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1.
The temperature-composition phase diagram of monopentadecenoin, a monoacylglycerol with a cis monounsaturated fatty acid 15 carbon atoms long (C15:1c10) in water was constructed using x-ray diffraction. Low- and wide-angle diffraction patterns were collected from samples of fixed hydration as a function of temperature in the heating direction on x-ray-sensitive film. The temperature and hydration ranges investigated were 0-104 degrees C and 0-60% (w/w) water, respectively. The phases identified in the system include the lamellar crystalline phase, the lamellar liquid crystalline phase, the fluid isotropic phase, and two inverted cubic phases belonging to space groups la3d (Q230) and Pn3m (Q244). Particular attention has been devoted to the issues of phase equilibrium, phase boundary verification, and structure characterization. The phase diagrams of monopentadecenoin, monomyristolein (C14:1c9), and monoolein (C18:1c9) are compared, and the impact of molecular structure on mesophase stability and structure is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
The bilayer phase transitions of four kinds of unsaturated phospholipids with different-sized polar head groups, dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine (DOPE), dioleoylphosphatidyl-N-methylethanolamine (DOMePE), dioleoylphosphatidyl-N,N-dimethylethanolamine (DOMe2PE) and dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC), were observed by means of differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and high-pressure light-transmittance. DSC thermogram and light-transmittance curve for each phospholipid vesicle solution exhibited only one phase transition under ambient pressure, respectively. The light-transmittance of DOPC solution at pressure higher than 234 MPa abruptly increased stepwise at two temperatures, which corresponds to the appearance of stable subgel and lamellar gel phases under high pressure in addition to the liquid crystal phase. The constructed temperature (T)-pressure (p) phase diagrams were compared among these phospholipids. The phase-transition temperatures of the phospholipids decreased stepwise by N-methylation of the head group. The slops of the T-p phase boundary (dT/dp) of DOPE, DOMePE and DOMe2PE bilayers (0.127-0.145 K MPa-1) were found to be close to that of the transition from the lamellar crystal (or subgel; Lc) phase to the liquid crystal (Lalpha) phase for DOPC bilayer (0.131 K MPa-1). On the other hand, the dT/dp value of the main transition from the lamellar gel (Lbeta) phase to the Lalpha phase for DOPC bilayer (0.233 K MPa-1) was significantly different from that of the Lc/Lalpha transition, hence both curves intersected with each other at 234 MPa. The thermodynamic quantities associated with the phase transition of DOPE, DOMePE and DOMe2PE bilayers had also similar values to those for the Lc/Lalpha transition of DOPC bilayer. Taking into account of the values of transition temperature, dT/dp and thermodynamic quantities compared with the corresponding results of saturated phospholipids, we identified the phase transitions observed in the DOPE, DOMePE and DOMe2PE bilayers as the transition from the Lc phase to the Lalpha phase although they have been regarded as the main transition in the previous studies. The Lbeta phase is probably unstable for DOPE, DOMePE and DOMe2PE bilayers at all pressures, it exists as a metastable phase at pressures below 234 MPa while as a stable phase at pressures above 234 MPa in DOPC bilayer. The difference in phase stability among the phospholipid bilayers is originated from that in hydration structure of the polar head groups.  相似文献   

3.
The phase properties of lipids have far-reaching consequences in membrane biology. Their influence ranges from domain formation in intact biomembranes to membrane protein reconstitution and crystallization. To exploit phase behavior in the spirit of rational design, it is imperative that the rules relating lipid molecular structure and liquid crystal or mesophase behavior be established. Phase behavior is quantitatively and concisely represented in the form of temperature-composition phase diagrams. A somewhat limited number of phase diagrams exists for the monoacylglycerols. The objective of the current study was to determine the quality of phase behavior prediction for a specific monoacylglycerol based on an analysis of the existing phase diagrams for related chain homologs. To this end, a phase diagram for the monononadecenoin (19:1c10)/water system was predicted in the temperature range from -15 degrees C to 120 degrees C and from 0% to 80% (w/w) water. The prediction was tested by constructing the corresponding phase diagram using low- and wide-angle x-ray diffraction, differential scanning calorimetry, and polarized light microscopy. The results show that the predicted and experimental phase diagrams agree remarkably well. They also highlight the need for additional phase studies of the type described to enlarge the data bank of phase diagrams and to strengthen the foundations of the rational design approach.  相似文献   

