| Literature DB >> 27142706 |
Radu Tanasescu1, Martin A Lanz1, Dennis Mueller1, Stephanie Tassler2, Takashi Ishikawa3, Renate Reiter4,5, Gerald Brezesinski2, Andreas Zumbuehl1.
Abstract
The artificial phospholipid Pad-PC-Pad was analyzed in 2D (monolayers at the air/water interface) and 3D (aqueous lipid dispersions) systems. In the gel phase, the two leaflets of a Pad-PC-Pad bilayer interdigitate completely, and the hydrophobic bilayer region has a thickness comparable to the length of a single phospholipid acyl chain. This leads to a stiff membrane with no spontaneous curvature. Forced into a vesicular structure, Pad-PC-Pad has faceted geometry, and in its extreme form, tetrahedral vesicles were found as predicted a decade ago. Above the main transition temperature, a noninterdigitated Lα phase with fluid chains has been observed. The addition of cholesterol leads to a slight decrease of the main transition temperature and a gradual decrease in the transition enthalpy until the transition vanishes at 40 mol % cholesterol in the mixture. Additionally, cholesterol pulls the chains apart, and a noninterdigitated gel phase is observed. In monolayers, cholesterol has an ordering effect on liquid-expanded phases and disorders condensed phases. The wavenumbers of the methylene stretching vibration indicate the formation of a liquid-ordered phase in mixtures with 40 mol % cholesterol.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27142706 DOI: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.6b01143
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Langmuir ISSN: 0743-7463 Impact factor: 3.882