Abstract: | The influence of sucrose, between 0 and 70% in the aqueous phase, upon multilamellar liposomes of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine was examined by differential scanning calorimetry and X-ray diffraction analysis. Increasing concentrations of sucrose increase the temperatures of both the main transition and the pretransition of the lipid. The effect is greater on the pretransition than on the main transition. At 35 degrees C the interlamellar spacing in the multilamellar liposomes is reduced by increasing sucrose concentration in the aqueous phase and no significant effects are seen in the chain lattice of the bilayers. This result is interpreted as a dehydrating effect of sucrose upon the bilayer-water system at 35 degrees C. At 5 degrees C the interlamellar spacing is increased and this increase is, at high (70%) sucrose concentrations, attributable to an untilting of the lipid acyl chains with no change in the thickness of the aqueous layers in the multilamellae. |