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

5.
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   

6.
A combination of differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and X-ray diffraction have been used to study the kinetics of formation and the structure of the low-temperature phase of 1-stearoyl-lysophosphatidylcholine (18:0-lysoPC). For water contents greater than 40 weight %, DSC shows a sharp endothermic transition at 27 degrees C (delta H = 6.75 kcal/mol) corresponding to a low-temperature phase----micelle transition. This sharp transition is not reversible, but is regenerated in a time and temperature-dependent manner. For example, with incubation at 0 degrees C the maximum transition enthalpy (delta H = 6.75 kcal/mol) is generated in about 45 min after an initial slow nucleation process of approx. 20 min. The kinetics of formation of the low-temperature phase is accelerated at lower temperatures and may be related to the disruption of 18:0-lysoPC micelles by ice crystal formation. X-ray diffraction patterns of 18:0-lysoPC recorded at 10 degrees C over the hydration range 20-80% are characteristic of a lamellar gel phase with tilted hydrocarbon chains with the bilayer repeat distance increasing from 47.6 A at 20% hydration to a maximum of 59.4 A at 39% hydration. At this maximum hydration, approx. 19 molecules of water are bound per molecule of 18:0-lysoPC. Electron density profiles show a phosphate-phosphate distance of 30 A, indicating an interdigitated lamellar gel phase for 18:0-lysoPC at all hydration values. The angle of chain tilt is calculated to be between 20 and 30 degrees. For water contents greater than 40%, this interdigitated lamellar phase converts to the micellar phase at 27 degrees C in a kinetically fast process, while the reverse (micelle----interdigitated bilayer) transition is a kinetically slower process (see also Wu, W. and Huang, C. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 5068-5073).  相似文献   

7.
1-Behenyl-2-lauryl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (22/12 PC) belongs to a unique group of phospholipids in which the molecule has one acyl chain almost twice as long as the other. The temperature-composition phase diagram for this lipid in the range of 25-65 degrees C, and 0 to 84.3% (w/w) water has been constructed by using the isoplethal method in the heating direction and x-ray diffraction for phase identification and structure characterization. At water contents between 10.3 and 34% (w/w) and at temperatures below 43 degrees C, a single mixed interdigitated lamellar gel phase (Lm beta, [symbol: see text]) of the type described by Hui et al. (1984. Biochemistry. 23:5570-5577) and McIntosh et al. (1984. Biochemistry. 23:4038-4044) was found. A second phase consisting of bulk aqueous solution coexists with the Lm beta phase at hydration levels above 34% (w/w) water in the temperature range between 25 and 43 degrees C. Above 43 degrees C, a partially interdigitated lamellar liquid crystalline (Lp alpha) phase ([symbol: see text]) is seen in the water concentration range extending from 0 to 84.3% (w/w). The pure Lp alpha phase is found below 43% (w/w) water, while coexistence of the Lp alpha phase and the bulk aqueous solution is observed above this water concentration which marks the hydration boundary. Interestingly, the latter boundary for both Lm beta and Lp alpha phases is nearly vertical in the temperature range studied. Furthermore, the lamellar chain-melting transition temperature appears to be relatively insensitive to hydration in the range 0-85% (w/w) water. We have confirmed the identify of the Lm beta phase by constructing a 5.7-A resolution electron density profile on oriented samples by the swelling method. Temperature-induced chain melting effects an increase in lipid bilayer thickness suggesting that the Lp alpha phase has chains packed in the partially as opposed to the mixed interdigitated configuration. Unlike the symmetric phosphatidylcholines a ripple (P beta') phase was not found as an intermediate between the low and high temperature lamellar phases of 22/12 PC. The specific volume of 22/12 PC is 940 (+/- 1) microliter/g and 946 (+/- 1) microliter/g in the hydrated lamellar gel state at 28 (+/- 2) and 40 (+/- 2) degrees C, respectively, from neutral buoyancy experiments. Based on measurements of the temperature dependence of the various lattice parameters of the different phases encountered in this study the corresponding lattice thermal expansion coefficients have been measured. These are discussed and their dependence on lipid hydration is reported.  相似文献   

