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1.
Charged lipid membranes commonly consist of a mixture of charged and zwitterionic lipids. We suggest a model that characterizes the influence of the dipolar nature of the zwitterionic lipid species on the electrostatic adsorption of macroions onto mixed membranes in the fluid state. The model is based on Poisson-Boltzmann theory which we have modified so as to account for the dipolar character of the zwitterionic lipids. In addition the membrane lipids are allowed to adjust their lateral distribution upon macroion adsorption. We consider and compare two experimentally relevant scenarios: cationic macroions adsorbed onto anionic membranes and anionic macroions adsorbed onto cationic membranes. We show that in the former case the adsorption strength is slightly weakened by the presence of the headgroup dipoles of the zwitterionic lipids. Here, macroion-induced lipid demixing is more pronounced and the lipid headgroups tilt away from a cationic macroion upon adsorption. In contrast, for the adsorption of anionic macroions onto a cationic membrane the zwitterionic lipids strongly participate in the electrostatic interaction between membrane and macroion, thus enhancing the adsorption strength significantly (we predict up to 20%). Consistent with that we find less lateral demixing of the charged lipids and a reorientation of the dipoles of the zwitterionic headgroups towards the anionic macroions. Our results may be of importance to understand the differences in the electrostatic adsorption of proteins/peptides onto cellular membranes versus complex formation between cationic membranes and DNA.  相似文献   

2.
Certain lipid monolayers at the air-water interface undergo a second-order transition from a tilted to an untilted liquid-crystalline state of their lipid hydrocarbon chains at sufficiently large lateral pressure. Recent experimental observations demonstrate that in the presence of divalent cations DNA adsorbs onto a zwitterionic lipid monolayer and decreases the tilt transition pressure. Lowering of the tilt transition pressure indicates that the DNA condenses the lipid monolayer laterally. To rationalize this finding we analyze a theoretical model that combines a phenomenological Landau approach with an extension of the Poisson-Boltzmann model to zwitterionic lipids. Based on numerical calculations of the mean-field electrostatic free energy of a zwitterionic lipid monolayer-DNA complex in the presence of divalent cations, we analyze the thermodynamic equilibrium of DNA adsorption. We find that adsorbed DNA induces a 10% reduction of the electrostatic contribution to the lateral pressure exerted by the monolayer. This result implies a small but notable decrease in the tilt transition pressure. Additional mechanisms due to ion-ion correlations and headgroup reorientations are likely to further enhance this decrease.  相似文献   

3.
Fluidity and charging of supported bilayer lipid membranes (sBLMs) prepared from 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine (DOPC) were studied by fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) and microslit electrokinetic measurements at varying pH and ionic composition of the electrolyte. Measurements in neutral electrolytes (KCl, NaCl) revealed a strong correlation between the membrane fluidity and the membrane charging due to unsymmetrical water ion adsorption (OH(-) ? H(3)O(+)). The membrane fluidity significantly decreased below the isoelectric point of 3.9, suggesting a phase transition in the bilayer. The interactions of both chaotropic anions and strongly kosmotropic cations with the zwitterionic lipids were found to be related with nearly unhindered lipid mobility in the acidic pH range. While for the chaotropic anions the observed effect correlates with the increased negative net charge at low pH, no correlation was found between the changes in the membrane fluidity and charge in the presence of kosmotropic cations. We discuss the observed phenomena with respect to the interaction of the electrolyte ions with the lipid headgroup and the influence of this process on the headgroup orientation and hydration as well as on the lipid packaging.  相似文献   

4.
Bipolar reverse osmosis membranes that have both negatively and positively charged layers have been prepared to enhance the selectivity towards mono- and divalent ions in respect of both cations and anions. Positively charged layers are formed on low pressure reverse osmosis membranes having negative charge (NTR-7410 and 7450) by an adsorption method using polyethyleneimine (PEI) or a quaternary ammonium polyelectrolyte (QAP). These layers attach to the membrane's dense layer, which is made of sulfonated polyether sulfone. The selectivity of mono- and divalent ions is proven by experimental results for single electrolytes (NaCl, Na2SO4 and MgCl2). Although negatively charged membranes repulse divalent anions more strongly than cations and monovalent anions, bipolar reverse osmosis membranes reject both divalent cations and divalent anions better than monovalent ions. An optimal preparation method for bipolar membranes showing selectivity towards mono- and divalent ions were developed. The bipolar membranes showed good ion selectivity for artificial sea water.  相似文献   

