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1.
Freely-diffusing phospholipid spin labels have been employed to study rhodopsin-lipid interactions in frog rod outer segment disc membranes. Examination of the ESR spectra leads us to the conclusion that there are two motionally distinguishable populations of lipid existing in frog rod outer segment membranes over a wide physiological temperature range. Each of the spin probes used shows a two-component electron spin resonance (ESR) spectrum, one component of which is motionally restricted on the ESR timescale, and represents between 33 and 40% of the total integrated spectral intensity. The second spectral component which accounts for the remainder of the spectral intensity possesses a lineshape characteristic of anisotropic motion in a lipid bilayer, very similar in shape to that observed from the same spin labels in dispersions of whole extracted frog rod outer segment lipid. The motionally restricted spectral component is attributed to those spin labels in contact with the surface of rhodospin, while the major component is believed to originate from spin labels in the fluid lipid bilayer region of the membranes. Calculations indicate that the motionally restricted lipid is sufficient to cover the protein surface. This population of lipids is shown here and elsewhere (Watts, A., Volotovski, I.D. and Marsh, D. (1979) Biochemistry 18, 5006-5013) to be by no means rigidly immobilized, having motion in the 20 ns time regime as opposed to motions in the one nanosecond time regime found in the fluid bilayer. Little selectivity for the motionally restricted population is observed between the different spin-labelled phospholipid classes nor with a spin-labelled fatty acid or sterol.  相似文献   

2.
Saturation transfer ESR has been used to study the dynamic behaviour of lipids in the appressed regions of thylakoid membranes from pea seedlings. Four different phospho- and galacto-lipid spin labels (phosphatidylcholine labelled at the 12 or 14 C-atom positions of the sn-2 chain, phosphatidylglycerol labelled at the 14-position of the sn-2 chain, and monogalactosyldiacylglycerol labelled at the 12-position of the sn-2 chain) were used to probe the lipid environment in photosystem II-enriched membranes prepared by detergent extraction. The ESR spectra show that the majority of the lipid in these preparations is strongly motionally restricted. Values for the effective rotational correlation times of the labelled chains were deduced from the lineheight ratios and integrals of thhe saturation transfer ESR spectra. The effective rotational correlation times were found to be in the 105 range, indicating a very low lipid chain mobility which correlates with the low lipid content of these preparations. Comparison of the effective rotational correlation times deduced from the different diagnostic regions of the spectrum revealed little anisotropy in the chain mobility, indicating that the dominant motional mode was trans-gauche isomerization. The effective rotational correlation times deduced from the spectral integrals were similar to those deduced from the lineheight ratios, consistent with the absence of any appreciable fluid lipid component in these preparations. The results also indicate some selectivity of interaction between the lipid species, with phosphatidylcholine exhibiting appreciably slower motion than either phosphatidylglycerol or monogalactosyldiacylglycerol.  相似文献   

