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1.
Fluctuations, inherent in flexible and biologically relevant lipid bilayers, make quantitative structure determination challenging. Shortcomings in older methods of structure determination have been realized and new methodologies have been introduced that take fluctuations into account. The large uncertainty in literature values of lipid bilayer structural parameters is being reduced.  相似文献   

2.
Bilayer form factors obtained from x-ray scattering data taken with high instrumental resolution are reported for multilamellar vesicles of L alpha phase lipid bilayers of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine at 50 degrees C under varying osmotic pressure. Artifacts in the magnitudes of the form factors due to liquid crystalline fluctuations have been eliminated by using modified Caillé theory. The Caillé fluctuation parameter eta 1 increases systematically with increasing lamellar D spacing and this explains why some higher order peaks are unobservable for the larger D spacings. The corrected form factors fall on one smooth continuous transform F(q); this shows that the bilayer does not change shape as D decreases from 67.2 A (fully hydrated) to 60.9 A. The distance between headgroup peaks is obtained from Fourier reconstruction of samples with four orders of diffraction and from electron density models that use 38 independent form factors. By combining these results with previous gel phase results, area AF per lipid molecule and other structural quantities are obtained for the fluid L alpha phase. Comparison with results that we derived from previous neutron diffraction data is excellent, and we conclude from diffraction studies that AF = 62.9 +/- 1.3 A2, which is in excellent agreement with a previous estimate from NMR data.  相似文献   

3.
This article, adapted from our acceptance speech of the Avanti Award in Lipids at the 47th Biophysical Society meeting in San Antonio, 2003, summarizes over 30 years of research in the area of lipid bilayers. Beginning with a theoretical model of the phase transition (J.F.N.), we have proceeded experimentally using dilatometry and density centrifugation to study volume, differential scanning calorimetry to study heat capacity, and X-ray scattering techniques to study structure of lipid bilayers as a function of temperature. Electron density profiles of the gel and ripple phases have been obtained as well as profiles from several fluid phase lipids, which lead to many structural results that compliment molecular dynamics simulations from other groups. Using the theory of liquid crystallography plus oriented lipid samples, we are the first group to obtain both material parameters (KC and B) associated with the fluctuations in fluid phase lipids. This allows us to use fully hydrated lipid samples, as in vivo, to obtain the structure.  相似文献   

4.
Molecular dynamics simulations of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) lipid bilayers using the CHARMM27 force field in the tensionless isothermal-isobaric (NPT) ensemble give highly ordered, gel-like bilayers with an area per lipid of approximately 48 A(2). To obtain fluid (L(alpha)) phase properties of DPPC bilayers represented by the CHARMM energy function in this ensemble, we reparameterized the atomic partial charges in the lipid headgroup and upper parts of the acyl chains. The new charges were determined from the electron structure using both the Mulliken method and the restricted electrostatic potential fitting method. We tested the derived charges in molecular dynamics simulations of a fully hydrated DPPC bilayer. Only the simulation with the new restricted electrostatic potential charges shows significant improvements compared with simulations using the original CHARMM27 force field resulting in an area per lipid of 60.4 +/- 0.1 A(2). Compared to the 48 A(2), the new value of 60.4 A(2) is in fair agreement with the experimental value of 64 A(2). In addition, the simulated order parameter profile and electron density profile are in satisfactory agreement with experimental data. Thus, the biologically more interesting fluid phase of DPPC bilayers can now be simulated in all-atom simulations in the NPT ensemble by employing our modified CHARMM27 force field.  相似文献   

5.
Valsartan is a marketed drug with high affinity to the type 1 angiotensin (AT1) receptor. It has been reported that AT1 antagonists may reach the receptor site by diffusion through the plasma membrane. For this reason we have applied a combination of differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), Raman spectroscopy and small and wide angle X-ray scattering (SAXS and WAXS) to investigate the interactions of valsartan with the model membrane of dipalmitoyl-phosphatidylcholine (DPPC). Hence, the thermal, dynamic and structural effects in bulk as well as local dynamic properties in the bilayers were studied with different valsartan concentrations ranging from 0 to 20 mol%. The DSC experimental results showed that valsartan causes a lowering and broadening of the phase transition. A splitting of the main transition is observed at high drug concentrations. In addition, valsartan causes an increase in enthalpy change of the main transition, which can be related to the induction of interdigitation of the lipid bilayers in the gel phase. Raman spectroscopy revealed distinct interactions between valsartan with the lipid interface localizing it in the polar head group region and in the upper part of the hydrophobic core. This localization of the drug molecule in the lipid bilayers supports the interdigitation view. SAXS measurements confirm a monotonous bilayer thinning in the fluid phase, associated with a steady increase of the root mean square fluctuation of the bilayers as the valsartan concentration is increased. At high drug concentrations these fluctuations are mainly governed by the electrostatic repulsion of neighboring membranes. Finally, valsartans' complex thermal and structural effects on DPPC bilayers are illustrated and discussed on a molecular level.  相似文献   