5.
The current interest in mixed cationic-zwitterionic lipid membranes derives from their potential use as transfer vectors in nonviral gene therapy. Mixed cationic-zwitterionic lipid membranes have a number of structural properties that are distinct from the corresponding anionic-zwitterionic lipid membranes. As known from experiment and reproduced by computer simulations, the average cross-sectional area per lipid changes nonmonotonically with the mole fraction of the charged lipid, passing through a minimum at a roughly equimolar mixture. At the same time, the average orientation of the zwitterionic headgroup dipoles changes from more parallel to the membrane plane to more perpendicular. We suggest a simple mean-field model that reveals the physical mechanisms underlying the observed structural properties. To backup the mean-field calculations, we have also performed Monte Carlo simulations. Our model extends Poisson-Boltzmann theory to include (besides the cationic headgroup charges) the individual charges of the zwitterionic lipid headgroups. We model these charges to be arranged as dipoles of fixed length with rotational degrees of freedom. Our model includes, in a phenomenological manner, the changes in steric headgroup interactions upon reorientation of the zwitterionic headgroups. Our numerical results suggest that two different mechanisms contribute to the observed structural properties: one involves the lateral electrostatic pressure and the other the zwitterionic headgroup orientation, the latter modifying steric headgroup interactions. The two mechanisms operate in parallel as they both originate in the electrostatic properties of the involved lipids. We have also applied our model to a mixed anionic-zwitterionic lipid membrane for which neither a significant headgroup reorientation nor a nonmonotonic change in the average lateral cross-sectional area is predicted.  相似文献   

6.
To gain a better understanding of how monovalent salt under physiological conditions affects plasma membranes, we have performed 200 ns atomic-scale molecular dynamics simulations of phosphatidylcholine (PC) and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) lipid bilayers. These two systems provide representative models for the outer and inner leaflets of the plasma membrane, respectively. The implications of cation-lipid interactions in these lipid systems have been considered in two different aqueous salt solutions, namely NaCl and KCl, and the sensitivity of the results on the details of interactions used for ions is determined by repeating the simulations with two distinctly different force fields. We demonstrate that the main effect of monovalent salt on a phospholipid membrane is determined by cations binding to the carbonyl region of a membrane, while chloride anions mostly stay in the water phase. It turns out that the strength and character of the cation-lipid interactions are quite different for different types of lipids and cations. PC membranes and Na+ ions demonstrate strongest interactions, leading to notable membrane compression. This finding was confirmed by both force fields (Gromacs and Charmm) employed for the ions. The binding of potassium ions to PC membranes (and the overall effect of KCl), in turn, was found to be much weaker mainly due to the larger size of a K+ ion compared to Na+. Furthermore, the effect of KCl on PC membranes was found to be force-field sensitive: The binding of a potassium ion was not observed at all in simulations performed with the Gromacs force-field, which seems to exaggerate the size of a K+ ion. As far as PE lipid bilayers are concerned, they are found to be influenced by monovalent salt to a significantly lesser extent compared to PC bilayers, which is a direct consequence of the ability of PE lipids to form both intra- and intermolecular hydrogen bonds and hence to adopt a more densely packed bilayer structure. Whereas for NaCl we observed weak binding of Na+ cations to the PE lipid-water interface, in the case of KCl we witnessed almost complete lack of cation binding. Overall, our findings indicate that monovalent salt ions affect lipids in the inner and outer leaflets of plasma cell membranes in substantially different ways.  相似文献   

7.
Adsorption fo tertriary amine local anesthetics and Ca2+ onto lipid membranes having various negative surface charge densities was studied by measuring lipid vesicle electrophoretic mobility.

As the surface charge density of the membrane was reduced, the adsorption of the local anesthetics dominated that of the divalent cation. For a relatively high negatively charged membrane, the adsorption of both local anesthetic and Ca2+ became comparable and competitive.

It is deduced that the major factor for the adsorption of local anesthetic onto lipid membranes is due to simple physical partitioning between aqueous and membrane phases, and not due to ionic type of binding as seen for divalent cations with membranes. However, the adsorption of anesthetics is influenced by the surface potential of membranes which is in turn related to the surface concentration of local anesthetics near the membrane.

