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Ion association reactions with biological membranes,studied with the fluorescent dye 1-anilino-8-naphthalenesulfonate
Authors:Bastien Gomperts  Frédéric Lantelme  Reinhard Stock
Institution:(1) Johnson Research Foundation, University of Pennsylvania, School of Medicine, 19104 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania;(2) Present address: Department of Experimental Pathology, University College Hospital Medical School, London, England;(3) Present address: Laboratoire de Chimie Isotopique, Faculté des Sciences d'Orsay, Université de Paris, Orsay, France;(4) Present address: Max-Planck-Institut für Kernphysik, Heidelberg, Germany
Abstract:Summary (1) When salts are added to buffered suspensions of membrane fragments containing the fluorochrome 1-anilino-8-naphthalenesulfonate (ANS), there is an increased fluorescence. This is caused by increased binding of the fluorochrome; the intrinsic fluorescence characteristics of the bound dye remain unaltered. These properties make ANS a sensitive and versatile indicator of ion association equilibria with membranes. (2) Alkali metal and alkylammonium cations bind to membranes in a unique manner. Cs+ binds most strongly to rat brain microsomal material, with the other alkali metals in the order Cs+>Rb+>K+>Na+>Li+. The reaction is endothermic and entropy driven. Monovalent cations are displaced by other monovalent cations. Divalent cations and some drugs (e. g., cocaine) displace monovalent cations more strongly. (3) Divalent cations bind to membranes (and to lecithin micelles) at four distinct sites, having apparent association constants between 50 and 0.2mm –1. The characteristics of the titration suggest that only one species of binding site is present at any one time, and open the possibility that structural transitions of the unassociated coordination sites may be induced by divalent cation binding. Divalent cation binding at the weakest site (like monovalent cation binding) is endothermic and entropy driven. At the next stronger site, the reaction is exothermic. Monovalent cations affect divalent cation binding by reducing the activity coefficient: they do not appear to displace divalent cations from their binding sites.
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