3.
L I Horváth  P J Brophy  D Marsh 《Biochemistry》1988,27(14):5296-5304
The pH and salt dependences of the interaction of phosphatidic acid, phosphatidylserine, and stearic acid with myelin proteolipid apoprotein (PLP) in dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) recombinants have been studied by electron spin resonance spectroscopy, using spin-labeled lipids. The two-component spin-label spectra have been analyzed both by spectral subtraction and by simulation using the exchange-coupled Bloch equations to give the fraction of lipids motionally restricted by the protein and the rate of lipid exchange between the fluid and motionally restricted lipid populations. For stearic acid, phosphatidic acid, and phosphatidylserine, the fraction of motionally restricted spin-label increases with increasing pH, with pKa's of 7.7, 7.6, and ca. 9.4, respectively. The corresponding pKa's for the bulk lipid regions of the bilayer are estimated, from changes in the ESR spectra, to be 6.7, 7.4, and 11, respectively. In the dissociated state at pH 9.0, the fraction of motionally restricted component decreases with increasing salt concentration, reaching an approximately constant value at [NaCl] = 0.5-1.0 M for all three negatively charged lipids. The net decreases for stearic acid and phosphatidic acid are considerably smaller (by ca. 30%) than those obtained on protonating the two lipids, whereas for phosphatidylserine the fraction of motionally restricted lipid in high salt is reduced to that corresponding to phosphatidylcholine. For a fixed lipid/protein ratio, the on-rate for exchange at the lipid-protein interface is independent of the degree of selectivity and has a shallow temperature dependence, as expected for a diffusion-controlled process.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
The D-galactose-H(+) symport protein (GalP) of Escherichia coli is a homologue of the human glucose transport protein, GLUT1. After amplified expression of the GalP transporter in E. coli, lipid-protein interactions were studied in gradient-purified inner membranes by using spin-label electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. Phosphatidylethanolamine, -glycerol, -choline and -serine, in addition to phosphatidic and stearic acids, were spin-labelled at the 14 C-atom of the sn-2 chain. EPR spectra of these spin labels at probe amounts in GalP membranes consist of two components. One component corresponds to a lipid population whose motion is restricted by direct interaction with the transmembrane sections of the integral protein. The other component corresponds to a lipid population with greater chain mobility, and is similar to the single-component EPR spectrum of the spin-labelled lipids in membranes of E. coli lipid extract. Quantitation of the protein-interacting spin-label component allows determination of the stoichiometry and selectivity of lipid-protein interactions. On average, approximately 20 mol of lipid are motionally restricted per 52 kDa of protein in GalP membranes. At the pH of the transport assay, there is relatively little selectivity between the different phospholipids tested. Only stearic acid displays a stronger preferential interaction with this protein.  相似文献   

5.
Conventional electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra of lipids that are spin-labelled close to the terminal methyl end of the acyl chains are able to resolve the lipids directly contacting the protein from those in the fluid bilayer regions of the membrane. This allows determination of both the stoichiometry of lipid–protein interaction (i.e., number of lipid sites at the protein perimeter) and the selectivity of the protein for different lipid species (i.e., association constants relative to the background lipid). Spin-label EPR data are summarised for 20 or more different transmembrane peptides and proteins, and 7 distinct species of lipids. Lineshape simulations of the two-component conventional spin-label EPR spectra allow estimation of the rate at which protein-associated lipids exchange with those in the bulk fluid regions of the membrane. For lipids that do not display a selectivity for the protein, the intrinsic off-rates for exchange are in the region of 10 MHz: less than 10× slower than the rates of diffusive exchange in fluid lipid membranes. Lipids with an affinity for the protein, relative to the background lipid, have off-rates for leaving the protein that are correspondingly slower. Non-linear EPR, which depends on saturation of the spectrum at high radiation intensities, is optimally sensitive to dynamics on the timescale of spin-lattice relaxation, i.e., the microsecond regime. Both progressive saturation and saturation transfer EPR experiments provide definitive evidence that lipids at the protein interface are exchanging on this timescale. The sensitivity of non-linear EPR to low frequencies of spin exchange also allows the location of spin-labelled membrane protein residues relative to those of spin-labelled lipids, in double-labelling experiments.  相似文献   

