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1.
The effect of alpha-tocopherol on the thermotropic phase transition behaviour of aqueous dispersions of dimyristoylphosphatidylethanolamine was examined using synchrotron X-ray diffraction methods. The temperature of gel to liquid-crystalline (Lbeta-->Lalpha) phase transition decreases from 49.5 to 44.5 degrees C and temperature range where gel and liquid-crystalline phases coexist increases from 4 to 8 degrees C with increasing concentration of alpha-tocopherol up to 20 mol%. Codispersion of dimyristoylphosphatidylethanolamine containing 2.5 mol% alpha-tocopherol gives similar lamellar diffraction patterns as those of the pure phospholipid both in heating and cooling scans. With 5 mol% alpha-tocopherol in the phospholipid, however, an inverted hexagonal phase is induced which coexists with the lamellar gel phase at temperatures just before transition to liquid-crystalline lamellar phase. The presence of 10 mol% alpha-tocopherol shows a more pronounced inverted hexagonal phase in the lamellar gel phase but, in addition, another non-lamellar phase appears with the lamellar liquid-crystalline phase at higher temperature. This non-lamellar phase coexists with the lamellar liquid-crystalline phase of the pure phospholipid and can be indexed by six diffraction orders to a cubic phase of Pn3m or Pn3 space groups and with a lattice constant of 12.52+/-0.01 nm at 84 degrees C. In mixed aqueous dispersions containing 20 mol% alpha-tocopherol, only inverted hexagonal phase and lamellar phase were observed. The only change seen in the wide-angle scattering region was a transition from sharp symmetrical diffraction peak at 0.43 nm, typical of gel phases, to broad peaks centred at 0.47 nm signifying disordered hydrocarbon chains in all the mixtures examined. Electron density calculations through the lamellar repeat of the gel phase using six orders of reflection indicated no difference in bilayer thickness due to the presence of 10 mol% alpha-tocopherol. The results were interpreted to indicate that alpha-tocopherol is not randomly distributed throughout the phospholipid molecules oriented in bilayer configuration, but it exists either as domains coexisting with gel phase bilayers of pure phospholipid at temperatures lower than Tm or, at higher temperatures, as inverted hexagonal phase consisting of a defined stoichiometry of phospholipid and alpha-tocopherol molecules.  相似文献   

2.
The structural transitions in aqueous dispersions of egg-sphingomyelin and bovine brain-sphingomyelin and sphingomyelin co-dispersed with different proportions of cholesterol were compared during temperature scans between 20° and 50 °C using small-angle and wide-angle X-ray scattering techniques. The Bragg reflections observed in the small-angle scattering region from pure phospholipids and codispersions of sphingomyelin:cholesterol in molar ratios 80:20 and 50:50 could all be deconvolved using peak fitting methods into two coexisting lamellar structures. Electron density profiles through the unit cell normal to the bilayer plane were calculated to derive bilayer and water layer thicknesses of coexisting structures at 20° and 50 °C. Codispersions of sphingomyelin:cholesterol in a molar ratio 60:40 consisted of an apparently homogeneous bilayer structure designated as liquid-ordered phase. Curve fitting analysis of the wide-angle scattering bands were applied to correlate changes in packing arrangements of hydrocarbon in the hydrophobic domain of the bilayer with changes in enthalpy recorded by differential scanning calorimetry. At 20 °C the wide-angle scattering bands of both pure sphingomyelins and codispersions of sphingomyelin and cholesterol could be deconvolved into two symmetric components. A sharp component located at a d-spacing of 0.42 nm was assigned to a gel phase in which the hydrocarbon chains are oriented perpendicular to the bilayer plane. A broader symmetric band centered at d-spacings in the region of 0.44 nm was assigned as disordered hydrocarbon in dispersions of pure sphingomyelin and as liquid-ordered phase in codispersions of sphingomyelin and cholesterol. It is concluded from the peak fitting analysis that cholesterol is excluded from gel phases of egg and brain sphingomyelins at 20 °C. The gel phases coexist with liquid-ordered phase comprised of egg-sphingomyelin and 27 mol% cholesterol and brain-sphingomyelin and 33 mol% cholesterol, respectively. Correlation of the disappearance of gel phase during heating scans and the enthalpy change recorded by calorimetry in codispersions of sphingomyelin and cholesterol leads to the conclusion that a major contribution to the broadened phase transition endotherm originates from dilution of the cholesterol-rich liquid-ordered phase by mobilization of sphingomyelin from the melting gel phase.  相似文献   

