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. 1985 May 21;24(11):2773-81.
doi: 10.1021/bi00332a027.

1-Palmitoyl-2-pyrenedecanoyl glycerophospholipids as membrane probes: evidence for regular distribution in liquid-crystalline phosphatidylcholine bilayers

1-Palmitoyl-2-pyrenedecanoyl glycerophospholipids as membrane probes: evidence for regular distribution in liquid-crystalline phosphatidylcholine bilayers

P J Somerharju et al. Biochemistry. .

Abstract

We have synthesized 1-palmitoyl-2-pyrenedecanoyl-sn-glycero derivatives of 3-phosphatidylcholine, 3-phosphatidylethanolamine, 3-phosphatidylserine, 3-phosphatidylglycerol, 3-phosphatidylinositol, and 3-phosphatidic acid and investigated their behavior in monolayers and in neat and mixed bilayers. Fluorescence spectroscopy of neat pyrene phospholipid dispersions revealed a well-defined thermotropic transition at 13.5-19 degrees C depending on the polar head group. An endotherm coinciding with this transition was observed with differential scanning calorimetry, indicating it to be due to the melting of the lipid acyl chains. For pyrenephosphatidylethanolamine, the endotherm was observed at a much higher temperature (70 degrees C). Compression isotherms obtained at an argon/water interface revealed that the pyrene moiety somewhat increases the mean molecular area of a phospholipid molecule but does not prevent the expression of head-group-dependent packing behavior. Partition of the pyrene lipids between coexisting fluid and solid phases was investigated with fluorometry and calorimetry. Both techniques indicate that these lipids prefer the fluid phase and that this preference is independent of the head group. The rates and apparent activation energies of lateral diffusion in fluid bilayers were found to be similar for most pyrene lipids, suggesting that the lateral movement of phospholipids is not critically dependent on interactions at the head-group level. Lateral distribution of the pyrene lipids in gel and fluid phosphatidylcholine bilayers was studied with the excimer technique and calorimetry. In gel-state dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine bilayers, the pyrene lipids form clusters. These clusters, however, do not consist of pure pyrene lipid but of aggregates (compounds) of the labeled and unlabeled lipid.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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