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1.
The locational and orientational structure and the dynamics of cholesterol in the bilayer membrane were studied by using the solution-state NMR. The intermolecular nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) was analyzed for large unilamellar vesicles (100 nm in diameter) composed of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and cholesterol at cholesterol concentrations of 9-33 mol %. The DMPC headgroups show (1)H-{(1)H}-NOEs with the methyl groups at the hydrophobic terminals of both cholesterol and DMPC, illustrating the significant fluctuation of the bilayer membrane in the vertical (bilayer normal) direction. Cholesterol was found to keep the hydroxyl (OH) group toward the outer water pool on the basis of the following observations: (1) the cross correlation between the DMPC headgroup and the cholesterol terminal methyl group is weaker than those between the DMPC headgroups and (2) the methyl group at the hydrophobic terminal of cholesterol shows strong correlation with the terminal group of the DMPC chain portion. The OH group plays a crucial role in orienting cholesterol with its OH group outward, since cholestane, which has a molecular structure similar to that of cholesterol except for the absence of the OH group, was found to have no orientational preference in the bilayer membrane. The dynamic slowdown at high cholesterol concentrations is demonstrated on the basis of the correlation times for NOE as well as the broadening of the proton linewidths.  相似文献   

2.
Lipid bilayer membranes are known to form various structures such as large sheets or vesicles. When the two leaflets of the bilayer have an equal composition, the membrane preferentially forms a flat sheet or a spherical vesicle. However, a difference in the composition of the two leaflets may result in a curved bilayer or in a wide variety of vesicle shapes. Vesicles with different shapes have already been shown in experiments and diverse vesicle shapes have been predicted theoretically from energy minimization of continuous curves. Here we present a molecular dynamics study of the effect of small changes in the phospholipid headgroups on the spontaneous curvature of the bilayer and on the resulting vesicle shape transformations. Small asymmetries in the bilayers already result in high spontaneous curvature and large vesicle deformations. Vesicle shapes that are formed include ellipsoids, discoids, pear-shaped vesicles, cup-shaped vesicles, as well as budded vesicles. Comparison of these vesicles with theoretically derived vesicle shapes shows both resemblances and differences.  相似文献   

3.
We studied effects of chloroform and carbon tetrachloride on bilayer membranes of dimyristoyl-phosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and egg yolk phosphatidylcholine (Egg-PC) by birefringence, dynamic light scattering and fluorescence methods. It is shown that interference light due to the membrane birefringence considerably decreases by addition of the organohalogen compounds for both lipid membranes, indicating a significant decrease in membrane order. In addition, results of dynamic light scattering and turbidity measurements show a rupture of multilamellar DMPC vesicles induced by addition of chloroform at concentrations above 0.2 v/v%. No rupture of the vesicles is observed within the limit of solubility of carbon tetrachloride in water, but excessive addition of carbon tetrachloride (above 0.2 v/v%) induces the vesicle rupture. Chain orientational order was estimated from the interference light intensity at low concentrations of the organohalogen compounds without the occurrence of the vesicle rupture. The estimation shows a monotonic decrease in the chain order with increasing the concentration. The decreases in DMPC chain order by chloroform and by carbon tetrachloride are about 17% at 0.2 v/v% and 23% at 0.05 v/v%, respectively. The reduction in the chain order is correlated with an increase in the membrane fluidity observed by excimer fluorescence of pyrene incorporated to the membrane. Behavior of membrane disordering of Egg-PC is approximately similar with that of DMPC. This implies the strong interaction between the organohalogen compounds and the lipid chains, whether or not the bilayer has the vacancy resulted from unsaturated double bonds and different chains in length. The results of this work suggest that damages of biological membranes by chloroform and tetrachloride are not only induced by a direct attack on proteins but also by a significant membrane disorder.  相似文献   