6.
The electron spin resonance (ESR) spectra from spin-labeled phospholipids in recombinants of myelin proteolipid apoprotein with dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine have been simulated with the exchanged-coupled Bloch equations to obtain values for both the fraction of motionally restricted lipids and the exchange rate between the fluid and motionally restricted lipid populations. The rate of exchange between the two spin-labeled lipid components is found to lie in the slow exchange regime of nitroxide ESR spectroscopy. The values obtained for the fraction of motionally restricted component in the exchanged-coupled spectra are found to be in good agreement with those obtained previously by spectral subtraction for the same system [Brophy, P. J., Horváth, L. I., & Marsh, D. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 860-865]. The rate of lipid exchange off the protein is independent of lipid/protein ratio for a given spin-labeled phospholipid, as expected, and decreases with increasing selectivity of the various phospholipids for the protein. At 30 degrees C and for ionic strength 0.1 and pH 7.4, the off-rate constants are 4.6 X 10(6) s-1 for phosphatidic acid, 1.1 X 10(7) s-1 for phosphatidylserine, 1.6 X 10(7) s-1 for phosphatidylcholine, and 2.2 X 10(7) s-1 for phosphatidylethanolamine. These values are in the inverse ratio of the relative association constants of the various lipids for the protein (Brophy et al., 1984) and are appreciably slower than the rate of lipid lateral diffusion in dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine bilayers.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
8.
The microwave saturation properties of various spin-labeled lipids in reconstituted complexes of the myelin proteolipid protein with dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine have been studied both by conventional and saturation transfer electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy. In the fluid phase, the conventional ESR spectra consist of a fluid and a motionally restricted (i.e., protein-associated) component, whose relative proportions can be determined by spectral subtractions and depend on the selectivity of the particular spin-labeled lipid for the protein. At 4 degrees C when the bulk lipid is in the gel phase, the integrated intensity of the saturation transfer ESR spectra displays a linear dependence on the fraction of motionally restricted lipid that is deduced from the conventional ESR spectra in the fluid phase, indicating the presence of distinct populations of free and protein-interacting lipid with no exchange between them on the saturation transfer ESR time scale in the gel phase. At 30 degrees C when the bulk lipid is in the fluid phase, the saturation transfer integral displays a nonlinear dependence on the fraction of motionally restricted lipid, consistent with exchange between the two lipid populations on the saturation transfer ESR time scale in the fluid phase. For lipid spin labels with different selectivities for the protein in complexes of fixed lipid/protein ratio, the data in the fluid phase are consistent with a constant (diffusion-controlled) on-rate for exchange at the lipid-protein interface. Values ranging between 1 and 9 x 10(6) s-1 are estimated for the intrinsic off-rates for exchange of spin-labeled stearic acid and phosphatidylcholine, respectively, at 30 degrees C. Conventional continuous wave saturation experiments lead to similar conclusions regarding the lipid exchange rates in the fluid and gel phases of the lipid/protein recombinants. The ESR saturation studies therefore demonstrate exchange on the time scale of the nitroxide spin-lattice relaxation at the lipid-protein interface of myelin proteolipid/dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine complexes in the fluid phase but not in the gel phase.  相似文献   

9.
The interaction of spin-labeled lipids with beta-barrel transmembrane proteins has been studied by the electron spin resonance (ESR) methods developed for alpha-helical integral proteins. The outer membrane protein OmpA and the ferrichrome-iron receptor FhuA from the outer membrane of Escherichia coli were reconstituted in bilayers of dimyristoylphosphatidylglycerol. The ESR spectra from phosphatidylglycerol spin labeled on the 14-C atom of the sn-2 chain contain a second component from motionally restricted lipids contacting the intramembranous surface of the beta-barrel, in addition to that from the fluid bilayer lipids. The stoichiometry of motionally restricted lipids, 11 and 32 lipids/monomer for OmpA and FhuA, respectively, is constant irrespective of the total lipid/protein ratio. It is proportional to the number of transmembrane beta-strands, eight for OmpA and 22 for FhuA, and correlates reasonably well with the intramembranous perimeter of the protein. Spin-labeled lipids with different polar headgroups display a differential selectivity of interaction with the two proteins. The more pronounced pattern of lipid selectivity for FhuA than for OmpA correlates with the preponderance of positively charged residues facing the lipids in the extensions of the beta-sheet and shorter interconnecting loops on the extracellular side of FhuA.  相似文献   