3.
The structure of the subgel phase of dipalmitoylphosphatidylglycerol (DPPG) has been analyzed by X-ray diffraction techniques. Diffraction recorded from highly oriented DPPG specimens in the subgel phase extends to 2-A resolution. There are sharp lamellar reflections on the meridian, and other reflections lie on a series of wide-angle lattice lines parallel to the meridian and crossing the equator in the range of 8-2 A. The wide-angle lattice lines consist of radially sharp reflections centered on the equator of the X-ray film and also a series of broader, off-equatorial maxima. The lattice lines indicate that the DPPG molecules in each bilayer crystallize in a two-dimensional oblique lattice with dimensions a = 5.50 A, b = 7.96 A, and gamma = 100.5 degrees. These oblique lattices are not regularly aligned from bilayer to bilayer. Analysis of the lamellar diffraction shows that the bilayer has about the same thickness in the subgel and gel (L beta') phases. In the direction normal to the hydrocarbon chains, the chains are significantly closer together in the subgel phase as compared to the normal L beta' gel phase but have about the same separation as the chains in polyethylene and the crystalline n-alkanes. The bilayer thickness, area per lipid molecule, and intensity distribution along the lattice lines all indicate that in the subgel phase the hydrocarbon chains are tilted between 30 and 35 degrees from the normal to the bilayer plane.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
By means of the scanning differential calorimetry, x-ray diffractometry, and the dynamic light scattering, we have systematically studied the phase and packing properties of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine vesicles or multibilayers in the presence of ethanol. We have also determined the partial ternary phase diagram of such dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine/water/ethanol mixtures. The directly measured variability of the structural bilayer parameters implies that ethanol binding to the phospholipid bilayers increases the lateral as well as the transverse repulsion between the lipid molecules. This enlarges the hydrocarbon tilt (by up to 23 degrees) and molecular area (by < or = 40%). Ethanol-phospholid association also broadens the interface and, thus, promotes lipid headgroup solvation. This results in excessive swelling (by 130%) of the phosphatidylcholine bilayers in aqueous ethanol solutions. Lateral bilayer expansion, moreover, provokes a successive interdigitation of the hydrocarbon chains in the systems with bulk ethanol concentrations of 0.4-1.2 M. The hydrocarbon packing density as well as the propensity for the formation of lamellar gel phases simultaneously increase. The pretransition temperature of phosphatidylcholine bilayers is more sensitive to the addition of alcohol (initial shift: delta Tp = 22 degrees C/mol) than the subtransition temperature (delta Ts reversible 5 degrees C/mol), whereas the chain-melting phase transition temperature is even less affected (delta Tm = 1.8 degrees C/mol). After an initial decrease of 3 degrees for the bulk ethanol concentrations below 1.2 M, the Tm value increases by 2.5 degrees above this limiting concentration. The gel-phase phosphatidylcholine membranes below Tm are fully interdigitated above this limiting concentration. The chain tilt on the fringe of full chain interdigitation is zero and increases with higher ethanol concentrations. Above Tm, some of the lipid molecules are solubilized by the bound ethanol molecules. More highly concentrated ethanol solutions (> 7 M) solubilize the phosphatidylcholine bilayers with fluid chains fully and result in the formation of mixed lipid-alcohol micelles.  相似文献   