8.
The in meso method for membrane protein crystallization uses a lipidic cubic phase as the hosting medium. The cubic phase provides a lipid bilayer into which the protein presumably reconstitutes and from which protein crystals nucleate and grow. The solutions used to spontaneously form the protein-enriched cubic phase often contain significant amounts of detergents that were employed initially to purify and to solubilize the membrane protein. By virtue of their surface activity, detergents have the potential to impact on the phase properties of the in meso system and, by extension, the outcome of the crystallization process. The purpose of this study was to quantify the effects that a popular series of nonionic detergents, the n-alkyl-beta-D-glucopyranosides, have on the phase behavior of hydrated monoolein, the lipid upon which the in meso method is based. Phase identity and phase microstructure were characterized by small-angle x-ray diffraction on samples prepared to mimic in meso crystallization conditions. Measurements were made in the 0-40 degrees C range. Samples prepared in the cooling direction allow for the expression of metastability, a feature of liquid crystalline phases that might be exploited in low-temperature crystallization. The results show that the cubic phase is relatively insensitive to small amounts of alkyl glucosides. However, at higher levels the detergents trigger a transition to the lamellar phase in a temperature- and salt concentration-dependent manner. These effects have important implications for in meso crystallization. A diffraction-based method for assaying detergents is presented.  相似文献   

9.
Monoerucin is a monoacylglycerol incorporating a cis monounsaturated fatty acid, 22 carbon atoms long, with the double bond at carbon number 13. The original temperature-composition phase diagram for the monoerucin/water system, constructed on the basis of ‘consistency’ and light microscopy, includes unexpectedly only the lamellar and fluid isotropic phases [Lutton, E.S., 1965. J. Am. Oil Chem. Soc. 42:1068–1070]. In separate studies using X-ray diffraction, the cubic phase [Larsson et al., 1978. J. Sci. Food Agric. 29:909–914] and the inverted hexagonal (HII) phase [Caffrey, M., 1989. Biophys. J. 95:11–21] were shown to be the dominant phases. We have resorted to the traditional isoplethal diffraction method for constructing the equilibrium phase diagram of monoerucin in water with a view to resolving the controversy regarding the thermotropic and lyotropic properties of the system. The study confirms the presence of the pure HII phase that extends from ca. 10 to 22% (w/w) water and from ca. 35 to 125°C, and its coexistence with excess water above ca. 24%(w/w) water in the same temperature range. The low temperature region of the diagram is dominated by the lamellar crystal (Lc) phase, with the existence of the lamellar liquid crystal (L) and cubic-Ia3d phases at intermediate temperatures and hydration levels. Differential scanning calorimetry and polarizing light microscopy were used to confirm the reported equilibrium phase behavior. Full structure characterization of the system and how phase microstructure depends on sample hydration and temperature are reported.  相似文献   

10.
A phase diagram for 1,2-distearoylphosphatidylethanolamine (DSPE) dispersed in glycerol/water mixtures was constructed using data obtained from differential scanning calorimetry and time-resolved X-ray diffraction measurements. The phase sequence seen on heating the lipid remains the same for samples containing up to 70 wt% glycerol. Depending on the hydration conditions, the samples are either in a metastable lamellar gel (L beta) or one or other of two possible sub-gel phases (Lc and Lc') at low temperatures. These phases convert first to a lamellar liquid crystalline (L alpha) and then to an inverted hexagonal (HII) phase on heating. On cooling, the samples revert first to the L alpha and then to the L beta phase. Although the phase sequence is preserved, marked changes are seen in the transition temperatures between the different phases. The temperature of the transition between the L alpha and the HII phases decreases strongly with increasing glycerol concentration while that of the Lc and Lc' phases to L alpha, and to a lesser extent that of the L beta to L alpha transition, increases. Substantial changes in phase behaviour are seen if the glycerol concentration is increased above 70 wt%. Under these conditions, the Lc and Lc' phases transform directly into the HII phase on heating (a similar direct transition from the L beta to the HII phase is seen above 80 wt% glycerol). An exothermic transition from the L beta phase to the Lc' phase is observed and there is also an increasing tendency for the samples to revert to the Lc or Lc' phases on storage. These changes in relative stability of the different phases are discussed in terms of a possible membrane Hofmeister effect and their relevance to the mode of action of cryoprotectants is explored.  相似文献   

