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1.
J T Kim  J Mattai  G G Shipley 《Biochemistry》1987,26(21):6599-6603
Mixed phospholipid systems of ether-linked 1,2-dihexadecylphosphatidylcholine (DHPC) and ester-linked 1,2-dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) have been studied by differential scanning calorimetry and X-ray diffraction. At maximum hydration (60 wt % water), DHPC shows three reversible transitions: a main (chain melting) transition, TM = 44.2 degrees C; a pretransition, TP = 36.2 degrees C; and a subtransition, TS = 5.5 degrees C. DPPC shows two reversible transitions: TM = 41.3 degrees C and TP = 36.5 degrees C. TM decreases linearly from 44.2 to 41.3 degrees C as DPPC is incorporated into DHPC bilayers; TP exhibits eutectic behavior, decreasing sharply to reach 23.3 degrees C at 40.4 mol % DPPC and then increasing over the range 40-100 mol % DPPC; TS remains constant at 4-5 degrees C and is not observed at greater than 20 mol % DPPC. At 50 degrees C, X-ray diffraction shows a liquid-crystalline bilayer L alpha phase at all DHPC:DPPC mole ratios. At 22 degrees C, DHPC shows an interdigitated bilayer gel L beta phase (bilayer periodicity d = 47.0 A) into which approximately 30 mol % DPPC can be incorporated. Above 30 mol % DPPC, a noninterdigitated gel L beta' phase (d = 64-66 A) is observed. Thus, at T greater than TM, DHPC and DPPC are miscible in all proportions in an L alpha bilayer phase. In contrast, a composition-dependent gel----gel transition between interdigitated and noninterdigitated bilayers is observed at T less than TP, and this leads to eutectic behavior of the DHPC/DPPC system.  相似文献   

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

3.
Effects of ethanol on dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and distearoylphosphatidylcholine (DSPC) dispersions were investigated with an automated scanning density meter and a differential scanning calorimeter (DSC). The temperature-dependent profile of specific volume measured by the density meter clearly exhibited phase transitions of the DPPC and the DSPC dispersions as drastic changes in the thermal expansion coefficients. On increasing the ethanol concentration in the DPPC dispersions, the pretransition temperature was reduced faster than the main transition temperature was. An interdigitated gel phase (L beta I) appeared as a region of lower specific volume at the pretransition temperature when the ethanol concentration reached 40 mg/ml. The L beta I phase spread both its ends in an ethanol-dependent fashion, and the high-temperature end merged to the main transition at 50 mg/ml of ethanol. The temperature-ethanol phase diagram has been determined for DPPC. The transitions L beta' to L beta I and from L beta I to P beta' were also observed on the thermograms of DSC measurements. In the DSPC dispersions, the L beta I phase was induced between the L beta' and the P beta' phases by a lower ethanol concentration (about 20 mg/ml).  相似文献   

4.
Mixtures of 1,2-dipalmitoyl- and 1,2-O-dihexadecyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC and DHPC) in dispersion with excess water were studied by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and X-ray diffraction techniques. The transition parameters of the main gel-to-liquid crystalline transition show a monotonous dependence on the composition, indicating ideal miscibility of the two lipids, in keeping with the closely similar structures of the pure, hydrated lipids in the P beta' and L alpha states. The pre-transition shows a depression to a minimum temperature of 23 degrees C occurring around equimolar mixtures. Below the pre-transition temperatures, the L beta' gel phase of DPPC maintains bimolecular structure up to DHPC admixtures of 50 mol%, with adaptations in hydrocarbon chain packing and multilayer periodicity. On the side of DHPC, the interdigitated gel structure shows full solubility for DPPC up to equimolarity without major structural changes. The crystalline Lc-phase of DPPC exhibits immiscibility with DHPC, demonstrated by the fact that the subtransition is abolished already at less than 15 mol% DHPC. DHPC, below its subtransition, can accommodate up to 50 mol% DPPC within an interdigitated layer structure with unperturbed, crystalline hydrocarbon chain packing.  相似文献   