5.
The effect of alpha-tocopherol on the structure and thermotropic phase behaviour of distearoylphosphatidylethanolamine was examined by using synchrotron X-ray diffraction methods. There was evidence that alpha-tocopherol does not distribute randomly in the dispersed phospholipid but instead phospholipid phases enriched in alpha-tocopherol are formed. Heating codispersions from lamellar gel phase induced formation of hexagonal-II phase at temperatures below the main transition of the pure phospholipid and which were enriched in alpha-tocopherol. Codispersions containing 5 or 10 mol% alpha-tocopherol were induced to form a cubic phase at temperatures above the lamellar to hexagonal-II phase transition. Such phases were not observed in codispersions containing 2.5 or 20 mol% alpha-tocopherol in which only lamellar and hexagonal-II phases were formed. The space group of the cubic phases were tentatively assigned as Pn3m. Equilibration of codispersions at 4 degrees C results in the formation of lamellar crystalline phases enriched in alpha-tocopherol and phase separated domains of pure phospholipid. Two lamellar crystalline phases were characterized on the basis of their particular wide-angle X-ray scattering patterns. The lamellar crystalline phases were also distinguished from other lamellar phases of the pure phospholipid by the lamellar repeat. Partitioning of alpha-tocopherol into phosphatidylethanolamine domains in membranes may introduce instability into the structure.  相似文献   

6.
Glucocerebrosides (GlcCer) isolated from the leaves of winter rye (Secale cereale L. cv Puma) differ from the more commonly investigated natural and synthetic cerebrosides, in that greater than 95% of the fatty acids are saturated and monounsaturated hydroxy fatty acids. Isomers of the trihydroxy long chain base hydroxysphingenine (t1(8:18 cis or trans)) and isomers of sphingadienine (d18:2(4trans, 8 cis or trans)) comprise 77% and 17%, respectively, of the total long chain bases. The phase behavior of fully hydrated and dry rye leaf GlcCer was investigated using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and x-ray diffraction. On initial heating, aqueous dispersions of GlcCer exhibit a single endothermic transition at 56 degrees C and have an enthalpy (delta H) of 46 J/g. Cooling to 0 degrees C is accompanied by a small exothermic transition (delta H = -8 J/g) at 8 degrees C. On immediate reheating, a broad exothermic transition (delta H = -39 J/g) is observed between 10 and 20 degrees C in addition to a transition at 56 degrees C. These transitions are not reversible, and the exothermic transition rapidly diminishes when the sample is held at low temperature. Using x-ray diffraction, it was determined that the endotherm at 56 degrees C represents a transition from a highly ordered lamellar crystalline phase (Lc) with a d-spacing of 57 A and a series of wide-angle reflections in the 3-10 A range, to a lamellar liquid crystalline (L alpha) phase having a d-spacing of 55 A and a diffuse wide-angle scattering peak centered at 4.7 A. Cooling leads to the formation of a metastable gel phase (L beta) with a d-spacing of 64.0 A and a single broad reflection at 4.28 A. Subsequent warming to above 15 degrees C restores the original Lc phase. Thus, rye GlcCer in excess water exhibit a series of irreversible transitions and gel phase metastability. Dry GlcCer undergo an initial heating endothermic transition at 130 degrees C, which is ascribed to a transformation into the HII phase from a two phase state characterized by the coexistence of phases with disordered (alpha) and helical (delta) type chain conformations but of unknown lattice identity: An exotherm at 67.5 degrees C observed upon subsequent cooling is of unknown origin. Since an undercooled HII phase persists down to 19 degrees C, the exotherm may derive in part from an alpha-to-delta type chain packing conformational change especially under slow cooling conditions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
Both wide-angle and lamellar x-ray diffraction data are interpreted in terms of a difference in hydrocarbon chain tilt between fully hydrated dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and dipalmitoyl phosphatidylethanolamine (DPPE). Although the hydrocarbon chains of multilayers of DPPC tilt ty approximately 30 degrees relative to the normal to the plane of the bilayer, as previously reported by others, the hydrocarbon chains of DPPE appear to be oriented approximately normal to the plane of the bilayer. It is found that the chain tilt in DPPC bilayers can be reduced by either: (a) adding an n-alkane to the bilayer interiors or (b) adding lanthanum ions to the fluid layers between bilayers. A molecular packing model is presented which accounts for these data. According to this model, DPPC chains tilt because of the size and conformation of the PC polar head group.  相似文献   