6.
The transient membrane lipid diacylglycerol (DG) is known to modify and destabilize phospholipid bilayers and can lead to the formation of nonbilayer structures. Since cholesterol forms a major fraction of many plasma membranes, we have investigated how it modifies the structural effects of DG on bilayers of egg phosphatidylcholine (PC) and egg phosphatidylethanolamine (PE). We view these systems as modelling the behaviour of local, DG-containing sites in membranes. Using X-ray diffraction, we have characterized the lamellar (L alpha) and inverse hexagonal (HII) structures that these ternary lipid mixtures form in excess aqueous solution. As the DG level increases, the lipid progresses from a single L alpha structure to a mixture of L alpha and HII, and then to a pure HII structure. This allows determination of the DG levels at which the HII transition begins, which we interpret as those levels that destabilize bilayers. In both PC and PE bilayers, the presence of 30 mol% cholesterol reduces the amounts of DG required to destabilize the bilayer structure. The destabilization can be translated into the number of neighbouring lipid molecules that a DG molecule perturbs, and of bilayer areas that it affects. The data show that the presence of cholesterol greatly enhances the perturbing effects of DG. We examine the possible role of DG in enzyme activation and membrane fusion.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Deuterium ((2)H) NMR spectroscopy provides detailed information regarding the structural fluctuations of lipid bilayers, including both the equilibrium properties and dynamics. Experimental (2)H NMR measurements for the homologous series of 1, 2-diacyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholines with perdeuterated saturated chains (from C12:0 to C18:0) have been performed on randomly oriented, fully hydrated multilamellar samples. For each lipid, the C-D bond order parameters have been calculated from de-Paked (2)H NMR spectra as a function of temperature. The experimental order parameters were analyzed using a mean-torque potential model for the acyl chain segment distributions, and comparison was made with the conventional diamond lattice approach. Statistical mechanical principles were used to relate the measured order parameters to the lipid bilayer structural parameters: the hydrocarbon thickness and the mean interfacial area per lipid. At fixed temperature, the area decreases with increasing acyl length, indicating increased van der Waals attraction for longer lipid chains. However, the main effect of increasing the acyl chain length is on the hydrocarbon thickness rather than on the area per lipid. Expansion coefficients of the structural parameters are reported and interpreted using an empirical free energy function that describes the force balance in fluid bilayers. At the same absolute temperature, the phosphatidylcholine (PC) series exhibits a universal chain packing profile that differs from that of phosphatidylethanolamines (PE). Hence, the lateral packing of phospholipids is more sensitive to the headgroup methylation than to the acyl chain length. A fit to the area per lipid for the PC series using the empirical free energy function shows that the PE area represents a limiting value for the packing of fluid acyl chains.  相似文献   

9.
Some of our recent work has resulted in the detailed structures of fully hydrated, fluid phase phosphatidylcholine (PC) and phosphatidylglycerol (PG) bilayers. These structures were obtained from the joint refinement of small-angle neutron and X-ray data using the scattering density profile (SDP) models developed by Ku?erka et al. (Biophys J 95:2356–2367, 2008; J Phys Chem B 116:232–239, 2012). In this review, we first discuss models for the standalone analysis of neutron or X-ray scattering data from bilayers, and assess the strengths and weaknesses inherent to these models. In particular, it is recognized that standalone data do not contain enough information to fully resolve the structure of naturally disordered fluid bilayers, and therefore may not provide a robust determination of bilayer structure parameters, including the much-sought-after area per lipid. We then discuss the development of matter density-based models (including the SDP model) that allow for the joint refinement of different contrast neutron and X-ray data, as well as the implementation of local volume conservation within the unit cell (i.e., ideal packing). Such models provide natural definitions of bilayer thicknesses (most importantly the hydrophobic and Luzzati thicknesses) in terms of Gibbs dividing surfaces, and thus allow for the robust determination of lipid areas through equivalent slab relationships between bilayer thickness and lipid volume. In the final section of this review, we discuss some of the significant findings/features pertaining to structures of PC and PG bilayers as determined from SDP model analyses.  相似文献   