The amounts of competitive adsorption of divalent cations and local anesthetics are analyzed with respect to their bulk concentrations and various surface charge densities of the membranes. With the results of the above studies, a possible interpretation for the interaction site as well as the mode of adsorption of local anesthetics onto axon membranes is made in relation to divalent cation concentrations in the bulk phases.  相似文献   


8.
Currently self-assembled DNA delivery systems composed of DNA multivalent cations and anionic lipids are considered to be promising tools for gene therapy. These systems become an alternative to traditional cationic lipid–DNA complexes because of their low cytotoxicity lipids. However, currently these nonviral gene delivery methods exhibit low transfection efficiencies. This feature is in large part due to the poorly understood DNA complexation mechanisms at the molecular level. It is well-known that the adsorption of DNA onto like charged lipid surfaces requires the presence of multivalent cations that act as bridges between DNA and anionic lipids. Unfortunately, the molecular mechanisms behind such adsorption phenomenon still remain unclear. Accordingly a historical background of experimental evidence related to adsorption and complexation of DNA onto anionic lipid surfaces mediated by different multivalent cations is firstly reviewed. Next, recent experiments aimed to characterise the interfacial adsorption of DNA onto a model anionic phospholipid monolayer mediated by Ca2 + (including AFM images) are discussed. Afterwards, modelling studies of DNA adsorption onto charged surfaces are summarised before presenting preliminary results obtained from both CG and all-atomic MD computer simulations. Our results allow us to establish the optimal conditions for cation-mediated adsorption of DNA onto negatively charged surfaces. Moreover, atomistic simulations provide an excellent framework to understand the interaction between DNA and anionic lipids in the presence of divalent cations. Accordingly,our simulation results in conjunction go beyond the macroscopic picture in which DNA is stuck to anionic membranes by using multivalent cations that form glue layers between them. Structural aspects of the DNA adsorption and molecular binding between the different charged groups from DNA and lipids in the presenceof divalent cations are reported in the last part of the study. Although this research work is far from biomedical applications, we truly believe that scientific advances in this line will assist, at least in part, in the rationaldesign and development of optimal carrier systems for genes and applicable to other drugs.  相似文献   

9.
In the electrodialysis process for concentrating sea water, the addition of a small amount of the polycationic reagent Nonisold into the sea water feed results in a reduction of divalent cation permeability relative to that of monovalent cations. This is due to the formation of a reagent layer on the surface of the cation-exchange membrane. Divalent cations require greater energy to pass over the potential barrier at the reagent layer than do monovalent cations. The relationship between the height of the potential barrier and the ratio of ionic fluxes or the permselectivity coefficient is deduced on the basis of a kinetic-controlled mechanism of uptake of ions from the solution, and the height of the potential barrier is estimated from the experimental results. The difference between the potential barrier for divalent cations and that for monovalent cations may reach up to about 10 kJ/mol.  相似文献   

10.
The structures of isolated alkaline earth metal cationized amino acids are investigated using infrared multiple photon dissociation (IRMPD) spectroscopy and theory. These results indicate that arginine, glutamine, proline, serine, and valine all adopt zwitterionic structures when complexed with divalent barium. The IRMPD spectra for these ions exhibit bands assigned to carboxylate stretching modes, spectral signatures for zwitterionic amino acids, and lack bands attributable to the carbonyl stretch of a carboxylic acid functional group. Structural and spectral assignments are strengthened through comparisons with absorbance spectra calculated for low-energy structures and the IRMPD spectra of analogous ions containing monovalent alkali metals. Many bands are significantly red-shifted from the corresponding bands for amino acids complexed with monovalent metal ions, owing to increased charge transfer to divalent metal ions. The IRMPD spectra of arginine complexed with divalent strontium and barium are very similar and indicate that arginine adopts a zwitterionic form in both ions. Calculations indicate that nonzwitterionic forms of arginine are lowest in free energy in complexes with smaller alkaline earth metal cations and that zwitterionic forms are preferentially stabilized with increasing metal ion size. B3LYP and MP2 calculations indicate that zwitterionic forms of arginine are lowest in free energy for M = Ca, Sr, and Ba.  相似文献   

11.
Most lipid components of cell membranes are either neutral, like cholesterol, or zwitterionic, like phosphatidylcholine and sphingomyelin. Very few lipids, such as sphingosine, are cationic at physiological pH. These generally interact only transiently with the lipid bilayer, and their synthetic analogs are often designed to destabilize the membrane for drug or DNA delivery. However, anionic lipids are common in both eukaryotic and prokaryotic cell membranes. The net charge per anionic phospholipid ranges from − 1 for the most abundant anionic lipids such as phosphatidylserine, to near − 7 for phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5 trisphosphate, although the effective charge depends on many environmental factors. Anionic phospholipids and other negatively charged lipids such as lipopolysaccharides are not randomly distributed in the lipid bilayer, but are highly restricted to specific leaflets of the bilayer and to regions near transmembrane proteins or other organized structures within the plane of the membrane. This review highlights some recent evidence that counterions, in the form of monovalent or divalent metal ions, polyamines, or cationic protein domains, have a large influence on the lateral distribution of anionic lipids within the membrane, and that lateral demixing of anionic lipids has effects on membrane curvature and protein function that are important for biological control.  相似文献   

