellar gel phase (L beta) is observed with d = 60.5 A. However, above the transition III, a broad, diffuse reflection is observed at approximately 39 A, consistent with the presence of a micellar phase. The following scheme is proposed for structural changes of fully hydrated C(18):C(2)-PC, occurring with temperature: L beta' (interdigitated)-->L beta (interdigitated)-->L alpha(noninterdigitated)-->Micelles. Thus, at low temperature C(18):C(2)-PC forms a bilayer gel phase (L beta') at all hydrations, whereas above the main transition temperature it forms a bilayer liquid crystalline phase L alpha at low hydrations and a micellar phase at high hydrations (> 60 wt% water).  相似文献   

9.
We have systematically investigated the effect of short chain alcohols (methanol to n-propanol) on the phase transitions of 1,2-dihexadecylphosphatidylcholine (DHPC), a lipid that forms a stable interdigitated gel phase (L beta I) in aqueous solution. The temperature of the low-temperature L beta I to P beta' phase transition of DHPC was found to increase with alcohol concentration, showing that alcohol interacts preferentially with the interdigitated phase relative to the non-interdigitated gel. The main transition of DHPC exhibited a biphasic effect of alcohol concentration similar to that previously observed with DPPC (Rowe, E.S. (1983) Biochemistry 22,3299-3305). As alcohol concentration is increased the lower L beta I to P beta' and main P beta' to L alpha transitions of DHPC merge at the threshold concentration of the biphasic effect, so that above this concentration there is one phase transition from L beta I directly to L alpha. This is analogous to DPPC above its biphasic threshold. Similar to DPPC, the transition between L beta I and L alpha exhibits marked hysteresis.  相似文献   

10.
E S Rowe  T A Cutrera 《Biochemistry》1990,29(45):10398-10404
It is well established that ethanol and other amphipathic molecules induce the formation of a fully interdigitated gel phase in saturated like-chain phosphatidylcholines (PC's). We have previously shown that the induction of interdigitation in PC's by ethanol is dependent upon the alcohol concentration, the lipid chain length, and the temperature [Nambi, P., Rowe, E. S. & McIntosh, T. J. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 9175-9182]. In the present study, we have used high-sensitivity differential scanning calorimetry to investigate the transitions of distearoylphosphatidylcholine between the noninterdigitated and the interdigitated phases. The enthalpy of the L beta' to L beta I transition is approximately half that of the L beta' to P beta' transition which occurs in the absence of ethanol. The reversibility of these transitions has also been investigated by employing both heating and cooling scans in order to establish the most stable phases as a function of temperature and ethanol concentration. It has been demonstrated that the transition to the interdigitated phase is reversible as a function of temperature. Kinetic studies on the reverse transition (L beta I to L beta') demonstrate that this transition can be very slow, requiring weeks to reach completion. The rate depends upon temperature and ethanol concentration. The slow phase changes mean that the lipid can exist for long periods of time in a phase structure which is not the most stable state. The biological significance of this type of lipid behavior is the implication that the phase structure of biological membranes may depend not only on the most stable phase structure of the lipids present but also on the synthetic pathway or other kinetic variables.  相似文献   

11.
The interaction of L-arginine with unilamellar liposomes of dihexadecylphosphate sodium salt (DHP-Na) has been investigated using calorimetric, light scattering, fluorescence spectroscopy and zeta-potential techniques. Heating from room temperature, the bilayer exhibits a phase transition from a subgel (L(c)) to the gel (L(beta')) phase as well as a pre-transition (L(beta')-P(beta')), which is followed by the main lipid phase transition (P(beta')-L(alpha)). Direct studies of the interaction of L-arginine with the DHP-Na bilayers via isothermal titration calorimetry at 27 degrees C depict significant differences between samples in the L(c) and the L(beta') phases reflecting the effect of molecular organization of the lipids upon the interaction. While L-arginine has only a small impact upon the L(c) to L(beta') phase transition, it affects more significantly the transition temperature as well as the shape of the DSC peaks of the main lipid phase transition. Based on fluorescence and zeta-potential studies, the permeability of L-arginine through the liposomal membrane is higher within the temperature range of the main lipid phase transition. Encapsulated l-arginine obstructs the formation of the subgel phase.  相似文献   