4.
We recently introduced a method to tether intact phospholipid vesicles onto a fluid supported lipid bilayer using DNA hybridization (Yoshina-Ishii, C.; Miller, G. P.; Kraft, M. L; Kool, E. T.; Boxer, S. G. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2005, 127, 1356-1357). Once tethered, the vesicles can diffuse in two dimensions parallel to the supported membrane surface. The average diffusion coefficient, D, is typically 0.2 microm(2)/s; this is 3-5 times smaller than for individual lipid or DNA-lipid conjugate diffusion in supported bilayers. In this article, we investigate the origin of this difference in the diffusive dynamics of tethered vesicles by single-particle tracking under collision-free conditions. D is insensitive to tethered vesicle size from 30 to 200 nm, as well as a 3-fold change in the viscosity of the bulk medium. The addition of macromolecules such as poly(ethylene glycol) reversibly stops the motion of tethered vesicles without causing the exchange of lipids between the tethered vesicle and supported bilayer. This is explained as a depletion effect at the interface between tethered vesicles and the supported bilayer. Ca ions lead to transient vesicle-vesicle interactions when tethered vesicles contain negatively charged lipids, and vesicle diffusion is greatly reduced upon Ca ion addition when negatively charged lipids are present both in the supported bilayer and tethered vesicles. Both effects are interesting in their own right, and they also suggest that tethered vesicle-supported bilayer interactions are possible; this may be the origin of the reduction in D for tethered vesicles. In addition, the effects of surface defects that reversibly trap diffusing vesicles are modeled by Monte Carlo simulations. This shows that a significant reduction in D can be observed while maintaining normal diffusion behavior on the time scale of our experiments.  相似文献   

5.
The size-dependent behavior of small unilamellar vesicles is explored by dissipative particle dynamics, including the membrane characteristics and mechanical properties. The spontaneously formed vesicles are in the metastable state and the vesicle size is controlled by the concentration of model lipids. As the vesicle size decreases, the bilayer gets thinner and the area density of heads declines. Nonetheless, the area density in the inner leaflet is higher than that in the outer. The packing parameters are calculated for both leaflets. The result indicates that the shape of lipid in the outer leaflet is like a truncated cone but that in the inner leaflet resembles an inverted truncated cone. Based on a local order parameter, our simulations indication that the orientation order of lipid molecules decreases as the size of the vesicle reduces and this fact reveals that the bilayer becoming thinner for smaller vesicle is mainly attributed to the orientation disorder of the lipids. The membrane tension can be obtained through the Young-Laplace equation. The tension is found to grow with reducing vesicle size. Therefore, small vesicles are less stable against fusion. Using the inflation method, the area stretching and bending moduli can be determined and those moduli are found to grow with reducing size. Nonetheless, a general equation with a single numerical constant can relate bending modulus, area stretching modulus, and bilayer thickness irrespective of the vesicle size. Finally, a simple metastable model is proposed to explain the size-dependent behavior of bilayer thickness, orientation, and tension.  相似文献   

6.
We report on the gel-to-fluid phase transition behavior of unilamellar vesicles formed with 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-phosphatidylcholine (14:0 DMPC). We have interrogated the gel-to-fluid transition temperature of these bilayer structures using the chromophore perylene incorporated in their nonpolar region. We observe a discontinuous change in the reorientation time of perylene sequestered within the bilayer at the known melting transition temperature of 14:0 DMPC, 24 degrees C. The perylene reorientation data reveal a local viscosity of 14.5 +/- 2.5 cP in the gel phase, and 8.5 +/- 1.5 cP in the fluid phase. We have also incorporated small amounts of 1,2-dimyristoleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (14:1 DMPC) into these unilamellar vesicles and find that the melting transition temperature for these bilayers varies in a regular manner with the amount of 14:1 DMPC present. These data demonstrate that very little "contaminant" is required to cause a substantial change in the gel-to-fluid transition temperature, even though these contaminants do not alter the viscosity of the bilayer sensed by perylene, either above or below the melting transition.  相似文献   

