Order-disorder transition in bilayers of diphytanoyl phosphatidylcholine. (57/927)

A comparative study on bilayers of diphytanoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPhPC) and bilayers of dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine (DMPC) was made by X-ray lamellar diffraction as a function of temperature and the degree of hydration. An order-disorder phase transition of DPhPC reveals an interesting contrast to the standard model of DMPC. Electron density profiles allow us to deduce the conformational changes which occur in the headgroup-glycerol region and in the chain region. The important conclusion is that the lipid headgroup may have different conformational energetics in lipids of different chains. We explain why this is important to protein-membrane interactions.  (+info)

Using O2 to probe membrane immersion depth by 19F NMR. (58/927)

A fluorinated detergent, CF(3)(CF(2))(5)C(2)H(4)-O-maltose, was reconstituted into a lipid bilayer model membrane system to demonstrate the feasibility of determining solvent accessibility and membrane immersion depth of each fluorinated group by (19)F NMR. Apolar oxygen, which is known to partition with an increasing concentration gradient toward the hydrophobic membrane interior, exhibits a range of paramagnetic relaxation effects on (19)F nuclei, depending on its depth in the membrane. This effect, which is predominately associated with spin-lattice relaxation rates (R(1)) and chemical shifts, can be amplified greatly with minimal line broadening by increasing the partial pressure of O(2) at least 100-fold (i.e., P(O(2)) greater than 20 bar). The differences of longitudinal relaxation rates at 20 bar of oxygen pressure to those under ambient pressure (R(1)(20bar) - R(1)(0)) are largest for those fluorine groups expected to be most deeply buried in the membrane bilayer. This result contrasts with the reverse trend, which is observed on addition of a membrane surface-associated paramagnetic species, 4-(N,N-dimethyl-N-hexadecyl) ammonium-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl iodide (CAT-16) at ambient pressures. Thus, differential relaxation rates may be observed in (19)F-labeled membrane-associated molecules resulting from the addition of apolar oxygen under high pressure. The results demonstrate that the degree of solvent accessibility and membrane immersion depth of specific fluorinated species in membrane-associated macromolecules can be probed by (19)F NMR.  (+info)

Membrane-induced folding of cecropin A. (59/927)

Lipid membranes manifest a diverse array of surface forces that can fold and orient an approaching protein. To better understand these forces and their ability to influence protein function, we have used infrared spectroscopy with isotopic editing to characterize the 37-residue membrane-active antimicrobial polypeptide cecropin A as it approached, adsorbed onto, and finally penetrated various lipid membranes. Intermediate stages in this process were isolated for study by the use of internal reflection and Langmuir trough techniques. Results indicate that this peptide adopts well-ordered secondary structure while superficially adsorbed to a membrane surface. Its conformation is predominantly alpha-helical, although some beta structure is likely to be present. The longitudinal axis of the helical structure, and the transverse axes of any beta structure, are preferentially oriented parallel to the membrane surface. The peptide expands the membrane against pressure when it penetrates the membrane surface, but its structure and orientation do not change. These observations indicate that interactions between the peptide and deeper hydrophobic regions of the membrane provide energy to perform thermodynamic work, but separate and distinct interactions between the peptide and superficial components of the membrane are responsible for peptide folding. These results have broad implications for our understanding of the mechanism of action and the specificity of these antimicrobial peptides.  (+info)

Time-Resolved fluorescence studies on the internal motion of chlorophyll a of light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-protein complex in lipid membranes. (60/927)

By analyzing the steady state and time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy, the internal motions of chlorophyll a of light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-protein complex (LHCII) were characterized in a dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) liposome. Corresponding to the thermotropic phase of the membrane, chlorophyll a showed an unique internal motion in LHCII. At the gel phase, two motional components, one fast and the other slow, were observed, which would originate in the heterogeneity of the mutual orientation and the binding site of the chlorophyll a in LHCII. Interestingly, the faster motion was suppressed and only the slower segmental rotation with the larger motional amplitude was allowed on the phase transition to a liquid crystalline phase.  (+info)

Liposome-induced pulmonary hypertension: properties and mechanism of a complement-mediated pseudoallergic reaction. (61/927)

Intravenous injection of liposomes can cause significant pulmonary hypertension in pigs, a vasoconstrictive response that provides a sensitive model for the cardiopulmonary distress in humans caused by some liposomal drugs. The reaction was recently shown to be a manifestation of "complement activation-related pseudoallergy" (CARPA; Szebeni J, Fontana JL, Wassef NM, Mongan PD, Morse DS, Dobbins DE, Stahl GL, Bunger R, and Alving CR. Circulation 99: 2302-2309, 1999). In the present study we demonstrate that the composition, size, and administration method of liposomes have significant influence on pulmonary vasoactivity, which varied between instantaneously lethal (following bolus injection of 5 mg lipid) to nondetectable (despite infusion of a 2,000-fold higher dose). Experimental conditions augmenting the pulmonary hypertensive response included the presence of dimyristoyl phosphatidylglycerol, 71 mol% cholesterol, distearoyl phosphatidylcholine, and hemoglobin in liposomes, increased vesicle size and polydispersity, and bolus injection vs. slow infusion. The vasoactivity of large multilamellar liposomes was reproduced with human C3a, C5a, and xenoreactive immunoglobulins, and it correlated with the complement activating and natural antibody binding potential of vesicles. Unilamellar, monodisperse liposomes with 0.19 +/- 0.10 microm mean diameter had no significant vasoactivity. These data indicate that liposome-induced pulmonary hypertension in pigs is multifactorial, it is due to natural antibody-triggered classic pathway complement activation and it can be prevented by appropriate tailoring of the structure and administration method of vesicles.  (+info)