12.
Thermotropic transitions of dihexadecylphosphatidylcholine (DHPC) dispersions in hydrogen oxide (1H2O) and deuterium oxide (2H2O) were investigated by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). In DHPC dispersions, transition temperature between interdigitated gel phase (L beta I) and ripple phase (P beta') is lower in 2H2O than in 1H2O, and transition between the ripple phase (P beta') and fluid phase (L alpha) in 2H2O occurs at a temperature slightly higher than in 1H2O. In dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) dispersions, on the other hand, transition temperature between lamellar gel phase (L beta') and ripple phase is higher in 2H2O than in 1H2O. These results suggest that the interdigitated gel phase is more stable in 1H2O than in 2H2O. To account for the shift of transition temperature by the water substitution, difference of interfacial energies between these aqueous environments is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
M Caffrey 《Biochemistry》1985,24(18):4826-4844
A study of the kinetics and mechanism of the thermotropic lamellar gel/lamellar liquid-crystalline and lamellar/inverted hexagonal phase transition in dihexadecylphosphatidylethanolamine (DHPE) at various hydration levels has been carried out. Measurements were made by using a real-time X-ray diffraction method at the Cornell High Energy Synchrotron Source. This represents an extension of an earlier study concerning the lamellar gel/lamellar liquid-crystalline phase transition in dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine [Caffrey, M., & Bilderback, D. H. (1984) Biophys. J. 45, 627-631]. With DHPE, the chain-melting and the nonbilayer transitions were examined under active heating and passive cooling conditions by using a temperature jump to effect phase transformation. Measurements were made at hydration levels ranging from 0% to 60% (w/w) water, and in all cases, the transitions were found to be repeatable, be reversible, and have an upper bound on the transit times (time required to complete the transition) of less than or equal to 3 s. The shortest transit time recorded for the chain-melting and lamellar/hexagonal transitions was less than 1 s. At 8% (w/w) water, the transit times were still on the order of seconds even though the transition does not involve the intermediate L alpha phase. Note, the measured transit times are gross values incorporating the intrinsic transit time in addition to the time required to heat or cool the sample through the transition temperature range and to supply or remove the latent heat of the transition. Regardless of the direction of the transition, both appear to be two state to within the sensitivity limits of the real-time method. From simultaneous wide- and low-angle measurements at the lamellar chain-melting transition, loss of long-range order in the lamellar gel phase appears to precede the chain-melting process. On the basis of the real-time X-ray diffraction measurements, a mechanism is proposed for the lamellar/hexagonal phase transition. The mechanism does not involve large or energetically expensive molecular rearrangements, leads directly to a hexagonal lattice coplanar with the lamellar phase, incorporates facile reversibility, repeatability, and cooperativity, accounts for an observed, apparent memory in the hexagonal phase of the original lamellar phase orientation, and is consistent with the experimental observation of a predominantly two-state transition. In conjunction with the kinetic measurements, the DHPE/water phase diagram was constructed. At and above 12% (w/w) water, the thermotropic transition sequence is L beta'/L alpha/HII.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
We have synthesized a homologous series of saturated 1,2-di-O-n-acyl-3-O-(beta-D-galactopyranosyl)-sn-glycerols with odd- and even-numbered hydrocarbon chains ranging in length from 10 to 20 carbon atoms, and have investigated their physical properties using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), X-ray diffraction (XRD) and Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy. The DSC results show a complex pattern of phase behaviour, which in a typical preheated sample consists of a lower temperature, moderately energetic lamellar gel/lamellar liquid-crystalline (L(beta)/L(alpha)) phase transition and a higher temperature, weakly energetic lamellar/nonlamellar phase transition. On annealing at a suitable temperature below the L(beta)/L(alpha) phase transition, the L(beta) phase converts to a lamellar crystalline (L(c1)) phase which may undergo a highly energetic L(c1)/L(alpha) or L(c1)/inverted hexagonal (H(II)) phase transition at very high temperatures on subsequent heating or convert to a second L(c2) phase in certain long chain compounds on storage at or below 4 degrees C. The transition temperatures and phase assignments for these galactolipids are supported by our XRD and FTIR spectroscopic measurements. The phase transition temperatures of all of these events are higher than those of the comparable phase transitions exhibited by the corresponding diacyl alpha- and beta-D-glucosyl glycerols. In contrast, the L(beta)/L(alpha) and lamellar/nonlamellar phase transition temperatures of the beta-D-galactosyl glycerols are lower than those of the corresponding diacyl phosphatidylethanolamines (PEs) and these glycolipids form inverted cubic phases at temperatures between the lamellar and H(II) phase regions. Our FTIR measurements indicate that in the L(beta) phase, the hydrocarbon chains form a hexagonally packed structure in which the headgroup and interfacial region are undergoing rapid motion, whereas the L(c) phase consists of a more highly ordered, hydrogen-bonded phase, in which the chains are packed in an orthorhombic subcell similar to that reported for the diacyl-beta-D-glucosyl-sn-glycerols. A comparison of the DSC data presented here with our earlier studies of other diacyl glycolipids shows that the rate of conversion from the L(beta) to the L(c) phase in the beta-D-galactosyl glycerols is slightly faster than that seen in the alpha-D-glucosyl glycerols and much faster than that seen in the corresponding beta-D-glucosyl glycerols. The similarities between the FTIR spectra and the first-order spacings for the lamellar phases in both the beta-D-glucosyl and galactosyl glycerols suggest that the headgroup orientations may be similar in both beta-anomers in all of their lamellar phases. Thus, the differences in their L(beta)/L(c) conversion kinetics and the lamellar/nonlamellar phase properties of these lipids probably arise from subtly different hydration and H-bonding interactions in the headgroup and interfacial regions of these phases. In the latter case, such differences would be expected to alter the ability of the polar headgroup to counterbalance the volume of the hydrocarbon chains. This perspective is discussed in the context of the mechanism for the L(alpha)/H(II) phase transition which we recently proposed, based on our X-ray diffraction measurements of a series of PEs.  相似文献   