8.
Quinn PJ 《The FEBS journal》2011,278(18):3518-3527
Specific lipid-lipid interactions are believed to be responsible for lateral domain formation in the lipid bilayer matrix of cell membranes. The miscibility of glucocerebroside and sphingomyelin extracted from biological tissues has been examined by synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction methods. Fully hydrated binary mixtures of egg-sphingomyelin codispersed with glucosylceramide rich in saturated C22 and C24 N-acyl fatty acids were subjected to heating scans between 20 and 90 °C at 2 °C·min(-1). X-ray scattering intensity profiles were recorded at 1 °C intervals simultaneously in both small-angle and wide-angle scattering regions. A gel phase characterized by a single symmetric peak in the wide-angle scattering region was transformed in all mixtures examined to a fluid phase at about 40 °C, similar to dispersions of pure egg-sphingomyelin. A coexisting lamellar structure was identified at temperatures up to about 75 °C which was characterized by a broad Bragg reflection. The scattering intensity of this structure increased relative to the structure assigned as bilayers of pure sphingomyelin with increasing proportions of glucosylceramide in the mixture. The relationship between the scattering intensities of the two peaks and the relative mass fractions of the two lipids showed that the bilayers assigned to a glucosylceramide-rich structure were composed of sphingomyelin and glucosylceramide in molar ratios of 1 : 1 and 2 : 1, respectively, at temperatures below and above the order-disorder phase transition temperature of the sphingomyelin (40 °C).  相似文献   

9.
The effect of alpha-tocopherol on the structure and phase behaviour of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine was examined by real-time synchrotron X-ray diffraction and freeze-fracture electron microscopic methods. X-ray scattering intensity was recorded from mixed aqueous dispersions of phospholipid with 2.5, 5, 10 and 20 mol% alpha-tocopherol during temperature scans at 3 degrees /min between -25 and 10 degrees C. A ripple structure is induced by the presence of alpha-tocopherol that coexists with the ripple phase characteristic of the pure phospholipid in mixtures containing 2.5 mol% alpha-tocopherol but completely replaces it in mixtures containing greater proportions of alpha-tocopherol. Freeze-fracture replicas of dispersions containing 5 mol% alpha-tocopherol indicate a ripple phase with a periodicity of about 9 nm. Increasing amounts of alpha-tocopherol result in a progressive reduction in temperature of the gel to liquid-crystal phase transition and broadening of the transition. Two lamellar phases coexist in the liquid-crystal state, one with a spacing of 6.4 nm assigned to an alpha-tocopherol-enriched lamellar structure and the other with a lamellar repeat of 6.1 nm corresponding to bilayers of pure phospholipid.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
The phase diagram of fully hydrated binary mixtures of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) with 1,2-dipalmitoylglycerol (DPG) published recently by López-García et al. identifies regions where stoichiometric complexes of 1:1 and 1:2 DPPC:DPG, respectively, are formed. In this study, the structural parameters of the 1:1 complex in the presence of pure DPPC was characterized by synchrotron low angle and static x-ray diffraction methods. Structural changes upon transitions through phase boundaries were correlated with enthalpy changes observed by differential scanning calorimetry in mixtures of DPPC with 5, 7.5, 10, and 20 mol% DPG dispersed in excess water. Phase separation of a complex in gel phase could be detected by calorimetry in the mixture containing 5 mol% DPG but was not detectable by synchrotron low angle x-ray diffraction. Static x-ray measurements show evidence of phase separation, particularly in the reflections indexing chain packing. In the mixture containing 7.5 mol% DPG, two distinct lamellar repeat spacings could be seen in the temperature range from 25 to 34 degrees C. The lamellar spacing of about 6.6 nm was assigned to pure gel phase DPPC because the change in the spacing corresponds with thermal transition of the pure phospholipid, and a longer repeat spacing of about 7.2 nm was assigned to domains of the 1:1 complex of DPPC-DPG.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
We have characterized the structural and thermotropic properties of one of the most important lipids in the cell membrane of Staphylococcus aureus, lysyl-dipalmitoylphosphatidylglycerol (lysyl-DPPG). applying differential scanning calorimetry and small- and wide-angle x-ray scattering. Microcalorimetry revealed that under physiological conditions (phosphate buffer, 20 mM NaPi, 130 mM NaCl, pH 7.4), the synthetic lysyl-DPPG resembles the features of the parent dipalmitoylphosphatidylglycerol (DPPG) with respect to its melting behavior. However, in contrast to DPPG, lowering the pH did not significantly affect the main transition temperature (∼40°C) of lysyl-DPPG, which can be explained by its difference in protonization because of the lysine group. X-ray experiments yielded the first information on chain packing and morphology of lysyl-DPPG. We found that lysyl-DPPG forms an interdigitated lamellar phase below the chain-melting transition. This can be explained by the large headgroup area of lysyl-DPPG as a result of its charged lysine group, especially if the headgroup is arranged parallel to the bilayer plane. Additionally, lysyl-DPPG degradation products, such as lysine and free fatty acids, had significant influences on the melting behavior and led to a multicomponent melting transition. Our results indicate that the degradation of lysyl-DPPG takes place mainly during the hydration process but also depends on lipid storage time, pH, and thermal treatment. Detailed temperature-resolved experiments at pH 5.0 demonstrated the formation of a lamellar gel phase with tilted hydrocarbon chains and a ripple phase, coexisting with the interdigitated lysyl-DPPG bilayers.  相似文献   