11.
Structures of lamellar phases in aqueous dispersions of diisoacylphosphatidylcholines (17iPC and 20iPC) were determined by x-ray diffraction methods. In agreement with previous DSC studies, subgel, gel, and liquid crystal phases were observed in each homolog. The subgel Lc(c') phases of both homologs show significant two-dimensional long range order and can be described by rectangular lattices. The dimensions of the two rectangular unit cells differ in that the side chains are canted (approximately 33 degrees) in the 20iPC homolog, while in 17iPC the side chains are normal to the bilayer plane. The gel L beta phases of 17iPC (Tgg = 17-19.5 degrees C) and 20iPC (Tgg = 44 degrees C) are similar but not identical and are consistent with a distorted, pseudohexagonal lattice for the rotationally disordered side chains. The liquid crystal phases of 17iPC (Tgl = 28 degrees C) and 20iPC (Tgl = 52 degrees C) are structurally similar and are typical of lipids with fluid side chains. Significant but different changes occur in the long spacings at Tgg and Tgl for the two homologs. This implies that interfacial states (particularly in the subgel phases) differ in the two homologs below the liquid crystal phase transition temperature.  相似文献   

12.
The bilayer phase transitions of dilauroylphosphatidylcholine (DLPC), containing two linear acyl chains with 12 carbon atoms, were observed by means of differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) under ambient pressure and light transmittance under high pressure. When the heating scan for the DLPC bilayer in 50 wt.% aqueous ethylene glycol (EG) solution began at -30 degrees C after cold storage, the DSC thermogram showed two endothermic peaks at 1.7 and 4.5 degrees C, which correspond to the transition from the lamellar crystalline (Lc) phase to the intermediate liquid crystalline (Lx) phase and the transition from the Lx phase to the liquid crystalline (L) phase, respectively. Extremely large enthalpy change (32.9 kJ mol(-1)) is characteristic of the Lc/Lx phase transition. The DSC thermogram for the heating scan beginning from -10 degrees C showed a single endothermic peak with 9.2 kJ mol(-1) at -0.4 degrees C, which was assigned as the so-called main transition between the metastable ripple gel (P'(beta)) and metastable Lalpha phases. The DLPC bilayer under high pressure underwent three kinds of transitions in EG solution, whereas only one transition was observed in water under high pressure. The middle-temperature transition in EG solution could be assigned to the main transition because of its consistency with the main transition in water. The lower-temperature transition is probably assigned as transition from the Lc phase to the P'(beta) phase. Since the slope (dT/dp) of the Lc/P'(beta) phase boundary is smaller than that for the main transition, the Lc/P'(beta) phase boundary and the main transition curves crossed each other at 40 MPa on the temperature-pressure phase diagram. The higher-temperature transition in EG solution refers to the transition from the Lx phase to the Lalpha phase. The Lx phase disappeared at about 180 MPa, and the direct transition from the P'(beta) phase to the Lalpha phase was observed at high pressures above 180 MPa.  相似文献   

13.
The phase behavior of partially hydrated 1, 2-dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine (DOPE) has been studied using differential scanning calorimetry and X-ray diffraction methods together with water sorption isotherms. DOPE liposomes were dehydrated in the H(II) phase at 29 degrees C and in the L(alpha) phase at 0 degrees C by vapor phase equilibration over saturated salt solutions. Other samples were prepared by hydration of dried DOPE by vapor phase equilibration at 29 degrees C and 0 degrees C. Five lipid phases (lamellar liquid crystalline, L(alpha); lamellar gel, L(beta); inverted hexagonal, H(II); inverted ribbon, P(delta); and lamellar crystalline, L(c)) and the ice phase were observed depending on the water content and temperature. The ice phase did not form in DOPE suspensions containing <9 wt% water. The L(c) phase was observed in samples with a water content of 2-6 wt% that were annealed at 0 degrees C for 2 or more days. The L(c) phase melted at 5-20 degrees C producing the H(II) phase. The P(delta) phase was observed at water contents of <0.5 wt%. The phase diagram, which includes five lipid phases and two water phases (ice and liquid water), has been constructed. The freeze-induced dehydration of DOPE has been described with the aid of the phase diagram.  相似文献   