15.
The polymorphic and metastable phase behavior of monoelaidin dry and in excess water was studied by using high-sensitivity differential scanning calorimetry and time-resolved x-ray diffraction in the temperature range of 4 degrees C to 60 degrees C. To overcome problems associated with a pronounced thermal history-dependent phase behavior, simultaneous calorimetry and time-resolved x-ray diffraction measurements were performed on individual samples. Monoelaidin/water samples were prepared at room temperature and stored at 4 degrees C for up to 1 week before measurement. The initial heating scan from 4 degrees C to 60 degrees C showed complex phase behavior with the sample in the lamellar crystalline (Lc0) and cubic (Im3m, Q229) phases at low and high temperatures, respectively. The Lc0 phase transforms to the lamellar liquid crystalline (L alpha) phase at 38 degrees C. At 45 degrees C, multiple unresolved lines appeared that coexisted with those from the L alpha phase in the low-angle region of the diffraction pattern that have been assigned previously to the so-called X phase (Caffrey, 1987, 1989). With further heating the X phase converts to the Im3m cubic phase. Regardless of previous thermal history, cooling calorimetric scans revealed a single exotherm at 22 degrees C, which was assigned to an L alpha+cubic (Im3m, Q229)-to-lamellar gel (L beta) phase transition. The response of the sample to a cooling followed by a reheating or isothermal protocol depended on the length of time the sample was incubated at 4 degrees C. A model is proposed that reconciles the complex polymorphic, mesomorphic, and metastability interrelationships observed with this lipid/water system. Dry monoelaidin exists in the lamellar crystalline (beta) phase in the 4 degrees C to 45 degrees C range. The beta phase transforms to a second lamellar crystalline polymorph identified as beta* at 45 degrees C that subsequently melts at 57 degrees C. The beta phase observed with dry monoelaidin is identical to the LcO phase formed by monoelaidin that was dispersed in excess water and that had not been previously heated.  相似文献   

16.
Partitioning and molecular dynamics of 2,2,6,6,-tetramethylpiperedine-1-oxyl (TEMPO) nitroxide radicals in large unilamellar liposomes (LUV) composed from 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine were investigated by using very high frequency electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. Experiments carried out at a microwave frequency of 94.3 GHz completely resolved the TEMPO EPR spectrum in the aqueous and hydrocarbon phases. An accurate computer simulation method combined with Levenberg-Marquardt optimization was used to analyze the TEMPO EPR spectra in both phases. Spectral parameters extracted from the simulations gave the actual partitioning of the TEMPO probe between the LUV hydrocarbon and aqueous phases and allowed analysis of picosecond rotational dynamics of the probe in the LUV hydrocarbon phase. In very high frequency EPR experiments, phase transitions in the LUV-TEMPO system were observed as sharp changes in both partitioning and rotational correlation times of the TEMPO probe. The phase transition temperatures (40.5 +/- 0.2 and 32.7 +/- 0.5 degrees C) are in agreement with previously reported differential scanning microcalorimetry data. Spectral line widths were analyzed by using existing theoretical expressions for motionally narrowed nitroxide spectra. It was found that the motion of the small, nearly spherical, TEMPO probe can be well described by anisotropic Brownian diffusion in isotropic media and is not restricted by the much larger hydrocarbon chains existing in ripple structure (P beta') or fluid bilayer structure (L alpha) phases.  相似文献   