13.
Thermal, structural, and cohesive measurements have been obtained for both bovine brain sphingomyelin (BSM) and N-tetracosanoylsphingomyelin (C24-SM) in the presence and absence of cholesterol. A goal of these experiments has been to clarify the mechanisms responsible for the strong interaction between sphingomyelin and cholesterol. Differential scanning calorimetry shows that fully hydrated bilayers of BSM and C24-SM have main endothermic phase transitions at 39 and 46 degrees C, respectively, that reflect the melting of the acyl chains from a gel to a liquid-crystalline phase. For each lipid, the addition of cholesterol monotonically reduces the enthalpy of this transition, so that at equimolar cholesterol the transition enthalpy is zero. The addition of equimolar cholesterol to either BSM or C24-SM coverts the wide-angle X-ray diffraction reflection at 4.15 A to a broad band centered at 4.5 A. Electron density profiles of gel-phase C24-SM bilayers contain two terminal methyl dips in the center of the bilayer, indicating that the lipid hydrocarbon chains partially interdigitate so that the long saturated 24-carbon acyl chains in one monolayer cross the bilayer center and appose the shorter sphingosine chains from the other monolayer. The incorporation of cholesterol adds electron density to the hydrocarbon chain region near the head group and removes the double terminal methyl dip. These wide- and low-angle X-ray data indicate that cholesterol packs into the hydrocarbon chain region near the sphingomyelin head group, fluidizes the methylene chains near the center of the bilayer compared to the gel phase, and reduces the extent of methylene chain interdigitation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
The mechanism of the subtransitions (Lc to L beta') in L-dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine bilayers in excess water has been investigated by time-resolved X-ray diffraction using synchrotron radiation. The temperature dependence of the diffraction patterns closely correlate with the asymmetric excess specific heat variation recorded by differential scanning calorimetry. During the subtransition two prominent wide-angle reflections, characteristic of the low-temperature crystalline phase, Lc, gradually change such that a sharp peak at a spacing of 0.430 nm decreases in intensity and ultimately disappears while a broader peak initially located at 0.375 nm progressively shifts to an eventual spacing of 0.410 nm. This behaviour is interpreted as a lateral deformation of the acyl chain packing subcell as the chains begin to rotate until a state is reached where the chains pack on a regular hexagonal array characteristic of the L beta phase. An increase in lamellar repeat distance from 6.0 to 6.4 nm takes place simultaneously with the acyl chain rearrangement at relatively low (5 K/min) as well as high (6 K/s) heating rates. As judged from the shape of the wide-angle peak, transformation to L beta' phase occurs some minutes after transition to the L beta phase. The X-ray data characterise the subtransition as a continuous (second order) phase transition in which a presumably orthorhombic subcell is transformed into a hexagonal subcell in a gradual process. In temperature jump experiments at 6 K/s between 0 degree C and 80 degrees C the relaxation time of the subtransition was found to be about 5 s while the relaxation time of the main gel to liquid-crystalline transition was about 2 s.  相似文献   