10.
Under physiological conditions, multicomponent biological membranes undergo structural changes which help define how the membrane functions. An understanding of biomembrane structure-function relations can be based on knowledge of the physical and chemical properties of pure phospholipid bilayers. Here, we have investigated phase transitions in dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC) bilayers. We demonstrated the existence of several phase transitions in DPPC and DOPC mica-supported bilayers by both atomic force microscopy imaging and force measurements. Supported DPPC bilayers show a broad L(beta)-L(alpha) transition. In addition to the main transition we observed structural changes both above and below main transition temperature, which include increase in bilayer coverage and changes in bilayer height. Force measurements provide valuable information on bilayer thickness and phase transitions and are in good agreement with atomic force microscopy imaging data. A De Gennes model was used to characterize the repulsive steric forces as the origin of supported bilayer elastic properties. Both electrostatic and steric forces contribute to the repulsive part of the force plot.  相似文献   

11.
This study revealed large distinctions between the lamellar and non-lamellar liquid crystalline lipid phases in their spreading at the air/water interface and propensity to form bilayer foam films. Comparative measurements were made for the lamellar L(alpha), the inverted hexagonal H(II) and the bicontinuous cubic Pn3m phases of the phospholipid dipalmitoleoylphosphatidylethanolamine (DPoPE). With regard to monolayer formation, followed as the decrease of surface tension with time, the best spreading (lowest surface tension) was observed for the L(alpha) phase, and poorest spreading (highest surface tension) was recorded for the H(II) phase. The cubic Pn3m phase of DPoPE, induced by temperature cycling, retained an intermediate position between the L(alpha) and H(II) phases. According to their ability to lower surface tension and disintegrate at the air/water interface, the three phases thus order as L(alpha)>Pn3m>H(II). Clearly expressed threshold (minimum) bulk lipid concentrations, C(t), required for formation of stable foam bilayers from these phases, were determined and their values were found to correlate well with the bulk lipid phase behaviour. The C(t) values for L(alpha) and H(II) substantially increase with the temperature. Their Arrhenius plots, ln C(t) versus 1/ T, are linear and intersect at approximately 36-37 degrees C, coinciding with the onset of the bulk L(alpha)-->H(II) phase transition, as determined by differential scanning calorimetry. However, the C(t) value for the Pn3m phase, equal to 30 micro g/mL, was found to be constant over the whole range investigated between 20 degrees C and 50 degrees C. The horizontal C(t) versus T plot for the Pn3m phase crosses the respective plot for the L(alpha) phase at the temperature bounding from below the hysteretic loop of the L(alpha)<-->H(II) transition (approximately 26 degrees C), thus providing a certain insight about the thermodynamic stability of the Pn3m phase relative to the L(alpha) phase. The established strong effect of the particular lipid phase on the formation of monolayers and stable black foam films should be of importance in various in vitro and in vivo systems, where lipid structures are in contact with interfaces and disintegrate there to different extents.  相似文献   

12.
A series of 2H NMR inversion recovery experiments in the L alpha phase of the cerebroside N-palmitoylgalactosylsphingosine (NPGS) have been performed. In these liquid crystalline lipid bilayers we have observed substantial anisotropy in the spin-lattice relaxation of the CD2 groups in the acyl chains. The form and magnitude of the anisotropy varies with position in the chain, being positive in the upper region, decreasing to zero at the 4-position, and reversing sign at the lower chain positions. It is also shown that addition of cholesterol to the bilayer results in profound changes in the anisotropy. These observations are accounted for by a simple motional model of discrete hops among nine sites, which result from the coupling of two modes of motion--long-axis rotational diffusion and gauche-trans isomerization. This model is employed in quantitative simulations of the spectral line shapes and permits determination of site populations and motional rates. These results, plus preliminary results in sphingomyelin and lecithin bilayers, illustrate the utility of T1 anisotropy measurements as a probe of dynamics in L alpha-phase bilayers.  相似文献   