7.
Polarization modulation infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy (PM-IRRAS) was employed to investigate the interaction of cholesterol with the headgroups of dimyristoylphosphatidycholine (DMPC) molecules under a static electric field. DMPC/cholesterol (7:3 molar ratio) mixtures form a bilayer on a Au(111) electrode surface by fusion and spreading of small unilamellar vesicles. PM-IRRAS experiments provided detailed information concerning the conformation and hydration of headgroups of DMPC bilayers in the presence and absence of 30% cholesterol. The presence of 30% cholesterol increases the space between the headgroups of DMPC molecules and hence increases the hydration of the DMPC/cholesterol mixed bilayer. The conformational state of the headgroups of DMPC molecules in the mixed bilayer is also significantly changed. The phosphate group is closer to the surface compared with the pure DMPC bilayer. The conformation of the -O-C-C-N moiety changes from gauche to trans in the presence of cholesterol.  相似文献   

8.
In this paper the immobilization of small unilamellar DMPC/GM1 lipid vesicles containing a water-soluble bodipy dye is described. The binding of the complete alphabeta toxin expressed by Vibrio cholerae to the attached vesicles was measured using Surface Plasmon Resonance (SPR) and a value of the dissociation constant K d obtained. Further measurements showed that the interaction of both the alphabeta-toxin and the beta-subunit alone resulted in the permeation of the lipid membrane, with release of a fluorophore contained within the vesicle being measured by combined SPR and Surface Plasmon enhanced Fluorescence Spectroscopy (SPFS). The leakage of dye through the membrane, measured by following the change in fluorescence, was fitted to a simple diffusion model. Finally, SPFS measurements of the effect of europium(III) chloride (EuCl 3) showed that cholera toxin binding and subsequent membrane permeation could be blocked by 1 micromol dm (-3) europium chloride. In view of the low oral toxicity of europium chloride, we speculate on the potential pharmaceutical applications of this molecule in the treatment of cholera infection.  相似文献   

9.
The interaction of submicellar concentrations of various physiologically important unconjugated [sodium deoxycholate (NaDC), sodium cholate (NaC)] and conjugated [sodium glycodeoxycholate (NaGDC), sodium glycocholate (NaGC), sodium taurodeoxycholate (NaTDC), sodium taurocholate (NaTC)] bile salts with dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) small unilamellar vesicles in solid gel (SG) and liquid crystalline (LC) phases was investigated using the excited-state prototropism of 1-naphthol. Steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence of the two excited-state prototropic forms of 1-naphthol indicate that submicellar bile salt concentration induces hydration of the lipid bilayer membrane into the core region. This hydration effect is a general phenomenon of the bile salts studied. The bilayer hydration efficiency of the bile salt follows the order NaDC > NaC > NaGDC > NaTDC > NaGC > NaTC for both DPPC and DMPC vesicles in their SG and LC phases.  相似文献   

10.
Cationic liposomes composed of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and dipalmityldimethylammmonium bromide (DPAB) were prepared by the Bangham method and the effect of DPAB on the membrane properties was examined in terms of liposomal shape, particle size, trapping efficiency, surface potential and dispersibility. The dispersibility of the mixed DPPC/DPAB liposomes (the mole fraction of DPAB (XDPAB)  0.05) was excellent and the dispersibility was maintained for 6 months, since the zeta-potential of the mixed liposomes was approximately +40 mV. The trapping efficiency of the mixed DPPC/DPAB liposomes (XDPAB = 0.05) was 10 times greater than that of the DPPC liposomes, and the value was largest among the mixed liposomes (XDPAB = 0–1.0). Freeze-fracture electron micrographs indicated that the shape of the mixed DPPC/DPAB liposomes (XDPAB = 0.05) was that of large unilamellar vesicles (LUVs) with a diameter of approximately 2 μm, while the shape of the DPPC liposomes was that of multilamellar vesicles (MLVs). The mixed liposomes had, therefore, a high trapping efficiency. Furthermore, the shape of the mixed DPPC/DPAB liposomes (XDPAB = 0.75) was also that of LUVs with a diameter of approximately 2 μm and these had a high trapping efficiency. Whereas, the particle size (500 nm) of the mixed DPPC/DPAB liposomes (XDPAB = 0.25) was smaller than that of the former and had the minimum trapping efficiency. The phase transition temperature of the liposomal bilayer membranes indicated a maximum value at 0.25–0.30 mole fractions of DPAB. These facts were considered to be due to the fact that DPPC and DPAB, whose molar ratio was 7.5:2.5, were tightly packed in the liposomal bilayer membranes and that the curvature of the liposomal particle was resultantly large. Nevertheless, LUVs having a high trapping efficiency were easily obtained by mixing a small amount of DPAB with the DPPC.  相似文献   