10.
R D Pates  D Marsh 《Biochemistry》1987,26(1):29-39
Lipid-protein interactions in bovine rod outer segment disk membranes have been studied by using a series of eight stearic acid spin-label probes which were labeled at different carbon atom positions in the chain. In randomly oriented membrane dispersions, the electron spin resonance (ESR) spectra of the C-8, C-9, C-10, C-11, C-12, C-13, and C-14 atom positional isomers all apparently consist of two components. One of the components corresponds closely to the spectra obtained from dispersions of the extracted membrane lipids, and the other, which is characterized by a considerably greater degree of motional restriction of the lipid chains, is induced by the presence of the protein. Digital subtraction has been used to separate the two components. The proportion of the motionally restricted lipid component is approximately constant, independent of the position of the spin-label group, and corresponds to 30-40% of the total spin-label spectral intensity. The hyperfine splitting of the outer maxima in the difference spectra of the motionally restricted component decreases, and concomitantly, the line widths increase with increasing temperature but change relatively little with increasing distance of the spin-label group from the polar head-group region. This indicates that the corresponding chain motions of the protein-interacting lipids lie in the slow-motion regime of spin-label ESR spectroscopy (tau R approximately 10(-8) S) and that the mobility of these lipids increases with increasing temperature but does not vary greatly along the length of the chain. The data from the hyperfine splittings also suggest the existence of a polarity gradient immediately adjacent to the protein surface, as observed in the fluid lipid regions of the membrane. The more fluid lipid component is only slightly perturbed relative to the lipids alone (for label positions 5-14, inclusive), indicating the presence of chain motions on the nanosecond time scale, and the spectra also reveal a similar polarity profile in both lipid and membrane environments. ESR spectra have also been obtained as a function of magnetic field orientation with oriented membrane samples. For the C-14 atom positional isomer, the motionally restricted component is observed to have a large hyperfine splitting, with the magnetic field oriented both parallel and perpendicular to the membrane normal. This indicates that the motionally restricted lipid chains have a broad distribution of orientations at this label position.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
The effect of griseofulvin on lipid constituents and membrane permeability ofMicrosporum gypseum has been investigated. Mycelia grown in medium containing griseofulvin (IC50 concentration) possessed a lower content of total lipids, phospholipids and sterols. This inhibitory effect was further supported by decreased incorporation of [14C] acetate in total lipids, total phospholipids and sterols. Decrease in total phospholipids was also reflected to a varying extent in all individual phospholipids. An increase in the unsaturated to saturated fatty acid ratio was observed in mycelia grown in medium containing griseofulvin. Membrane permeability was affected by griseofulvin as shown by increased K+-efflux and greater leakage of intracellular [32P] labelled components from prelabelled cells. Our results suggest that the antifungal activity of griseofulvin is partially due to its secondary effect on lipid constituents ofMicrosporum gypseum.  相似文献   

12.
To investigate the physical mechanism by which melittin inhibits Ca-adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) activity in sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) membranes, we have used electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy to probe the effect of melittin on lipid-protein interactions in SR. Previous studies have shown that melittin substantially restricts the rotational mobility of the Ca-ATPase but only slightly decreases the average lipid hydrocarbon chain fluidity in SR. Therefore, in the present study, we ask whether melittin has a preferential effect on Ca-ATPase boundary lipids, i.e., the annular shell of motionally restricted lipid that surrounds the protein. Paramagnetic derivatives of stearic acid and phosphatidylcholine, spin-labeled at C-14, were incorporated into SR membranes. The electronic paramagnetic resonance spectra of these probes contained two components, corresponding to motionally restricted and motionally fluid lipids, that were analyzed by spectral subtraction. The addition of increasing amounts of melittin, to the level of 10 mol melittin/mol Ca-ATPase, progressively increased the fraction of restricted lipids and increased the hyperfine splitting of both components in the composite spectra, indicating that melittin decreases the hydrocarbon chain rotational mobility for both the fluid and restricted populations of lipids. No further effects were observed above a level of 10 mol melittin/mol Ca-ATPase. In the spectra from control and melittin-containing samples, the fraction of restricted lipids decreased significantly with increasing temperature. The effect of melittin was similar to that of decreased temperature, i.e., each spectrum obtained in the presence of melittin (10:1) was nearly identical to the spectrum obtained without melittin at a temperature approximately 5 degrees C lower. The results suggest that the principal effect of melittin on SR membranes is to induce protein aggregation and this in turn, augmented by direct binding of melittin to the lipid, is responsible for the observed decreases in lipid mobility. Protein aggregation is concluded to be the main cause of inactivation of the Ca-ATPase by melittin, with possible modulation also by the decrease in mobility of the boundary layer lipids.  相似文献   