15.
Formation of well ordered lamellar subgel (SGII) phase in aqueous dispersions of L-dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine upon cooling from the lamellar gel phase, without low-temperature equilibration, is observed in real time using synchrotron x-ray diffraction. It has the same lamellar repeat period as the gel phase from which it was formed but differs in its wide-angle diffraction pattern. The SGII phase forms at about 7 degrees C upon cooling at 2 degrees C/min. In temperature jump experiments at 1 degree C/s from 50 to -5 degrees C, the relaxation time of the lamellar gel-SGII transition is found to be approximately 15 s. The conversion between the lamellar gel and SGII phase is cooperative and rapidly reversible. Upon heating, it coincides in temperature with an endothermic event with a calorimetric enthalpy of 0.35 kcal/mol, the so-called sub-subtransition. Similar sub-subtransitions are also observed calorimetrically at temperatures approximately 10 degrees C below the subtransition, without low-temperature storage, in aqueous dispersions of L-dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine and L-distearoylphosphatidylcholine, but not in racemic DL-dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine. The formation of the equilibrium lamellar crystalline Lc phase appears to take place only from within the SGII phase.  相似文献   

16.
The location of ubiquinone-10 in phospholipid bilayers was analyzed using a variety of physical techniques. Specifically, we examined the hypothesis that ubiquinone localizes at the geometric center of phospholipid bilayers. Light microscopy of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine at room temperature in the presence of 0.05-0.5 mol fraction ubiquinone showed two separate phases, one birefringent lamellar phase and one phase that consisted of isotropic liquid droplets. The isotropic phase had a distinct yellow color, characteristic of melted ubiquinone. [13C]NMR spectroscopy of phosphatidylcholine liposomes containing added ubiquinone indicated a marked effect on the 13C-spin lattice relaxation times of the lipid hydrocarbon chain atoms near the polar head region of the bilayer, but almost no effect on those atoms nearest the center of the bilayer. X-ray diffraction experiments showed that for phosphatidylcholine bilayers, both in the gel and liquid-crystal-line phases, the presence of ubiquinone did not change either the lamellar repeat period or the wide-angle reflections from the lipid hydrocarbon chains. In electron micrographs, the hydrophobic freeze-fracture surfaces of bilayers in the rippled (P beta') phase were also unmodified by the presence of ubiquinone. These results indicate that the ubiquinone which does partition into the bilayer is not localized preferentially between the monolayers, and that an appreciable fraction of the ubiquinone forms a separate phase located outside the lipid bilayer.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of alpha-tocopherol on the thermotropic phase behaviour and structure of aqueous dispersions of 1,2-di-lauryl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine was examined by synchrotron X-ray diffraction. The pure phospholipid exhibited a lamellar gel to liquid-crystal phase transition at 30 degrees C on heating at 3 degrees C min(-1) between 10 degrees C and 90 degrees C. The transition was reversible with a temperature hysteresis of 0.3 degrees C on cooling. At temperatures less than 10 degrees C only lamellar gel phase of the pure phospholipid was seen in co-dispersions of up to 20 mol % alpha-tocopherol. The presence of 2.5 mol % alpha-tocopherol caused the appearance of inverted hexagonal phase at temperatures just below the main phase transition temperature that co-existed with the lamellar gel phase. The intensity of scattering from the hexagonal-II phase increased with increasing proportion of alpha-tocopherol in the mixture and in proportions greater than 10 mol % it persisted at temperatures above the main transition and co-existed with the lamellar liquid-crystal phase of the pure phospholipid. At higher temperatures all co-dispersions containing up to 15 mol % alpha-tocopherol showed the presence of cubic phases. These phases indexed a Pn3m or Pn3 space grouping. When the proportion of alpha-tocopherol was increased to 20 mol % the only non-lamellar phase observed was inverted hexagonal phase. This phase co-existed with lamellar gel and liquid-crystal phases of the pure phospholipid, but was the only phase present at temperatures >60 degrees C. The X-ray diffraction data were used to construct a partial phase diagram of the lipid mixture in excess water between 10 degrees and 90 degrees C and up to 20 mol % alpha-tocopherol in phospholipid.  相似文献   