Estimations of lipid bilayer geometry in fluid lamellar phases. (62/927)

The excess water bilayer thickness, d(l,0), and molecular area, A(0), of lipid amphiphiles in the fluid lamellar phases of dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC) and dipalmitoleoylphosphatidylcholine (DPolPC) have been estimated between 15 and 50 degrees C and for dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) between 25 and 50 degrees C. These determinations have been made from X-ray measurements on samples of known water composition. With respect to temperature, T, d(l,0) and A(0) are well fitted to a linear equation. We find d(l,0) (A)=(35.68+/-0.02)-(0.0333+/-0.0006)T (degrees C) and A(0) (A(2))=(70.97+/-0.05)+(0.136+/-0.001)T (degrees C) for DOPC, d(l,0) (A)=(35.2+/-0.1)-(0.068+/-0.003)T (degrees C) and A(0) (A(2))=(59.7+/-0.2)+(0.210+/-0.006)T (degrees C) for DMPC, and d(l,0) (A)=(34.54+/-0.03)-(0.0531+/-0.0009)T (degrees C) and A(0) (A(2))=(67.12+/-0.09)+(0.173+/-0.003)T (degrees C) for DPolPC. The accuracy of these estimates depends largely on how accurately the excess water point is determined. Ideally, reliable X-ray and compositional data will be available around the excess water and it may be found by simple inspection, but this is the exception rather than the rule, since samples close to water excess normally sequester sizeable amounts of water in defects, which lead to an underestimate of d(l,0). and overestimate of A(0). In this paper, we report a methodology for identifying and removing such data points and fitting the remaining data in order to determine the excess water point.  (+info)

Comparative dynamics and location of chain spin-labelled sphingomyelin and phosphatidylcholine in dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine membranes studied by EPR spectroscopy. (63/927)

The dynamics and environment of sphingomyelin spin-labelled at different positions in the N-acyl chain have been studied in dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine bilayer membranes by using electron spin resonance spectroscopy. Comparison was made with phosphatidylcholine spin-labelled on the sn-2 acyl chain in the same host membrane. Spin-labelled sphingomyelin was found to mix well with the host phosphatidylcholine lipids in both gel and fluid phase membranes. At 1 mol%, mutual spin-spin interactions are no greater than for spin-labelled phosphatidylcholine. In the fluid membrane phase, the effective chain order parameters and polarity-sensitive isotropic hyperfine coupling constants of spin-labelled sphingomyelin display a similar dependence on the position of labelling to those of spin-labelled phosphatidylcholine. The values of both parameters are, however, generally larger for sphingomyelin than for phosphatidylcholine at equivalent positions of acyl chain labelling. This difference is attributed to the different chain linkage of sphingo- and glycero-lipids, combined with an offset of approximately one C-atom in transbilayer register between the respective N-acyl and O-acyl chains. In the gel phase, differences in chain configuration between sphingomyelin and phosphatidylcholine are indicated by differences in spin label spectral anisotropy between the two lipids, which appears to reverse towards the terminal methyl chain end.  (+info)

Atomic detail peptide-membrane interactions: molecular dynamics simulation of gramicidin S in a DMPC bilayer. (64/927)

Molecular dynamics simulations have been performed of the sequence-symmetric cyclic decapeptide antibiotic gramicidin S (GS), in interaction with a hydrated dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) bilayer, and the results compared with a "control" simulation of the system in the absence of GS. Following experimental evidence, the GS was initially set in a single antiparallel beta-sheet conformation with two Type II' beta-turns in an amphiphilic interaction with the membrane. This conformation and position remained in the 6.5 ns simulation. Main-chain dihedrals are on average approximately 26 degrees from those determined by NMR experiment on GS in dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) solution. Sequence-symmetric main-chain and side-chain dihedral angle pairs converge to within approximately 5 degrees and approximately 10 degrees, respectively. The area per lipid, lipid tail order parameters, and quadrupole spin-lattice relaxation times of the control simulation are mostly in good agreement with corresponding experiments. The GS has little effect on the membrane dipole potential or water permeability. However, it is found to have a disordering effect (in agreement with experiment) and a fluidifying effect on lipids directly interacting with it, and an ordering effect on those not directly interacting.  (+info)