11.
We demonstrate here that the hydrogen/deuterium solvent exchange (HDX) properties of the transmembrane fragment of the M2 protein of Influenza A (M2-TM) incorporated into lipid vesicles or detergent micelles can be studied with straightforward electrospray (ESI) and nanospray mass spectrometry (MS) configurations provided that key factors, including sample preparation techniques, are optimized. Small unilamellar vesicle preparations were obtained by solubilizing dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and the M2-TM peptide in aqueous solution with n-octyl-β-D-glycopyranoside, followed by dialysis to remove the detergent. Electron microscopy experiments revealed that subsequent concentration by centrifugation introduced large multilamellar aggregates that were not compatible with ESI-MS. By contrast, a lyophilization-based concentration procedure, followed by thawing above the liquid crystal transition temperature of the lipid component, maintained the liposome size profile and yielded excellent ion fluxes in both ESI-MS and nano-ESI-MS. Using these methods the global HDX profile of M2-TM in aqueous DMPC vesicles was compared with that in methanol, demonstrating that several amide sites were protected from exchange by the lipid membrane. We also show that hydrophobic peptides can be detected by ESI-MS in the presence of a large molar excess of the detergent Triton X-100. The rate of HDX of M2-TM in Triton X-100 micelles was faster than that in DMPC vesicles but slower than when the peptide had been denatured in methanol. These results indicate that the accessibility of backbone amide sites to the solvent can be profoundly affected by membrane protein structure and dynamics, as well as the properties of model bilayer systems.  相似文献   

12.
Physicochemical properties of PEG-grafted liposomes   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Egg phosphatidylcholine (EggPC) or dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) liposomes containing polyethylene glycol (PEG)-lipids covering a range of 0-30 mol% have been prepared by Extrusion method. The physicochemical properties including size evolution and calcein permeation were evaluated to investigate the effect of PEG-lipids on bilayer structure. The results from quasielasetic light scattering (QELS), freeze-fracture microscopy, and gel exclusion chromatography revealed that presence of low concentration of PEG-lipid results in decreasing of vesicle size and further increase in the PEG-lipid concentrations lead to a transition from the lamellar membranes to micelles. The permeability for calcein increased with increase in concentration of distearoylphosphatidylethanolamine (DSPE)-PEG. On the other hand, the permeability decreased with low amount of cholesterol-PEG (blow 20% cholesterol-PEG) and increased with high amount of it. The maximum concentration of PEG-lipid that may be incorporated without alteration of the liposome structure depends on the composition of the bilayer. The concentration of DSPE-PEG2000 incorporated into vesicles without damaging vesicle structures were <20 mol% for EggPC and <10% for DMPC.  相似文献   