17.
F Zhang  E S Rowe 《Biochemistry》1992,31(7):2005-2011
The interactions of n-butanol with dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) were studied using titration calorimetry and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). DSC results indicated that n-butanol induces the interdigitated phase in DPPC above 10 mg/mL butanol. A new application of titration calorimetry for measuring partition coefficients of nonsaturating solutes into lipids was developed. The partition coefficients and the heat of binding of n-butanol into DPPC were measured for the L beta', P beta', L alpha, and L beta I phases of DPPC. The partition coefficients were temperature dependent and ranged from 70 to 110 for the L beta I phase, from 170 to 183 for the L alpha phase, and similar to that for the L beta I phase in the P beta' phase. The binding to the L beta' phase could not be detected, giving an upper limit for this partition coefficient of 23. The enthalpies for binding to the L beta I and L alpha phases were 1.0 and 1.5 kcal/mol, respectively. The van't Hoff enthalpy was in good agreement with the calorimetric enthalpy for the partitioning into the L alpha phase; however, it was greater than the calorimetric enthalpy for the L beta I phase, suggesting that the interaction of n-butanol with this phase is cooperative in some way.  相似文献   

18.
D P Siegel  J L Banschbach 《Biochemistry》1990,29(25):5975-5981
Inverted cubic (QII) phases form in hydrated N-methylated dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine (DOPE-Me). Previous work indicated that QII phases in this and other systems might be metastable structures. Whether or not QII phases are stable has important implications for models of the factors determining the relative stability of bilayer and nonbilayer phases and of the mechanisms of transitions between those phases. Here, using X-ray diffraction and very slow scan rate differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), we show that thermodynamically stable QII phases form slowly during incubation of multilamellar samples of DOPE-Me at constant temperature. The equilibrium L alpha/QII phase transition temperature is 62.2 +/- 1 degree C. The transition enthalpy is 174 +/- 34 cal/mol, about two-thirds of the L alpha/HII transition enthalpy observed at faster scan rates. This implies that the curvature free energy of lipids in QII phases is substantially lower than in L alpha phases and that this reduction is substantial compared to the reduction achieved in the HII phase. The L alpha/QII transition is slow and is not reliably detected with DSC until the temperature scan rate is reduced to ca. 1 degrees C/h. At faster scan rates, the HII phase forms at a reproducible temperature of 66 degrees C. This HII phase is metastable until ca. 72-79 degrees C, where the equilibrium QII/HII transition seems to occur. These results, as well as the induction of QII phases in similar systems by temperature cycling (observed by others), are consistent with a theory of L alpha/QII/HII transition mechanisms proposed earlier (Siegel, 1986c).  相似文献   

19.
The mechanism of the phase transition of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine multilayers freeze-dried from fully hydrated gel phase (L beta') in the presence of trehalose has been investigated by real-time X-ray diffraction methods. Sequential diffraction patterns were recorded with an accumulation time of 3 s during heating and 1.2 s during cooling between about 20 and 80 degrees C. A transition is observed in the range 47-53 degrees C that involves structural events typical of a lamellar gel-lamellar liquid-crystal (L beta--L alpha) transformation. This transition is completely reversible with a temperature hysteresis of 2-3 degrees C and thereby resembles the main phase transition of fully hydrated dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine multilayers. The mechanism of the transition from L beta to L alpha as seen in the wide-angle scattering profiles show that the sharp peak at about 0.41 nm, characteristic of the gel phase, broadens and shifts progressively to about 0.44 nm towards the end of the transition. A temperature jump of 6C degrees/s through the phase transition region of a freeze-dried dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine: trehalose mixture (molar ratio 1:1) showed that the phase transition had a relaxation time of about 2 s which is similar to that of the main transition in the fully hydrated lipid. X-ray diffraction studies of the melting of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine freeze-dried from the lamellar-gel phase in the absence of trehalose showed a transition at above 70 degrees C. The low-angle diffraction data of phospholipid/trehalose mixtures are consistent with an arrangement of trehalose molecules in a loosely packed 'monolayer' separating bilayers of phospholipid. Trehalose appears to reduce the direct interbilayer hydrogen bond coupling thereby modifying the thermal stability and the phase transition mechanism of the bilayers.  相似文献   