5.
The effect of 2,4-dichlorophenol (DCP) on the structures and phase transitions of fully hydrated 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC) liposomes was studied using FT-Raman spectroscopy. Whereas the Raman frequency shifts of the most frequently investigated bands of C-C and C-H stretching regions only indicate the main phase transition (P(beta')-L(alpha)) of the pure DPPC/water system, the Raman shift of C-H scissoring vibration at 1440 cm(-1) was found to be able to reveal the pretransition (L(beta')-P(beta')) as well. Analyzing the spectral parameters of the trans band at 1128 cm(-1), which does not overlap with DCP vibrational modes, a continuous decrease of trans conformations was found with increasing DCP concentration at 26 degrees C accompanying the phase transitions L(beta')-P(beta') and P(beta')-L(alpha). The intensity ratio of the symmetrical and asymmetrical methylene stretching bands (at 2850 cm(-1) and 2880 cm(-1)), defined as the disorder parameter by Levin [Levin, I.W., 1985. Two types of hydrocarbon chain interdigitation in sphingomielin bilayers. Biochemistry 24, 6282-6286], indicated that in the interdigitated phase (L(I)) the order is markedly high and comparable with that of L(beta). Both the phase transition P(beta')-L(alpha) in the DCP/DPPC molar ratio range of 10/100-50/100 and the phase transition L(I)-L(alpha) led to a significant increase of disordered chains and the presence of DCP molecules induced a more disordered chain region than that observed in the L(alpha) phase of DPPC. Nevertheless, it was found that the L(alpha) phase with DCP contains approximately the same amount of trans conformers than that without DCP.  相似文献   

6.
X Peng  J Jonas 《Biochemistry》1992,31(28):6383-6390
High-pressure 31P NMR was used for the first time to investigate the effects of pressure on the structure and dynamics of the phosphocholine headgroup in pure 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC) multilamellar aqueous dispersions and in DPPC bilayers containing the positively charged form of the local anesthetic tetracaine (TTC). The 31P chemical shift anisotropies, delta sigma, and the 31P spin-lattice relaxation times, T1, were measured as a function of pressure from 1 bar to 5 kbar at 50 degrees C for both pure DPPC and DPPC/TTC bilayers. This pressure range permitted us to explore the rich phase behavior of DPPC from the liquid-crystalline (LC) phase through various gel phases such as gel I (P beta'), gel II (L beta'), gel III, gel IV, gel X, and the interdigitated, Gi, gel phase. For pure DPPC bilayers, pressure had an ordering effect on the phospholipid headgroup within the same phase and induced an interdigitated Gi gel phase which was formed between the gel I (P beta') and gel II (L beta') phases. The 31P spin-lattice relaxation time measurements showed that the main phase transition (LC to gel I) was accompanied by the transition between the fast and slow correlation time regimes. Axially symmetric 31P NMR lineshapes were observed at pressures up to approximately 3 kbar but changed to characteristic axially asymmetric rigid lattice lineshapes at higher pressures (3.1-5.1 kbar).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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

8.
E S Rowe  T A Cutrera 《Biochemistry》1990,29(45):10398-10404
It is well established that ethanol and other amphipathic molecules induce the formation of a fully interdigitated gel phase in saturated like-chain phosphatidylcholines (PC's). We have previously shown that the induction of interdigitation in PC's by ethanol is dependent upon the alcohol concentration, the lipid chain length, and the temperature [Nambi, P., Rowe, E. S. & McIntosh, T. J. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 9175-9182]. In the present study, we have used high-sensitivity differential scanning calorimetry to investigate the transitions of distearoylphosphatidylcholine between the noninterdigitated and the interdigitated phases. The enthalpy of the L beta' to L beta I transition is approximately half that of the L beta' to P beta' transition which occurs in the absence of ethanol. The reversibility of these transitions has also been investigated by employing both heating and cooling scans in order to establish the most stable phases as a function of temperature and ethanol concentration. It has been demonstrated that the transition to the interdigitated phase is reversible as a function of temperature. Kinetic studies on the reverse transition (L beta I to L beta') demonstrate that this transition can be very slow, requiring weeks to reach completion. The rate depends upon temperature and ethanol concentration. The slow phase changes mean that the lipid can exist for long periods of time in a phase structure which is not the most stable state. The biological significance of this type of lipid behavior is the implication that the phase structure of biological membranes may depend not only on the most stable phase structure of the lipids present but also on the synthetic pathway or other kinetic variables.  相似文献   