13.
Lipid-protein interactions in (Na+,K+)-ATPase-rich membranes from Squalus acanthias have been studied using spin-labeled derivatives of the mono- and disialogangliosides GM1, GM2, GM3, and GD1b, in conjunction with electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy. Ganglioside-protein interactions are revealed by the presence of a second component in the ESR spectra of the membranes in addition to a component that corresponds closely to the ESR spectra obtained from dispersions of the extracted membrane lipids. This second component corresponds to spin-labeled gangliosides whose chain motion is significantly restricted relative to that of the fluid lipids in the membrane or the lipid extract. A small selectively for the motionally restricted component associated with the protein is found in the order GD1b greater than GM1 approximately equal to GM2 approximately equal to GM3. Comparison with previous results from spin-labeled phospholipids in the same system [Esmann, M., Watts, A., & Marsh, D. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 1386-1393] shows that the spin-labeled monosialogangliosides GM1, GM2, and GM3 display little selectivity in the lipid-protein interaction relative to spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine. The spectral characteristics of both the fluid and motionally restricted spin-labeled components differ very significantly, however, between the gangliosides and the phospholipids. The outer hyperfine splitting of the motionally restricted component is smaller for the gangliosides than for the phospholipids, indicating a smaller degree of motional restriction on interaction of the ganglioside lipid chains with the protein.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
We have developed a saturation transfer EPR (ST-EPR) method to measure selectively the rotational dynamics of those lipids that are motionally restricted by integral membrane proteins and have applied this methodology to measure lipid-protein interactions in native sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) membranes. This analysis involves the measurement of spectral saturation using a series of six stearic acid spin labels that are labeled with a nitroxide at different carbon atom positions. A large amount of spectral saturation is observed for spin labels in native SR membranes, but not for spin labels in dispersions of extracted SR lipids, implying that the motional properties of those lipids interacting with the Ca-ATPase, i.e., the boundary or annular lipid, can be directly measured without the need for spectral subtraction procedures. A comparison of the motional properties of the restricted lipid, measured by ST-EPR, with those measured by digital subtraction of conventional EPR spectra qualitatively agree, for in both cases the Ca-ATPase restricts the rotational mobility of a population of lipids, whose rotational mobility increases as the nitroxide is positioned toward the center of the bilayer. However, the ability of ST-EPR to directly measure the motionally restricted lipid in a model-independent means provides the greater precision necessary to measure small changes in the rotational dynamics of the lipid at the protein-lipid interface, providing a valuable tool in clarifying the relationship between the physical nature of the protein-lipid interface and membrane function.  相似文献   

15.
ESR spectra of spin probes were used to monitor lipid-protein interactions in native and cholesterol-enriched microsomal membranes. In both systems composite spectra were obtained, one characteristic of bulk bilayer organization and another due to a motionally restricted population, which was ascribed to lipids in a protein microenvironment. Computer spectral subtractions revealed that cholesterol modulates the order/mobility of both populations in opposite ways, i.e., while the lipid bilayer region gives rise to more anisotropic spectra upon cholesterol enrichment, the spectra of the motionally restricted population become indicative of increased mobility and/or decreased order. These events were evidenced by measurement of both effective order parameters and correlation times. The percentages of the motionally restricted component were invariant in native and cholesterol-enriched microsomes. Variable temperature studies also indicated a lack of variation of the percentages of both spectral components, suggesting that the motionally restricted one was not due to protein aggregation. The results correlate well with the effect of cholesterol enrichment on membrane-bound enzyme kinetics and on the behavior of fluorescent probes [Castuma & Brenner (1986) Biochemistry 25, 4733-4738]. Several hypothesis are put forward to explain the molecular mechanism of the cholesterol-induced spectral changes.  相似文献   

16.
Lipid-protein interactions in thylakoid membranes from lettuce, pea, tomato, and cucumber have been studied using spin-labeled analogues of the thylakoid membrane lipid components, monogalactosyl diglyceride and phosphatidylglycerol. The electron spin resonance spectra of the spin-labeled lipids all consist of two components, one corresponding to the fluid lipid environment in the membranes and the other to the motionally restricted lipids interacting with the integral membrane proteins. Comparison of the spectra from the same spin label in thylakoid membranes from different plants shows that the overall lipid fluidity in the membranes decreases with chilling sensitivity. Spectral subtraction has been used to quantitate the fraction of the membrane lipids in contact with integral membrane proteins. Thylakoid membranes of cucumber, a typical chilling-sensitive plant, have been found to have a higher proportion of motionally restricted lipids and a different lipid selectivity for lipid-protein interaction, as compared with those of pea, a typical chilling-resistant plant. This correlation with chilling sensitivity holds generally for the different plants studied. It seems likely that the chilling sensitivity in thylakoid membranes is not determined by lipid fluidity alone, but also by the lipid-protein interactions which could affect protein function in a more direct manner.  相似文献   