20.
The thermotropic phase behaviour of aqueous dispersions of some synthetic 1,2-di-O-alkyl-3-O-(beta-D-galactosyl)-rac-glycerols (rac-beta-D-GalDAGs) with both odd and even hydrocarbon chain lengths was studied by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), small-angle (SAXS) and wide-angle (WAXS) X-ray diffraction. DSC heating curves show a complex pattern of lamellar (L) and nonlamellar (NL) phase polymorphism dependent on the sample's thermal history. On cooling from 95 degrees C and immediate reheating, rac-beta-D-GalDAGs typically show a single, strongly energetic phase transition, corresponding to either a lamellar gel/liquid-crystalline (L(beta)/L(alpha)) phase transition (N< or =15 carbon atoms) or a lamellar gel/inverted hexagonal (L(beta)/H(II)) phase transition (N> or =16). At higher temperatures, some shorter chain compounds (N=10-13) exhibit additional endothermic phase transitions, identified as L/NL phase transitions using SAXS/WAXS. The NL morphology and the number of associated intermediate transitions vary with hydrocarbon chain length. Typically, at temperatures just above the L(alpha) phase boundary, a region of phase coexistence consisting of two inverted cubic (Q(II)) phases are observed. The space group of the cubic phase seen on initial heating has not been determined; however, on further heating, this Q(II) phase disappears, enabling the identification of the second Q(II) phase as Pn3 m (space group Q(224)). Only the Pn3 m phase is seen on cooling. Under suitable annealing conditions, rac-beta-D-GalDAGs rapidly form highly ordered lamellar-crystalline (L(c)) phases at temperatures above (N< or =15) or below (N=16-18) the L(beta)/L(alpha) phase transition temperature (T(m)). In the N< or =15 chain length lipids, DSC heating curves show two overlapping, highly energetic, endothermic peaks on heating above T(m); corresponding changes in the first-order spacings are observed by SAXS, accompanied by two different, complex patterns of reflections in the WAXS region. The WAXS data show that there is a difference in hydrocarbon chain packing, but no difference in bilayer dimensions or hydrocarbon chain tilt for these two L(c) phases (termed L(c1) and L(c2), respectively). Continued heating of suitably annealed, shorter chain rac-beta-D-GalDAGs from the L(c2) phase results in a phase transition to an L(alpha) phase and, on further heating, to the same Q(II) or H(II) phases observed on first heating. On reheating annealed samples with longer chain lengths, a subgel phase is formed. This is characterized by a single, poorly energetic endotherm visible below the T(m). SAXS/WAXS identifies this event as an L(c)/L(beta) phase transition. However, the WAXS reflections in the di-16:0 lipid do not entirely correspond to the reflections seen for either the L(c1) or L(c2) phases present in the shorter chain rac-beta-D-GalDAGs; rather these consist of a combination of L(c1), L(c2) and L(beta) reflections, consistent with DSC data where all three phase transitions occur within a span of 5 degrees C. At very long chain lengths (N> or =19), the L(beta)/L(c) conversion process is so slow that no L(c) phases are formed over the time scale of our experiments. The L(beta)/L(c) phase conversion process is significantly faster than that seen in the corresponding rac-beta-D-GlcDAGs, but is slower than in the 1,2-sn-beta-D-GalDAGs already studied. The L(alpha)/NL phase transition temperatures are also higher in the rac-beta-D-GalDAGs than in the corresponding rac-beta-D-GlcDAGs, suggesting that the orientation of the hydroxyl at position 4 and the chirality of the glycerol molecule in the lipid/water interface influence both the L(c) and NL phase properties of these lipids, probably by controlling the relative positions of hydrogen bond donors and acceptors in the polar region of the membrane.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号