18.
The location of ubiquinone-10 in phospholipid bilayers was analyzed using a variety of physical techniques. Specifically, we examined the hypothesis that ubiquinone localizes at the geometric center of phospholipid bilayers. Light microscopy of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine at room temperature in the presence of 0.05–0.5 mol fraction ubiquinone showed two separate phases, one birefringent lamellar phase and one phase that consisted of isotropic liquid droplets. The isotropic phase had a distinct yellow color, characteristic of melted ubiquinone. [13C]NMR spectroscopy of phosphatidylcholine liposomes containing added ubiquinone indicated a marked effect on the 13C-spin lattice relaxation times of the lipid hydrocarbon chain atoms near the polar head region of the bilayer, but almost no effect on those atoms nearest the center of the bilayer. X-ray diffraction experiments showed that for phosphatidylcholine bilayers, both in the gel and liquid-crystal-line phases, the presence of ubiquinone did not change either the lamellar repeat period or the wide-angle reflections from the lipid hydrocarbon chains. In electron micrographs, the hydrophobic freeze-fracture surfaces of bilayers in the rippled (Pβ′) phase were also unmodified by the presence of ubiquinone. These results indicate that the ubiquinone which does partition into the bilayer is not localized preferentially between the monolayers, and that an appreciable fraction of the ubiquinone forms a separate phase located outside the lipid bilayer.  相似文献   

19.
Summary

Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and X-ray diffraction studies on (DMPA)/poly(L-lysine) systems are reported. DSC studies revealed that addition of poly(L-lysine) to DMPA bilayers raises the gel to liquid-crystalline phase transition of the systems, and that this effect depends on the molecular weight of the poly(L-lysine). Small-angle X-ray diffraction measurements showed that, in the liquid-crystalline phase, the lamellar spacing of a DMPA/short-poly(L-lysine) (~4000 mol. wt.) system is shorter than that of a DMPA/long-poly(L-lysine) (~22 000 mol. wt.). In this connection wide-angle X-ray diffraction measurements indicate that the long-poly(L-lysine) adopts a β-sheet conformation on the DMPA bilayers in both the gel and the liquid-crystalline phases, but the short-poly(L-lysine) adopts this conformation only on gel phase DMPA bilayers. We found that the spacings of the hydrocarbon chain packing in a DMPA bilayer in the gel phase increases with temperature, while the spacing between neighbouring polypeptide chains in long-poly(L-lysine) in the β-sheet conformation remains almost constant. These observations indicate that the positively charged lysine residues are structurally independent of the negatively charged head groups of the phospholipid. On the basis of the present results we propose a model to explain the elementary behaviour of extrinsic membrane proteins in biomembranes.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of dolichol C(95) on the structure and thermotropic phase behaviour of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine, dipalmitoylphosphatidylethanolamine and stearoyloleoylphosphatidylethanolamine has been examined by synchrotron X-ray diffraction and differential scanning calorimetry. The presence of dolichol C(95) had no detectable effects on the temperature of either the gel to ripple or the ripple to liquid-crystal phase transition of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine. A proportionate increase of a few degrees in the temperature of the gel to lamellar liquid-crystal phase transition is observed in dispersions of dipalmitoylphosphatidylethanolamine and significantly there is a decrease in the temperature of the lamellar to non-lamellar phase transition of stearoyloleoylphosphatidylethanolamine. There was no significant change in the bilayer repeat spacing of all three mixed dispersions in gel phase in the presence of up to 20 mol% dolichol C(95). Electron density calculations showed that there was no change of bilayer thickness of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine with incorporation of up to 7.5 mol% dolichol C(95). These data suggest that effect of dolichol on the phospholipid model membranes depend on both the head group and the hydrocarbon chains of the phospholipid molecules. The presence of dolichol in phosphatidylcholine bilayers conforms to a model in which the polyisoprene compound is phase separated into a central domain sandwiched between the two monolayers in gel phase. In bilayers of phosphatidylethanolamines dolichol tends to stabilize the bilayers in gel phase at low temperatures and destabilize the bilayers in lamellar disordered structure at high temperatures. Non-lamellar structures coexist with lamellar disordered phase over a wide temperature range suggesting that dolichol is enriched in domains of non-lamellar structure and depleted from lamellar phase. These findings are useful to understand the function of dolichol in cell membranes.  相似文献   

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