9.
J Shah  R I Duclos  Jr    G G Shipley 《Biophysical journal》1994,66(5):1469-1478
The structural and thermotropic properties of 1-stearoyl-2-acetyl-phosphatidylcholine (C(18):C(2)-PC) were studied as a function of hydration. A combination of differential scanning calorimetry and x-ray diffraction techniques have been used to investigate the phase behavior of C(18):C(2)-PC. At low hydration (e.g., 20% H2O), the differential scanning calorimetry heating curve shows a single reversible endothermic transition at 44.6 degrees C with transition enthalpy delta H = 6.4 kcal/mol. The x-ray diffraction pattern at -8 degrees C shows a lamellar structure with a small bilayer periodicity d = 46.3 A and two wide angle reflections at 4.3 and 3.95 A, characteristic of a tilted chain, L beta' bilayer gel structure. Above the main transition temperature, a liquid crystalline L alpha phase is observed with d = 53.3 A. Electron density profiles at 20% hydration suggest that C(18):C(2)-PC forms a fully interdigitated bilayer at -8 degrees C and a noninterdigitated, liquid crystalline phase above its transition temperature (T > Tm). Between 30 and 50% hydration, on heating C(18):C(2)-PC converts from a highly ordered, fully interdigitated gel phase (L beta') to a less ordered, interdigitated gel phase (L beta), which on further heating converts to a noninterdigitated liquid crystalline L alpha phase. However, the fully hydrated (> 60% H2O) C(18):C(2)-PC, after incubation at 0 degrees C, displays three endothermic transitions at 8.9 degrees C (transition I, delta H = 1.6 kcal/mol), 18.0 degrees C (transition II), and 20.1 degrees C (transition III, delta HII+III = 4.8 kcal/mol). X-ray diffraction at -8 degrees C again showed a lamellar gel phase (L beta') with a small periodicity d = 52.3 A. At 14 degrees C a less ordered, lamellar gel phase (L beta) is observed with d = 60.5 A. However, above the transition III, a broad, diffuse reflection is observed at approximately 39 A, consistent with the presence of a micellar phase. The following scheme is proposed for structural changes of fully hydrated C(18):C(2)-PC, occurring with temperature: L beta' (interdigitated)-->L beta (interdigitated)-->L alpha(noninterdigitated)-->Micelles. Thus, at low temperature C(18):C(2)-PC forms a bilayer gel phase (L beta') at all hydrations, whereas above the main transition temperature it forms a bilayer liquid crystalline phase L alpha at low hydrations and a micellar phase at high hydrations (> 60 wt% water).  相似文献   