13.
We report on the investigations of the transformation of spherically closed lipid bilayers to supported lipid bilayers in aqueous media in contact with SiO(2) surfaces. The adsorption kinetics of small unilamellar vesicles composed of dimyristoyl- (DMPC) and dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) mixtures on SiO(2) surfaces were investigated using a dissipation-enhanced quartz crystal microbalance (QCM-D) as a function of buffer (composition and pH), lipid concentration (0.01-1.0 mg/mL), temperature (15-37 degrees C), and lipid composition (DMPC and DMPC/DPPC mixtures). The lipid mixtures used here possess a phase transition temperature (T(m)) of 24-33 degrees C, which is close to the ambient temperature or above and thus considerably higher than most other systems studied by QCM-D. With HEPES or Tris.HCl containing sodium chloride (150 mM) and/or calcium chloride (2 mM), intact vesicles adsorb on the surface until a critical density ((c)) is reached. At close vesicle contact the transformation from vesicles to supported phospholipid bilayers (SPBs) occurs. In absence of CaCl(2), the kinetics of the SPB formation process are slowed, but the passage through (c) is still observed. The latter disappears when buffers with low ionic strength were used. SPB formation was studied in a pH range of 3-10, yet the passage through (c) is obtained only for pH values above to the physiological pH (7.4-10). With an increasing vesicle concentration, (c) is reached after shorter exposure times. At a vesicle concentration of 0.01-1 mg/mL, vesicle fusion on SiO(2) proceeds with the same pathway and accelerates roughly proportionally. In contrast, the pathway of vesicle fusion is strongly influenced by the temperature in the vicinity of T(m). Above and around the T(m), transformation of vesicles to SPB proceeds smoothly, while below, a large number of nonruptured vesicles coexist with SPB. As expected, the physical state of the membrane controls the interaction with both surface and neighboring vesicles.  相似文献   

14.
Membrane fusion is an essential process guiding many important biological events, which most commonly requires the aid of proteins and peptides as fusogenic agents. Small drug induced fusion at low drug concentration is a rare event. Only three drugs, namely, meloxicam (Mx), piroxicam (Px), and tenoxicam (Tx), belonging to the oxicam group of non steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) have been shown by us to induce membrane fusion successfully at low drug concentration. A better elucidation of the mechanism and the effect of different parameters in modulating the fusion process will allow the use of these common drugs to induce and control membrane fusion in various biochemical processes. In this study, we monitor the effect of lipid headgroup size mismatch in the bilayer on oxicam NSAIDs induced membrane fusion, by introducing dimyristoylphosphatidylethanolamine (DMPE) in dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) small unilamellar vesicles (SUVs). Such headgroup mismatch affects various lipid parameters which includes inhibition of trans-bilayer motion, domain formation, decrease in curvature, etc. Changes in various lipidic parameters introduce defects in the membrane bilayer and thereby modulate membrane fusion. SUVs formed by DMPC with increasing DMPE content (10, 20, and 30 mol %) were used as simple model membranes. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) were used to characterize the DMPC-DMPE mixed vesicles. Fluorescence assays were used to probe the time dependence of lipid mixing, content mixing, and leakage and also used to determine the partitioning of the drugs in the membrane bilayer. How the inhibition of trans-bilayer motion, heterogeneous distribution of lipids, decrease in vesicle curvature, etc., arising due to headgroup mismatch affect the fusion process has been isolated and identified here. Mx amplifies these effects maximally followed by Px and Tx. This has been correlated to the enhanced partitioning of the hydrophobic Mx compared to the more hydrophilic Px and Tx in the mixed bilayer.  相似文献   