13.
Supported phospholipid bilayers.   总被引:20,自引:11,他引:9       下载免费PDF全文
Phospholipid bilayers have been formed on glass, quartz, and silicon surfaces by a sequential transfer of two monolayers at a pressure of approximately 40 dyn/cm from the air-water interface to the solid substrates. Lateral diffusion measurements of L-alpha-dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) bilayers supported on oxidized silicon wafers reveal two sharp phase transitions at temperatures similar to those found in multilayer systems with several different techniques. The diffusion measurements obtained using fluorescence recovery after pattern photobleaching provide evidence for the existence of an intermediate (probably P beta' or ripple) phase in single bilayers. While in the intermediate and high temperature (liquid-crystalline L alpha) phase, the diffusion coefficients do not vary very much with temperature, a strong temperature dependence is observed in the low temperature (gel L beta') phase. This is attributed to defect-mediated diffusion. Lipids in silicon supported bilayers made from L-alpha-dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC) or L-alpha-dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) diffuse rapidly above their respective chain-melting transition temperatures. Arrhenius plots show straight lines with activation energies of 40.9 and 43.7 kJ/mol, respectively. Supported DPPC bilayers on oxidized silicon form long tubular liposomes when heated through their oxidized silicon form long tubular liposomes when heated through their chain-melting-phase transition, as viewed with epifluorescence microscopy. It is suggested that this is a consequence of the expansion of the lipid on the fixed solid support. Conversely, DOPC bilayers form large void areas on this substrate upon cooling. Large circular membrane defects (holes) are observed under rapid coating conditions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
The application of Förster Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET) to the detection and characterization of phase separation in lipid bilayers (both in model systems and in cell membranes) is reviewed. Models describing the rate and efficiency of FRET for both uniform probe distribution and phase separation, and recently reported methods for detection of membrane heterogeneity and determination of phase boundaries, probe partition coefficients and domain size, are presented and critically discussed. Selected recent applications of FRET to one-phase lipid systems, gel/fluid phase separation, liquid ordered/liquid disordered phase separation (lipid rafts), complex systems containing ceramide and cell membranes are presented to illustrate the wealth of information that can be inferred from carefully designed FRET studies of membrane domains.  相似文献   

15.
The energy of intermediates in fusion of phospholipid bilayers is sensitive to kappa(m), the saddle splay (Gaussian curvature) elastic modulus of the lipid monolayers. The value kappa(m) is also important in understanding the stability of inverted cubic (Q(II)) and rhombohedral (R) phases relative to the lamellar (L(alpha)) and inverted hexagonal (H(II)) phases in phospholipids. However, kappa(m) cannot be measured directly. It was previously measured by observing changes in Q(II) phase lattice dimensions as a function of water content. Here we use observations of the phase behavior of N-mono-methylated dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine (DOPE-Me) to determine kappa(m). At the temperature of the L(alpha)/Q(II) phase transition, T(Q), the partial energies of the two phases are equal, and we can express kappa(m) in terms of known lipid monolayer parameters: the spontaneous curvature of DOPE-Me, the monolayer bending modulus kappa(m), and the distance of the monolayer neutral surface from the bilayer midplane, delta. The calculated ratio kappa(m)/kappa(m) is -0.83 +/- 0.08 at T(Q) approximately 55 degrees C. The uncertainty is due primarily to uncertainty in the value of delta for the L(alpha) phase. This value of kappa(m)/kappa(m) is in accord with theoretical expectations, including recent estimates of the value required to rationalize observations of rhombohedral (R) phase stability in phospholipids. The value kappa(m) substantially affects the free energy of formation of fusion intermediates: more energy (tens of k(B)T) is required to form stalks and fusion pores (ILAs) than estimated solely on the basis of the bending elastic energy. In particular, ILAs are much higher in energy than previously estimated. This rationalizes the action of fusion-catalyzing proteins in stabilizing nascent fusion pores in biomembranes; a function inferred from recent experiments in viral systems. These results change predictions of earlier work on ILA and Q(II) phase stability and L(alpha)/Q(II) phase transition mechanisms. To our knowledge, this is the first determination of the saddle splay (Gaussian) modulus in a lipid system consisting only of phospholipids.  相似文献   

16.
Many biophysical processes such as insertion of proteins into membranes and membrane fusion are governed by bilayer electrostatic potential. At the time of this writing, the arsenal of biophysical methods for such measurements is limited to a few techniques. Here we describe a, to our knowledge, new spin-probe electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) approach for assessing the electrostatic surface potential of lipid bilayers that is based on a recently synthesized EPR probe (IMTSL-PTE) containing a reversibly ionizable nitroxide tag attached to the lipids’ polar headgroup. EPR spectra of the probe directly report on its ionization state and, therefore, on electrostatic potential through changes in nitroxide magnetic parameters and the degree of rotational averaging. Further, the lipid nature of the probe provides its full integration into lipid bilayers. Tethering the nitroxide moiety directly to the lipid polar headgroup defines the location of the measured potential with respect to the lipid bilayer interface. Electrostatic surface potentials measured by EPR of IMTSL-PTE show a remarkable (within ±2%) agreement with the Gouy-Chapman theory for anionic DMPG bilayers in fluid (48°C) phase at low electrolyte concentration (50 mM) and in gel (17°C) phase at 150-mM electrolyte concentration. This agreement begins to diminish for DMPG vesicles in gel phase (17°C) upon varying electrolyte concentration and fluid phase bilayers formed from DMPG/DMPC and POPG/POPC mixtures. Possible reasons for such deviations, as well as the proper choice of an electrostatically neutral reference interface, have been discussed. Described EPR method is expected to be fully applicable to more-complex models of cellular membranes.  相似文献   