10.
While hydrated dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) forms tilted chain L beta' bilayers in the gel phase, the ether-linked analogue dihexadecyl phosphatidylcholine (DHPC) exhibits gel phase polymorphism. At low hydration DHPC forms L beta' phases but at greater than 30% H2O a chain-interdigitated gel phase is observed (Ruocco, M. J., D. S. Siminovitch, and R. G. Griffin. 1985. Biochemistry. 24:2406-2411; Kim, J.T., J. Mattai, and G.G. Shipley. 1987. Biochemistry. 26:6599-6603). In this study we report the behavior of a phosphatidylcholine (PC) with both types of chain linkage, 1-hexadecyl-2-palmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (HPPC). HPPC has been investigated as a function of hydration using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and x-ray diffraction. By DSC, over the hydration range 5. 1-70.3 wt% H2O, HPPC exhibits two reversible transitions. The reversible main chain-melting transition decreases from 69 degrees C, reaching a limiting value of 40 degrees C at full hydration. X-ray diffraction patterns of hydrated HPPC have been recorded as a function of hydration at 20 degrees and 50 degrees C. At 50 degrees C, melted-chain L alpha bilayer phases are observed at all hydrations. At 20 degrees C, at low hydrations (less than 34 wt% H2O) HPPC exhibits diffraction patterns characteristic of bilayer gel phases similar to those of the gel phase of DPPC. In contrast, at greater than or equal to 34 wt% H2O, HPPC shows a much reduced bilayer periodicity, d = 47 A, and a single sharp reflection at 4.0 A in the wide angle region. This diffraction pattern is identical to that exhibited by the interdigitated phase of DHPC.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
The bilayer phase transitions of palmitoylstearoyl-phosphatidylcholine (PSPC), diheptadecanoyl-PC (C17PC) and stearoylpalmitoyl-PC (SPPC) which have the same total carbon numbers in the two acyl chains were observed by differential scanning calorimetry and high-pressure optical method. As the temperature increased, these bilayers exhibited four phases of the subgel (Lc), lamellar gel (L beta'), ripple gel (P beta') and liquid crystal (L alpha), in turn. The Lc phase was observed only in the first heating scan after cold storage. The temperatures of the phase transitions were almost linearly elevated by applying pressure. The temperature-pressure phase diagrams and the thermodynamic quantities associated with the phase transitions were compared among the lipid bilayers. For all the bilayers studied, the pressure-induced interdigitated gel (L beta I) phase appeared above the critical interdigitation pressure (CIP) between the L beta' and P beta' phases. The CIPs for the PSPC, C17PC and SPPC bilayers were found to be 50.6, 79.1 and 93.0 MPa, respectively. Contribution of two acyl chains to thermodynamic properties for the phase transitions of asymmetric PSPC and SPPC bilayers was not even. The sn-2 acyl chain lengths of asymmetric PCs governed primarily the bilayer properties. The fluorescence spectra of Prodan in lipid bilayers showed the emission maxima characteristic of bilayer phases, which were dependent on the location of Prodan in the bilayers. Second derivative of fluorescent spectrum exhibited the original emission spectrum of Prodan to be composed of the distribution of Prodan into multiple locations in the lipid bilayer. The F'497/F'430 value, a ratio of second derivative of fluorescence intensity at 497 nm to that at 430 nm, is decisive evidence whether bilayer interdigitation will occur. With respect to the L beta'/L beta I phase transition in the SPPC bilayer, the emission maximum of Prodan exhibited the narrow-range red-shift from 441 to 449 nm, indicating that the L beta I phase in the SPPC bilayer has a less polar "pocket" formed by a space between uneven terminal methyl ends of the sn-1 and sn-2 chains, in which the Prodan molecule remains stably.  相似文献   