15.
The kinetics of addition of fatty acids (as alkaline solutions of the fatty acid anions) to pre-existing unilamellar phospholipid vesicles (mean diameter 100 nm) has been studied. The phospholipid DMPC (1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine) has been mainly used, together with three fatty acids, oleic acid (cis-9-octadecenoic acid), linoleic acid (cis,cis-9,12-octadecadienoic acid) and capric acid (decanoic acid). Experiments were performed above as well as below the main phase transition temperature (Tm) of DMPC vesicles. The pH chosen to study the fatty acid vesicle interaction (after fatty acid and vesicle mixing) was 8.5 in the case of oleic acid and linoleic acid and 7.4 for capric acid. In the absence of any pre-existing phospholipid vesicles, the addition of alkaline solutions of the fatty acid anions to corresponding buffer solutions of pH 8.5 or 7.4 leads to a partial protonation of the fatty acid anions again resulting in the formation of fatty acid vesicles. This process is rather slow, taking place over a period of hours/days, and the vesicles formed are very polydisperse and include a range of vesicle sizes/shapes. However, in the presence of pre-existing phospholipid vesicles the added fatty acids equilibrate readily within a few minutes and the size of the vesicles that form are then closely related to the size of the originally present phospholipid vesicles; the vesicles formed being generally somewhat larger than the pre-existing vesicles. In the case of the phospholipid DMPC, the mixed fatty acid/phospholipid vesicle system is often formed rather rapidly (particularly above Tm), so that stopped-flow methods have been applied to follow the kinetics of the process. It is proposed that most of the fatty acid molecules are initially rapidly incorporated into the bilayers of the pre-exisiting phospholipid vesicles as monomers, rather than that the added fatty acids form separate fatty acid vesicles. The mean vesicle sizes formed in the systems investigated have been analysed by using dynamic light scattering measurements. The behaviour of the DMPC system was found to be slightly different from the POPC (1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine) system studied before, but the results are consistent with a model that involves growth and subsequent fission of the mixed vesicles. The study provides further support of the "matrix effect" in this type of system [S. Lonchin, P.L. Luisi, P. Walde, B.H. Robinson, J. Phys. Chem. B 103 (1999) 10910-10916]. The pre-existing DMPC vesicles act as a kind of seed to control the behavior of the system in the presence of added fatty acid anions.  相似文献   

16.
Vesicles prepared by DMPC (1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine) and SOPC (1-stearoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine) lipid molecules having sizes smaller than the diffraction-limited focused laser beam have been used to confine single molecules in the laser focus. The confinement of single molecules in a volume smaller than the focused laser beam leads to a Gaussian distribution of single molecule fluorescence intensity. The interactions of single Nile Red molecules with DMPC and SOPC lipid bilayers were studied by single molecule fluorescence confocal microscopy. Nile Red molecules were observed to associate with and dissociate from individual DMPC and SOPC vesicles adsorbed on a glass surface, generating on-and-off fluctuations in a fluorescence signal representing a very low noise two-state trajectory. Off-time statistics were used to investigate the mean radius of the vesicles and the size distribution functions. The means of the on-time distributions of Nile Red in DMPC and SOPC vesicles were significantly different. The association and dissociation reactions of single Nile Red molecules with a vesicle have been studied. Features of the bimolecular interaction between the probe Nile Red and the vesicle were evaluated from the uncorrelated mean on-time and vesicle radius distributions, and the linear Nile Red concentration dependence of the mean off-time. Nile Red is shown to be a useful probe of the structural fluctuations and heterogeneity of these membrane structures, and it is a useful model with which to directly study a diffusion-influenced reversible bimolecular reaction.  相似文献   

17.
Gangliosides are a group of structurally diverse, sialic acid containing glycosphingolipids embedded into the membrane via their hydrophobic ceramide moiety. To gain atomic level insights into the structural perturbations caused by Galbeta3GalNAcbeta4(NeuAcalpha3)Galbeta4Glc1Cer (GM1), molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of a 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) bilayer containing GM1 at five different concentrations have been performed. Biological membranes contain GM1 only on the exoplasmic leaflet. However, vesicles prepared in the laboratory contain GM1 in both the leaflets albeit unequally. Hence, simulations were performed with GM1 present in only one (asymmetric bilayers) or in both of the leaflets (symmetric bilayers) of the bilayer. In symmetric bilayers, there is a decrease in surface area, an increase in deuterium order parameter, and an increase in peak-to-peak distance of DPPC with increasing concentration of GM1. Thus, the overall area of the lipid bilayer decreases (condensation effect) and the thickness increases with increasing concentrations of GM1. Even in asymmetric systems, decrease in surface area and increase in deuterium order parameter of hydrocarbon chains of DPPC are observed. However, the decrease in bilayer area and the increase in bilayer thickness are not as much as in the symmetric bilayer.  相似文献   

