Literature DB >> 7104326

Investigation of human erythrocyte ghost membranes with intramolecular excimer probes.

K A Zachariasse, W L Vaz, C Sotomayor, W Kühnle.   

Abstract

Human erythrocyte ghost membranes have been investigated using two intramolecular excimer probes, di(1-pyrenyl)propane and di(1-pyrenylmethyl) ether. Values for the viscosity of the direct probe environment in the ghost membranes range from 76 cP at 37 degrees C to 570 cP at 5 degrees C, as reported for di(1-pyrenyl(propane, with liquid paraffin as the reference solvent. For the activation energy of the excimer formation process, determined here mainly by the viscosity of the medium, a value of 37 kJ/mol is obtained. The other probe molecule reports a higher local viscosity, 133 cP at 37 degrees C, as well as a higher activation energy of excimer formation, 54 kJ/mol. Neither thermotropic phase transitions nor temperature hysteresis effects are observed within the temperature range (0 to 40 degrees C) studied. From the vibrational structure of the fluorescence spectrum of di(1-pyrenylmethyl) ether, a polarity of the probe environment close to that of hexanol (epsilon - 13.3) results for the erythrocyte ghost membranes. The polarity measured in egg phosphatidylcholine membranes and in multibilayers of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine is slightly larger, comparable to that of butanol (epsilon = 17.5), whereas a polarity comparable to that of methanol (epsilon = 32.7) is observed for aqueous micellar solutions of sodium dodecyl sulphate. Further, from the wavelength shifts in the absorption spectrum of di(1-pyrenyl)propane and di(1-pyrenylmethyl) ether, the polarizability of the probe surroundings can be determined, leading to a surprisingly high value for the apparent refractive index. This is attributed to a high local density of the direct environment of the probe, for which a location between the membrane/water interface and the unpolar bilayer mid-plane is deduced.

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Year:  1982        PMID: 7104326     DOI: 10.1016/0005-2736(82)90343-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochim Biophys Acta        ISSN: 0006-3002


  9 in total

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9.  The Effect of Lidocaine · HCl on the Fluidity of Native and Model Membrane Lipid Bilayers.

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  9 in total

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