12.
In order to understand the effect of polar head group modification on the thermotropic and barotropic phase behavior of phospholipid bilayer membranes, the phase transitions of dipalmitoylphosphatidylethanolamine (DPPE), dipalmitoylphosphatidyl-N-methylethanolamine (DPMePE), dipalmitoylphosphatidyl-N,N-dimethylethanolamine (DPMe2PE) and dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) bilayer membranes were observed by differential scanning calorimetry and high-pressure optical methods. The temperatures of the so-called main transition from the gel (L(beta)) or ripple gel (P(beta)') phase to the liquid crystalline (L(alpha)) phase were almost linearly elevated by applying pressure. The slope of the temperature-pressure boundary, dT/dp, was in the range of 0.220-0.264 K MPa(-1) depending on the number of methyl groups in the head group of lipids. The main-transition temperatures of N-methylated DPPEs decreased with increasing size of head group by stepwise N-methylation. On the other hand, there was no significant difference in thermodynamic quantities of the main transition between the phospholipids. With respect to the transition from the subgel (L(c)) phase to the lamellar gel (L(beta) or L(beta)') phase, the transition temperatures were also elevated by applying pressure. In the case of DPPE bilayer the L(c)/L(beta) transition appeared at a pressure higher than 21.8 MPa. At a pressure below 21.8 MPa the L(c)/L(alpha) transition was observed at a temperature higher than the main-transition temperature. The main (L(beta)/L(alpha)) transition can be recognized as the transformation between metastable phases in the range from ambient pressure to 21.8 MPa. Polymorphism in the gel phase is characteristic of DPPC bilayer membrane unlike other lipid bilayers used in this study: the L(beta)', P(beta)' and pressure-induced interdigitated gel (L(beta)I) phases were observed only in the DPPC bilayer. Regarding the bilayers of DPPE, DPMePE and DPMe2PE, the interdigitation of acyl chain did not appear even at pressures as high as 200 MPa.  相似文献   

13.
H Komatsu  E S Rowe 《Biochemistry》1991,30(9):2463-2470
It is now recognized that many amphiphilic molecules such as ethanol can induce the formation of the fully interdigitated gel phase (L beta I) in phosphatidylcholines (PC's). In the present study, we have developed a simple detection method for the L beta I phase using pyrene-labeled PC (PyrPC), which is a PC analogue with covalently coupled pyrene moiety at the end of one of its acyl chains. The intensity ratio of its fluorescence vibrational bands is a reflection of the polarity of the environment of the fluorophore. We have tested this fluorophore in several established interdigitated lipid systems, including 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (1,2-DPPC) in the presence of high concentrations of ethanol and 1,2-di-O-hexadecyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DHPC) and 1,3-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-2-phosphocholine (1,3-DPPC) in the absence of any additives. We have found in each of these systems that the ratio of the intensities of band III (387.5 nm) to band I (376.5 nm) is sensitive to the lipid phase change from the noninterdigitated L beta' phase to the interdigitated L beta I phase. By comparison of the III/I ratios for PyrPC in the lipid systems with the III/I ratios for methylpyrene in organic solvents, it was shown that the polarity of the PyrPC environment in the L beta I phase is similar to that of pentanol or ethanol. Using this method, we investigated the effect of cholesterol on the ethanol induction of the interdigitated gel phase in 1,2-DPPC. We found that the ethanol induction of the interdigitated gel phase is prevented by the presence of 20 mol % cholesterol.  相似文献   

14.
13C-NMR spectra have been obtained at 50.3 MHz for monoarachidoylphosphatidylcholine (MAPC) and dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) dispersions from 25 degrees C to 55 degrees C and for DPPC polycrystals at 25 degrees C using the cross polarization/magic angle spinning technique. Differential scanning calorimetric studies on DPPC and MAPC dispersions show comparable lipid phase transitions with transition temperatures at 41 degrees C and 45 degrees C, respectively, and thus enable the comparison of thermal, structural and dynamic differences between these two systems at corresponding temperatures. Conformational-dependent 13C chemical shift studies on DPPC dispersions demonstrate not only the coexistence of the tilted gel (L beta') and liquid-crystalline (L alpha) phases in the rippled gel (P beta') phase, but also the presence of an intermediate third microscopic phase as evidenced by three resolvable peaks for omega - 1 methylene carbon signals at the temperature interval between Tp and Tm. By comparing chemical shifts of MAPC in the hydrocarbon chain region with those of DPPC at similar reduced temperatures, it can be concluded that the packings are perturbed markedly in the middle segment of the fatty acyl chain during the lamellar to micellar transition. However, terminal methylene and methyl groups of interdigitated MAPC lamellae were found to be more ordered than those of non-interdigitated DPPC bilayers in the gel state. Interestingly, the terminal methyl groups of MAPC in the micelles remain to be relatively ordered; in fact, they are more ordered than the corresponding acyl chain end of DPPC in the liquid-crystalline state. Analysis of data obtained from rotating frame proton spin-lattice relaxation measurements shows a highly mobile phosphocholine headgroup, a rigid carbonyl group and an ordered hydrocarbon chain for lamellar MAPC in the interdigitated state. Furthermore, results suggest that free rotations of the glycerol C2-C3 bond within MAPC molecules may occur in the interdigitated bilayer, whereas intramolecular exchange between two conformations of the glycerol backbone in DPPC become possible at temperatures close to the pretransition temperature. Without isotope enrichment, we conclude that high-resolution solid-state 13C-NMR is indeed a useful technique which can be employed to study the packing and dynamics of phospholipids.  相似文献   

