Temperature-jump and voltage-jump experiments at planar lipid membranes support an aggregational (micellar) model of the gramicidin A ion channel
- PMID: 2420993
- DOI: 10.1007/BF01870893
Temperature-jump and voltage-jump experiments at planar lipid membranes support an aggregational (micellar) model of the gramicidin A ion channel
Abstract
The kinetics of formation and dissociation of channels formed by gramicidin A and two analogues in planar lipid membranes was studied using a laser temperature-jump technique developed earlier [Brock, W., Stark, G., Jordan, P.C. (1981), Biophys. Chem. 13:329-348]. The time course of the electric current was found to agree with a single exponential term plus a linear drift. In case of gramicidin A the relaxation time was identical to that reported for V-jump experiments [Bamberg, E., Läuger, P. (1973), J. Membrane Biol. 11:177-194], which were interpreted on the basis of a dimerization reaction. The same results were obtained for gramicidin A and for chemically dimerized malonyl-bis-desformylgramicidin. It is therefore suggested that the dimerization represents a parallel association of two dimers to a tetramer. There is evidence that the tetramer, contrary to the presently favored dimer hypothesis, is the smallest conductance unit of an active gramicidin channel. An additional V-jump-induced relaxation process of considerably larger time constant is interpreted as a further aggregation of gramicidin dimers.
References
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Miscellaneous