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Impermeant potential-sensitive oxonol dyes: II. The dependence of the absorption signal on the length of alkyl substituents attached to the dye
Authors:P. Nyirjesy  E. B. George  R. K. Gupta  M. Basson  P. R. Pratap  J. C. Freedman  K. Raman  A. S. Waggoner
Affiliation:(1) Department of Biological Sciences, Carnegie-Mellon University, 15213 Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania;(2) Department of Chemistry, Amherst College, 01002 Amherst, Massachusetts;(3) Department of Physiology, SUNY Health Sciences Center, 13210 Syracuse, New York;(4) Present address: Department of Neurology, Johns Hopkins Medical School, 21205 Baltimore, MD;(5) Present address: Obstetrics Department, Thomas Jefferson University Hospital, 19107 Philadelphia, PA;(6) Present address: Coulter Immunology, Inc., 440 20th Street, 33010 Hialeah, FL;(7) Present address: Department of Biology, MIT, 02139 Cambridge, MA;(8) Present address: Warner Lambert, Inc., 175 Tabor Rd., 07950 Morris Plains, NJ;(9) Present address: Carnegie-Mellon University, 4400 5th Avenue, 15213 Pittsburgh, PA
Abstract:Summary We have measured the potential-dependent light absorption changes of 43 impermeant oxonol dyes with an oxidized cholesterol bilayer lipid membrane system. The size of the signal is strongly dependent on the chain length of alkyl groups attached to the chromophore. Dye molecules with intermediate chain lengths give the largest signals. To better understand the dependence of the absorbance signal on alkyl chain length, a simple equilibrium thermodynamic analysis has been derived. The analysis uses the free energy of dye binding to the membrane and the ldquoon-offrdquo model (E.B. George et al.,J. Membrane Biol.,103:245–253, 1988a) for the potential-sensing mechanism. In this model, a population of dye molecules in nonpolar membrane binding sites is in a potential-dependent equilibrium with a second population of dye that resides in an unstirred layer adjacent to the membrane. Dye in the unstirred layer is in a separate equilibrium with dye in the bulk bathing solution. The equilibrium binding theory predicts a ldquosigmoidally shapedrdquo increase in signal with increasing alkyl chain length, even for very nonpolar dyes. We suggest that aggregation of the more hydrophobic dyes in the membrane bathing solution may be responsible for their low signals, which are not predicted by the theory.
Keywords:potential-dependent dye  oxonol dye  membrane  lipid bilayer  dye binding  mechanism
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