15.
We previously reported that 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC) forms an interdigitated gel phase in the presence of 1-palmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (16:0LPC) at concentrations below 30 mol%. In the present investigation, fluorescent probe 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene (DPH), X-ray diffraction, and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) were used to investigate the effect of cholesterol on the phase behavior of 16:0LPC/DPPC binary mixtures. At 25 degrees C, 30 mol% 16:0LPC significantly decreases the DPH fluorescence intensity during the transition of DPPC from the L(beta') phase to the L(betaI) phase. However, the addition of cholesterol to 16:0LPC/DPPC mixtures results in a substantial increase in fluorescence intensity. The changes in DPH fluorescence intensity reflect the probe's redistribution from an orientation parallel to the acyl chain to the center of the bilayer, suggesting a bilayer structure transition from interdigitation to noninterdigitation. The normal repeat period of small angle X-ray diffraction patterns can be restored and a reflection appears at 0.42 nm with a broad shoulder around 0.41 nm in wide angle X-ray diffraction patterns when 10 mol% cholesterol is incorporated into 30 mol% 16:0LPC/DPPC vesicles, indicating that the mixtures are in the gel phase (L(beta')). Moreover, DSC results demonstrate that 10 mol% cholesterol is sufficient to significantly decrease the main enthalpy, cooperativity and lipid chain melting of 30 mol% 16:0LPC/DPPC binary mixtures, which are L(betaI), indicating that the transition of the interdigitated phase is more sensitive to cholesterol than that of the noninterdigitated phase. Our data imply that the interdigitated gel phase induced by 16:0LPC is prevented in the presence of 10 mol% cholesterol, but unlike ethanol, an increasing concentration of 16:0LPC is not able to restore the interdigitation structure of the lipid mixtures.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
Comparative thermodynamic studies on the interactions of aqueous dispersions of dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) bilayer vesicles with hydrophobic and amphipathic species were conducted to elucidate the nature of the solute-induced interdigitated lipid phase. Cyclohexanol, a strong hydrophobic species, lowers the temperature (tm) of the lipid main phase transition from the gel to the liquid-crystalline phase. Unlike ethanol (an amphipathic species), as reported previously, cyclohexanol does not exert a biphasic effect on tm (lowering tm at lower concentrations and raising tm at higher concentrations). At cyclohexanol greater than or equal to 15.4 mg/ml or 0.154 M, the thermogram of DPPC vesicles exhibits a small transition adjacent to the main phase transition but at a lower temperature. In contrast, ethanol does not promote such a small transition. Furthermore, the enthalpy (delta H) of the transition is increased in the presence of cyclohexanol. The sign of the enthalpy change (delta H-delta Ho) is positive and that of the free energy change (delta G-delta Go) is negative, a characteristic of solute-solute hydrophobic interaction. In contrast, DPPC bilayer vesicles exhibit both (delta H-delta Ho) and (delta G-delta Go) greater than 0 in the presence of ethanol in a concentration range where lipid vesicles exist in an interdigitated phase. To support the above distinct thermodynamic observations, fluorescence steady-state polarization (P) measurements were also performed. At the temperature below tm, the value of P decreases as cyclohexanol concentration increases, while a biphasic effect on P was found in the presence of ethanol. These findings support the postulation that the solute-induced interdigitated lipid phase requires the solute molecule to be amphipathic in nature.  相似文献   