14.
Differential scanning calorimetry and x-ray diffraction techniques have been used to investigate the structure and phase behavior of hydrated dimyristoyl lecithin (DML) in the hydration range 7.5 to 60 weight % water and the temperature range -10 to +60 degrees C. Four different calorimetric transitions have been observed: T1, a low enthalpy transition (deltaH approximately equal to 1 kcal/mol of DML) at 0 degrees C between lamellar phases (L leads to Lbeta); T2, the low enthalpy "pretransition" at water contents greater than 20 weight % corresponding to the transition Lbeta leads to Pbeta; T3, the hydrocarbon chain order-disorder transition (deltaH = 6 to 7 kcal/mol of DML) representing the transition of the more ordered low temperature phases (Lbeta, Pbeta, or crystal C, depending on the water content) to the lamellar Lalpha phase; T4, a transition occurring at 25--27 degrees C at low water contents representing the transition from the lamellar Lbeta phase to a hydrated crystalline phase C. The structures of the Lbeta, Pbeta, C, and Lalpha phases have been examined as a function of temperature and water content. The Lbeta structure has a lamellar bilayer organization with the hydrocarbon chains fully extended and tilted with respect to the normal to the bilayer plane, but packed in a distorted quasihexagonal lattice. The Pbeta structure consists of lipid bilayer lamellae distorted by a periodic "ripple" in the plane of the lamellae; the hydrocarbon chains are tilted but appear to be packed in a regular hexagonal lattice. The diffraction pattern from the crystalline phase C indexes according to an orthorhombic cell with a = 53.8 A, b = 9.33 A, c = 8.82 A. In the lamellae bilayer Lalpha strucure, the hydrocarbon chains adopt a liquid-like conformation. Analysis of the hydration characteristics and bilayer parameters (lipid thickness, surface area/molecule) of synthetic lecithins permits an evaluation of the generalized hydration and structural behavior of this class of lipids.  相似文献   

15.
The hydration properties and the phase structure of 1,2-di-O-tetradecyl-3-O(3-O-methyl-beta-D-glucopyranosyl)-sn-glycerol (3-O-Me-beta-D-GlcDAIG) in water have been studied via differential scanning calorimetry, 1H-NMR and 2H-NMR spectroscopy, and x-ray diffraction. Results indicate that this lipid forms a crystalline (Lc) phase up to temperatures of 60-70 degrees C, where a transition through a metastable reversed hexagonal (Hll) phase to a reversed micellar solution (L2) phase occurs. Experiments were carried out at water concentrations in a range from 0 to 35 wt%, which indicate that all phases are poorly hydrated, taking up < 5 mol water/mol lipid. The absence of a lamellar liquid crystalline (L alpha) phase and the low levels of hydration measured in the discernible phases suggest that the methylation of the saccharide moiety alters the hydrogen bonding properties of the headgroup in such a way that the 3-O-Me-beta-D-GlcDAIG headgroup cannot achieve the same level of hydration as the unmethylated form. Thus, in spite of the small increase in steric bulk resulting from methylation, there is an increase in the tendency of 3-O-Me-beta-D-GlcDAIG to form nonlamellar structures. A similar phase behavior has previously been observed for the Acholeplasma laidlawii A membrane lipid 1,2-diacyl-3-O-(6-O-acyl-alpha-D-glucopyranosyl)-sn-glycerol in water (Lindblom et al. 1993. J. Biol. Chem. 268:16198-16207). The phase behavior of the two lipids suggests that hydrophobic substitution of a hydroxyl group in the sugar ring of the glucopyranosylglycerols has a very strong effect on their physicochemical properties, i.e., headgroup hydration and the formation of different lipid aggregate structures.  相似文献   

16.
Both dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) and glycerol act cryoprotectants for biological systems and materials. Knowledge of molecular interactions of DMSO and glycerol with biological lipids is important for understanding of their cryoprotecitive mechanisms. In this study, the phase behavior and structures of hydrated monoolein were investigated in the presence of DMSO or glycerol, using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and simultaneous X-ray diffraction/DSC measurements. Based on the results obtained by this study, partial phase diagrams were constructed as a function of DMSO or glycerol concentrations and temperature. DMSO and glycerol hardly affect the enthalpy value for melting temperature of lamellar crystal phase of monoolein and the structure. On the other hand, DMSO and glycerol greatly affect the phase transformations associated with bicontinuous cubic phases of monoolein and the cubic phase structures. DMSO expands Im3m/Pn3m cubic phase co-existence region in the phase diagram and increases the lattice constant of the Pn3m monoolein cubic phase. Glycerol shows opposite effects. The present study suggests that different mechanisms act in the cryopreservation by DMSO and glycerol.  相似文献   