12.
Oxygen K-edge X-ray absorption spectra (XAS) of aqueous chloride solutions have been measured for Li(+), Na(+), K(+), NH(4)(+), C(NH(2))(3)(+), Mg(2+), and Ca(2+) at 2 and 4 M cation concentrations. Marked changes in the liquid water XAS are observed upon addition of the various monovalent cation chlorides that are nearly independent of the identity of the cation. This indicates that interactions with the dissolved monovalent cations do not significantly perturb the unoccupied molecular orbitals of water molecules in the vicinity of the cations and that water-chloride interactions are primarily responsible for the observed spectral changes. In contrast, the addition of the divalent cations engenders changes unique from the case of the monovalent cations, as well as from each other. Density functional theory calculations suggest that the ion-specific spectral variations arise primarily from direct electronic perturbation of the unoccupied orbitals due to the presence of the ions, probably as a result of differences in charge transfer from the water molecules onto the divalent cations.  相似文献   

13.
We apply a means to probe, stabilize, and control the size of lipid raft-like domains in vitro. In biomembranes the size of lipid rafts is ca. 10-30 nm. In vitro, mixing saturated and unsaturated lipids results in microdomains, which are unstable and coalesce. This inconsistency is puzzling. It has been hypothesized that biological line-active surfactants reduce the line tension between saturated and unsaturated lipids and stabilize small domains in vivo. Using solution X-ray scattering, we studied the structure of binary and ternary lipid mixtures in the presence of calcium ions. Three lipids were used: saturated, unsaturated, and a hybrid (1-saturated-2-unsaturated) lipid that is predominant in the phospholipids of cellular membranes. Only membranes composed of the saturated lipid can adsorb calcium ions, become charged, and therefore considerably swell. The selective calcium affinity was used to show that binary mixtures, containing the saturated lipid, phase separated into large-scale domains. Our data suggests that by introducing the hybrid lipid to a mixture of the saturated and unsaturated lipids, the size of the domains decreased with the concentration of the hybrid lipid, until the three lipids could completely mix. We attribute this behavior to the tendency of the hybrid lipid to act as a line-active cosurfactant that can easily reside at the interface between the saturated and the unsaturated lipids and reduce the line tension between them. These findings are consistent with a recent theory and provide insight into the self-organization of lipid rafts, their stabilization, and size regulation in biomembranes.  相似文献   

14.
The behavior of self-assembled monolayers of thiohexadecanoic acid adsorbed onto gold interacting in asymmetric 2:1 electrolytes has been studied with direct force measurements. The effects of two divalent cations (Mg(2+) and Ca(2+)) were studied at concentrations ranging from 1 μM to 10 mM. As compared to interactions in the presence of Na(+), the divalent ions adsorb strongly to the surfaces, with the effect of lowering the surface potential and decreasing the double-layer repulsion. At concentrations above 10 μM, the Ca(2+) ions were found to adsorb stronger than Mg(2+). Ca(2+) ions cause charge reversal at high concentrations, and the net interactions at 10 mM were attractive over the measurable range. Copyright 2000 Academic Press.  相似文献   

15.
Anionic unsaturated lipid bilayers represent suitable model systems that mimic real cell membranes: they are fluid and possess a negative surface charge. Understanding of detailed molecular organization of water-lipid interfaces in such systems may provide an important insight into the mechanisms of proteins' binding to membranes. Molecular dynamics (MD) of full-atom hydrated lipid bilayers is one of the most powerful tools to address this problem in silico. Unfortunately, wide application of computational methods for such systems is limited by serious technical problems. They are mainly related to correct treatment of long-range electrostatic effects. In this study a physically reliable model of an anionic unsaturated bilayer of 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoserine (DOPS) was elaborated and subjected to long-term MD simulations. Electrostatic interactions were treated with two different algorithms: spherical cutoff function and particle-mesh Ewald summation (PME). To understand the role of lipid charge in the system behavior, similar calculations were also carried out for zwitterionic bilayer composed of 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DOPC). It was shown that, for the charged DOPS bilayer, the PME protocol performs much better than the cutoff scheme. In the last case a number of artifacts in the structural organization of the bilayer were observed. All of them were attributed to inadequate treatment of electrostatic interactions of lipid headgroups with counterions. Electrostatic properties, along with structural and dynamic parameters, of both lipid bilayers were investigated. Comparative analysis of the MD data reveals that the water-lipid interface of the DOPC bilayer is looser than that for DOPS. This makes possible deeper penetration of water molecules inside the zwitterionic (DOPC) bilayer, where they strongly interact with carbonyls of lipids. This can lead to thickening of the membrane interface in zwitterionic as compared to negatively charged bilayers.  相似文献   