18.
Calorimetric, X-ray diffraction, and 31P nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) studies of aqueous dispersions of 1,2-dihexadecyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DHPC) gel phases at low temperatures (-60 to 22 degrees C) show thermal, structural, and dynamic differences when compared to aqueous dispersions of 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC) gel phases at corresponding temperatures. Differential scanning calorimetry of DHPC dispersions demonstrates a reversible, low-enthalpy "subtransition" at 4 degrees C in contrast to the conditionally reversible, high-enthalpy subtransition observed at 17 degrees C for annealed DPPC bilayers. X-ray diffraction studies indicate that DHPC dispersions form a lamellar gel phase with dav congruent to 46 A both above and below the "subtransition". It is suggested that the reduced dav observed for DHPC (46 A as compared to 64 A in DPPC) is due to an interdigitated lamellar gel phase which exists at all temperatures below the pretransition at 35 degrees C. 31P NMR spectra of DHPC gel-phase bilayers show an axially symmetric chemical shift anisotropy powder pattern which remains sharp down to -20 degrees C, suggesting the presence of fast axial diffusion. In contrast, 31P spectra of DPPC bilayers indicate this type of motion is frozen out at approximately 0 degrees C.  相似文献   

19.
Trehalose is believed to have the ability to protect some organisms against low temperatures. To clarify the cryoprotective mechanism of trehalose, the structure and the phase behavior of fully hydrated dihexadecylphosphatidylcholine (DHPC) membranes in the presence of various concentrations of trehalose were studied by means of differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), static x-ray diffraction, and simultaneous x-ray diffraction and DSC measurements. The temperature of the interdigitated gel (Lbeta(i))-to-ripple (Pbeta') phase transition of DHPC decreases with a rise in trehalose concentration up to approximately 1.0 M. Above a trehalose concentration of approximately 1.0 M, no Lbeta(i) phase is observed. In this connection, the electron density profile calculated from the lamellar diffraction data in the presence of 1.6 M trehalose indicates that DHPC forms noninterdigitated bilayers below the P beta' phase. It was concluded that trehalose destabilizes the Lbeta(i) phase of DHPC bilayers. This suggests that trehalose reduces the area at the interface between the lipid and water. The relation between this effect of trehalose and a low temperature tolerance was discussed from the viewpoint of cold-induced denaturation of proteins.  相似文献   

20.
We have systematically investigated the effect of short-chain n-alcohols and glycerol on the pretransition of 1,2-dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) by spectrophotometry. It is found that the n-alcohols and glycerol remove the pretransition above a critical concentration for each ligand. In addition, the short-chain n-alcohols below the critical concentration decrease the pretransition temperature. The longer the aliphatic chain length of the n-alcohol (up to butanol) the greater the decrease in the pretransition temperature, and the lower the concentration necessary to remove the pretransition. However, glycerol differs from the short-chain n-alcohols in that it has no significant effect on either the pretransition or the main transition, but it is also capable of removing the pretransition above a critical concentration. It has previously been shown that alcohols have a biphasic effect on the main transition temperature of phosphatidylcholines (Rowe, E.S. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 3299-3305). At high alcohol concentrations, the main transition is not thermodynamically reversible (Rowe, E.S. (1985) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 813, 321-330). Recently, Simon and McIntosh (Biochim. Biophys. Acta (1984) 773, 169-172) have identified that at high ethanol concentration DPPC exists in the interdigitated phase. The critical ligand concentration at which the pretransition disappears coincides with the induction of main transition hysteresis and the biphasic alcohol effect in the main transition. These three effects appear to correlate with the induction of the interdigitated gel state by alcohols and glycerol.  相似文献   

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