17.
The temperature dependence of the molecular diffusion in monoolein/water systems is investigated at several levels of hydration. Using the proton/deuteron selectivity, field gradient NMR allows the simultaneous determination of the diffusion constants of both, lipid and water molecules in the various lamellar and non-lamellar phases. Due to the mesoscopic structure of the monoolein/water phases, the diffusion coefficients are interpreted as 'reduced' or 'effective' diffusion coefficients, and are related to the microscopic molecular displacements by a so-called 'obstruction factor'. Changes in the microscopic structure at the phase transition from the bicontinuous cubic phases to the inverse hexagonal phase are reflected in the obstruction factor of the monoolein diffusion coefficients. The reduction of the water diffusion coefficients is too high to be explained by an obstruction factor only, implying a mechanism of molecular motion, which strongly differs from that of bulk water. Experiments on samples prepared with isotopic labeled water (2H(2)O and H(2)(17)O) indicate a chemical exchange of protons between the water molecules and the lipid headgroups on a millisecond timescale.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
Phase behavior and structure of aqueous dispersions of sphingomyelin   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
The phase behavior of bovine brain sphingomyelin in water has been determined by polarizing light microscopy, differential scanning calorimetry, and X-ray diffraction. Lamellar phases, in which water is intercalated between sheets of lipid molecules arranged in the classical bilayer fashion, are present over much of the phase diagram. An order-disorder transition separates the high temperature, liquid crystalline, lamellar phase from a more ordered lamellar phase at low temperatures. The hydration characteristics of sphingomyelin are similar to the structurally related lecithin in that only limited amounts of water are incorporated above and below the transition. Above the transition at 47 degrees C, a maximum of 35% by weight of water can be incorporated between the lipid bilayers, the total thickness at maximum hydration being 60.2 A, the lipid thickness 38 A, and the surface area per lipid molecule at the interface 60 A(2). Water in excess of 35% by weight is present as a separate phase. Below the phase transition, at 25 degrees C a maximum of 42% by weight of water may be incorporated between the lipid bilayers. On increasing the hydration, the lamellar repeat distance increases from 63.5 A to a limiting value of 76 A. Within this hydration range the calculated lipid thickness decreases from 63.5 to 42.5 A, and the surface area per lipid molecule increases from 36.1 to 53.6 A(2). Although these changes may be accounted for by a structure in which the hexagonally packed ordered hydrocarbon chains tilt progressively with respect to the normal to the bilayer plane on increasing hydration, it is possible that changes in other more complex lamellar structures may be responsible for these variations in lipid thickness and surface area.  相似文献   

20.
The phase diagram of DOPE/water dispersions was investigated by NMR and X-ray diffraction in the water concentration range from 2 to 20 water molecules per lipid and in the temperature range from -5 to +50 degrees C. At temperatures above 22 degrees C, the dispersions form an inverse (HII) phase at all water concentrations. Below 25 degrees C, an HII phase occurs at high water concentrations, an L alpha phase is formed at intermediate water concentrations, and finally the system switches back to an HII phase at low water concentrations. The enthalpy of the L alpha-HII-phase transition is +0.3 kcal/mol as measured by differential scanning calorimetry. Using 31P and 2H NMR and X-ray diffraction, we measured the trapped water volumes in HII and L alpha phases as a function of osmotic pressure. The change of the HII-phase free energy as a function of hydration was calculated by integrating the osmotic pressure vs trapped water volume curve. The phase diagram calculated on the basis of the known enthalpy of transition and the osmotic pressure vs water volume curves is in good agreement with the measured one. The HII-L alpha-HII double-phase transition at temperatures below 22 degrees C can be shown to be a consequence of (i) the greater degree of hydration of the HII phase in excess water and (ii) the relative sensitivities with which the lamellar and hexagonal phases dehydrate with increasing osmotic pressure. These results demonstrate the usefulness of osmotic stress measurements to understand lipid-phase diagrams.  相似文献   

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