18.
A bilayer structure is an important immediate for the vesicle formation. However,the mechanism for the bilayer-vesicle transition remains unclear. In this work,a dissipative particle dynamics(DPD) simulation method was employed to study the mechanism of the bilayer-vesicle transition. A coarse-grained model was built based on a lipid molecule termed dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine(DMPC). Simulations were performed from two different initial configurations:a random dispersed solution and a tensionless bilayer. It was found that the bilayer-vesicle transition was driven by the minimization of the water-tail hydrophobic interaction energy,and was accompanied with the increase of the position entropy due to the redistribution of water molecules. The bulk pressure was reduced during the bilayer-vesicle transition,suggesting the evolved vesicle morphology was at the relatively low free energy state. The membrane in the product vesicle was a two-dimensional fluid. It can be concluded that the membrane of a vesicle is not interdigitated and most of the bonds in lipid chains are inclined to orient along the radical axis of the vesicle.  相似文献   

19.
The development of chemical reactions in nanospaces is of paramount importance for the development of active nanodevices, particularly in nanofluidics. It has been shown in a previous paper that phospholipid vesicles can be incorporated without spontaneous bilayer rupture into poly-L-glutamic acid/poly(allylamine) (PGA/PAH) multilayered polyelectrolyte films. The aim of the present study was to use such a system as an "embedded submicronic reactor" able to trigger precipitation of calcium phosphates within closed spaces through an enzymatic reaction, the enzyme also being encapsulated in the vesicle interior. To this aim, large unilamellar vesicles (LUVs) were produced containing calcium ions as active ions in the mineralization process, spermine as an activator of crystal growth, and alkaline phosphatase as a catalyst to convert phosphate esters into phosphates. After stabilization by adding a layer of poly-(D-lysine), these vesicles were embedded in a (PGA-PAH)n film. A paranitrophenyl phosphate containing solution was then put in contact with this film. It is shown by means of infrared spectroscopy in the attenuated total reflection mode that, consecutively to this contact, calcium phosphates are growing inside the embedded vesicles. By using scanning near-field fluorescence microscopy, it is demonstrated that the alkaline phosphatase enzymes are most probably located inside the vesicles after their embedding. In addition, atomic force microscopy was used to show, after chemical removal of the organic top layer of the film, that the inorganic platelets produced after the precipitation reaction are localized in volumes of similar size and shape as that of the vesicles into which the phosphate ester hydrolysis and subsequent precipitation reaction did occur.  相似文献   

20.
Biological membranes undergo constant shape remodeling involving the formation of highly curved structures. The lipid bilayer represents the fundamental architecture of the cellular membrane with its shapes determined by the Helfrich curvature bending energy. However, the dynamics of bilayer shape transitions, especially their modulation by membrane proteins, and the resulting shape instabilities, are still not well understood. Here, we review in a unifying manner several theories that describe the fluctuations (i.e. undulations) of bilayer shapes as well as their local coupling with lipid or protein density variation. The coupling between local membrane curvature and lipid density gives rise to a ‘slipping mode’ in addition to the conventional ‘bending mode’ for damping the membrane fluctuation. This leads to a number of interesting experimental phenomena regarding bilayer shape dynamics. More importantly, curvature-inducing proteins can couple with membrane shape and eventually render the membrane unstable. A criterion for membrane shape instability is derived from a linear stability analysis. The instability criterion reemphasizes the importance of membrane tension in regulating the stability and dynamics of membrane geometry. Recent progresses in understanding the role of membrane tension in regulating dynamical cellular processes are also reviewed. Protein density is emphasized as a key factor in regulating membrane shape transitions: a threshold density of curvature coupling proteins is required for inducing membrane morphology transitions.  相似文献   

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