16.
By means of contact angle measurements with water and aqueous salt solutions, it is shown that plurivalent cations increase the hydrophobicity of negatively charged phospholipid vesicle membranes (consisting of phosphatidic acid, PA, or of phosphatidylserine, PS), but does not influence the hydrophobicity of neutral phospholipid membranes, (e.g., phosphatidylcholine, PC, at up to 200 mM of CaCl2). The hydrophobizing action of cations on PA and PS membranes is concomitant with the reduction in (negative) zeta potential with increasing cation concentrations. Trivalent cations, La3+, showed more effective in hydrophobizing negatively charged phospholipid membranes than divalent and monovalent cations. Except for hydrogen ions, monovalent cations do not show any appreciable hydrophobizing effect on lipid vesicle membranes at concentrations less than 1 M. The hydrophobizing effect on phospholipid membranes can also be used to explain the induction of lateral phase separation into patches of different phospholipids as well as cell fusion.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Adsorption on planar silica substrates of various monovalent and divalent cations from aqueous solution is studied by optical reflectivity. The adsorbed amount is extracted by means of a thin slab model. The experimental data are compared with grand canonical Monte Carlo titration simulations at the primitive model level. The surface excess of charge due to adsorbed cations is found to increase with pH and salt concentration as a result of the progressive dissociation of silanol groups. The simulations predict, in agreement with experiments, that the surface excess of charge from divalent ions is much larger than from monovalent ions. Ion-ion correlations explain quantitatively the enhancement of surface ionization by multivalent cations. On the other hand, the combination of experimental and simulation results strongly suggests the existence of a second ionizable site in the acidic region. Variation of the distance of closest approach between the ions and surface sites captures ion specificity of water-silica interfaces in an approximate fashion.  相似文献   

19.
Dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) monolayers were deposited onto a germanium attenuated total reflectance (ATR) crystal using the Langmuir–Blodgett technique. The DPPC-coated crystal was then exposed to human serum albumin or human fibrinogen solutions while measuring the protein adsorption by recording FTIR spectra. The effect of the zwitterionic nature of the DPPC polar headgroup towards protein adsorption has been ascertained by exposing either the phospholipid headgroup or the acyl chains to the protein solution; this was possible by the use of a silanized or a bare germanium crystal. Calibration curves have been made to measure the protein surface concentrations. After 3 h, the albumin surface concentration on DPPC monolayers was about three times higher when the proteins were exposed to the lipid acyl chains instead of the polar headgroups (e.g. 3 vs. 1 μg cm−2). As for fibrinogen (FGN) adsorption, when the lipid polar headgroups were exposed to the protein solution, the FGN adsorption was low reaching a maximum value of 0.5 μg cm−2. When interacting with the lipid acyl chains, the FGN adsorption reached a plateau at a value of 2.1 μg cm−2 after 3 h. Clearly, both albumin and FGN showed a low tendency to adsorb on surfaces where the lipid polar headgroups are exposed toward the protein solution.  相似文献   

20.
The binding of a negatively charged residue, aspartic acid (Asp) in tripeptide arginine-glycine-aspartic acid, onto a negatively charged hydroxylated rutile (110) surface in aqueous solution, containing divalent (Mg(2+), Ca(2+), or Sr(2+)) or monovalent (Na(+), K(+), or Rb(+)) cations, was studied by molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. The results indicate that ionic radii and charges will significantly affect the hydration, adsorption geometry, and distance of cations from the rutile surface, thereby regulating the Asp/rutile binding mode. The adsorption strength of monovalent cations on the rutile surface in the order Na(+) > K(+) > Rb(+) shows a "reverse" lyotropic trend, while the divalent cations on the same surface exhibit a "regular" lyotropic behavior with decreasing crystallographic radii (the adsorption strength of divalent cations: Sr(2+) > Ca(2+) > Mg(2+)). The Asp side chain in NaCl, KCl, and RbCl solutions remains stably H-bonded to the surface hydroxyls and the inner-sphere adsorbed compensating monovalent cations act as a bridge between the COO(-) group and the rutile, helping to "trap" the negatively charged Asp side chain on the negatively charged surface. In contrast, the mediating divalent cations actively participate in linking the COO(-) group to the rutile surface; thus the Asp side chain can remain stably on the rutile (110) surface, even if it is not involved in any hydrogen bonds with the surface hydroxyls. Inner- and outer-sphere geometries are all possible mediation modes for divalent cations in bridging the peptide to the rutile surface.  相似文献   

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