17.
We present atomistic molecular dynamics results for fully hydrated bilayers composed of ceramide NS-24:0, free fatty acid 24:0 and cholesterol, to address the effect of the different components in the stratum corneum (the outermost layer of skin) lipid matrix on its structural properties. Bilayers containing ceramide molecules show higher in-plane density and hence lower rate of passive transport compared to phospholipid bilayers. At physiological temperatures, for all composition ratios explored, the lipids are in a gel phase with ordered lipid tails. However, the large asymmetry in the lengths of the two tails of the ceramide molecule leads to a fluidlike environment at the bilayer midplane. The lateral pressure profiles show large local variations across the bilayer for pure ceramide or any of the two-component mixtures. Close to the skin composition ratio, the lateral pressure fluctuations are greatly suppressed, the ceramide tails from the two leaflets interdigitate significantly, the depression in local density at the interleaflet region is lowered, and the bilayers have lowered elastic moduli. This indicates that the observed composition ratio in the stratum corneum lipid layer is responsible for both the good barrier properties and the stability of the lipid structure against mechanical stresses.  相似文献   

18.
19.
The structural modifications of the dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) organization induced by increasing concentration of the volatile anesthetic enflurane have been studied by differential scanning calorimetry, small-angle, and wide-angle x-ray scattering. The interaction of enflurane with DPPC depends on at least two factors: the enflurane-to-lipid concentration ratio and the initial organization of the lipids. At 25 degrees C (gel state), the penetration of enflurane within the lipids induces the apparition of two different mixed lipid phases. At low anesthetic-to-lipid molar ratio, the smectic distance increases whereas the direction of the chain tilt changes from a tilt toward next-neighbors to a tilt between next-neighbors creating a new gel phase called L(beta')(2NNN). At high ratio, the smectic distance is much smaller than for the pure L(beta') DPPC phase, i.e., 50 A compared to 65 A, the aliphatic chains are perpendicular to the membrane and the fusion temperature of the phase is 33 degrees C. The electron profile of this phase that has been called L(beta)(i), indicates that the lipids are fully interdigitated. At 45 degrees C (fluid state), a new melted phase, called L(alpha)(2), was found, in which the smectic distance decreased compared to the initial pure L(alpha)(1) DPPC phase. The thermotropic behavior of the mixed phases has also been characterized by simultaneous x-ray scattering and differential scanning calorimetry measurements using the Microcalix calorimeter of our own. Finally, titration curves of enflurane effect in the mixed lipidic phase has been obtained by using the fluorescent lipid probe Laurdan. Measurements as a function of temperature or at constant temperature, i.e., 25 degrees C and 45 degrees C give, for the maximal effect, an enflurane-to-lipid ratio (M/M), within the membrane, of 1 and 2 for the L(alpha)(2) and the L(beta)(i) lamellar phase respectively. All the results taken together allowed to draw a pseudo-binary phase diagram of enflurane-dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine in excess water.  相似文献   

20.
A theoretical model is proposed which states that the time-independent fluorescence anisotropy of the rod-shaped molecule diphenylhexatriene incorporated into lipid bilayers is a direct result of forces constraining the diphenylhexatriene molecule. These forces are postulated as equating with the lateral pressure operating within the bilayer independently of the probe molecule.Insertion into the model of experimental observations (recorded in the literature) on anisotropy of diphenylhexatriene in lipid bilayers as a function of temperature yielded values of lateral pressure, which decreased with temperature, and sharply at the temperature defining the transition from gel phase to fluid phase. The values so predicted for the mid-point of the transition and for the entirely fluid phase, respectively, compared favourably with estimates of the lateral pressures in these physical states, that have been reported elsewhere and arrived at either from theories describing lipid chain behaviour or from lipid monolayer compression experiments. Previously documented effects on anisotropy induced by incorporation of cholesterol into fluid lipid bilayers have been interpreted as reflections of rises in intramembranal lateral pressure.  相似文献   

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