17.
The interaction of spin-labeled lipids with the myelin proteolipid apoprotein in complexes with dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine of varying lipid/protein ratios has been studied with electron spin resonance spectroscopy. A first shell of approximately 10 lipids per 25 000-dalton protein is found to be motionally restricted by the protein interface. This stoichiometry is consistent with a hexameric arrangement of the protein in the membrane. A selectivity of the various spin-labeled lipids for the motionally restricted component at the protein interface is found in the order stearic acid greater than phosphatidic acid greater than cardiolipin approximately greater than phosphatidylserine greater than phosphatidylglycerol approximately equal to phosphatidylcholine greater than phosphatidylethanolamine greater than androstanol approximately greater than cholestane.  相似文献   

18.
Spin-label ESR studies of lipid-protein interactions in thylakoid membranes   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
G Li  P F Knowles  D J Murphy  I Nishida  D Marsh 《Biochemistry》1989,28(18):7446-7452
Lipid-protein interactions in thylakoid membranes, and in the subthylakoid membrane fractions containing either photosystem 1 or photosystem 2, have been studied by using spin-labeled analogues of the thylakoid membrane lipid components, monogalactosyldiacylglycerol, phosphatidylglycerol, and phosphatidylcholine. The electron spin resonance spectra of the spin-labeled lipids all consist of two components, one corresponding to the fluid lipid environment in the membranes and the other to the motionally restricted membrane lipids interacting directly with the integral membrane proteins. Spectral subtraction has been used to quantitate the fraction of the membrane lipids in contact with the membrane proteins and to determine the selectivity between the different lipid classes for the lipid-protein interaction. The fractions of motionally restricted lipid in the thylakoid membrane are 0.36, 0.39, and 0.53, for the spin-labeled monogalactosyldiacylglycerol, phosphatidylcholine, the phosphatidylglycerol, respectively. Spin-labeled monogalactosyldiacylglycerol exhibits very little preferential interaction over phosphatidylchline, which suggests that part of the role of monogalactosyldiacylglycerol in thylakoid membranes is structural, as is the case for phosphatidylcholine in mammalian membranes. Spin-labeled phosphatidylglycerol shows a preferential interaction over the corresponding monogalactosyldiacylglycerol and phosphatidylcholine analogues, in contrast to the common behavior of this lipid in mammalian systems. This pattern of lipid selectivity is preserved in both the photosystem 1 and photosystem 2 enriched subthylakoid membrane fractions.  相似文献   

19.
Studies of lipid interactions with membranous Na,K-ATPase by using electron spin resonance spectroscopy in conjunction with spin-labelled lipids are reviewed. The lipid stoichiometry, selectivity and exchange dynamics at the lipid-protein interface can be determined, in addition to information on the configuration and rotational dynamics of the protein-associated lipid chains. These parameters, particularly the stoichiometry and selectivity, are related directly to the intramembranous structure of the Na,K-ATPase, and can be used to check the integrity of extensively trypsinised preparations.  相似文献   

20.
Surface areas and fluctuations evaluated from 50 ns molecular dynamics simulations of fully hydrated dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) bilayers in a 1:2 trehalose:lipid ratio carried out at surface tensions 10, 17 and 25 dyn/cm/leaflet are compared with those of pure bilayers under the same conditions. Trehalose increases the surface area, as consistent with the surface tension lowering observed in simulations at constant area. The system bulk elastic modulus K b  = 1.5 ± 0.3 × 1010 dyn/cm2. It is independent of bilayer surface area and trehalose content within statistical error. In contrast, the area elastic modulus K a shows a strong area dependence. At 64 Å2/lipid (the experimental surface area), K a  = 138 ± 26 dyn/cm for a pure DPPC bilayer and 82 ± 10 dyn/cm for one with trehalose; i.e. trehalose increases fluidity of the bilayer surface at this area per lipid.  相似文献   

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