Electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) spectroscopy was used to investigate binary mixtures of single-chain micelle-forming lipids and diacyl bilayer-forming lipids dispersed in D 2 O at 77 K. Mixtures of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and lyso-palmitoylphosphatidylcholine (Lyso-PPC) over the entire composition range (0–100 mol%) and phosphatidylcholine spin-labeled at selected carbon atom position along the sn-2 chain (n-PCSL) were considered. On increasing the content of the lysolipids incorporated in DPPC, the lipid bilayers are first transformed in interdigitated lamellae and then converted in micelles of Lyso-PPC. In the interdigitated phase, the profile of translamellae water accessibility is rather uniform as all the hydrocarbon segments are equally exposed to the solvent. In Lyso-PPC micelle, water penetrates at any depth of the hydrocarbon region with a tendency to increase toward the chain termini. The extent of water penetration is higher in the interdigitated DPPC/Lyso-PPC dispersions than in Lyso-PPC micelles. The profiles of water permeation revealed directly by D 2 O-ESEEM are also confirmed by more indirect evaluation of the polarity profiles based on the 14 N-hyperfine splitting in the conventional electron paramagnetic resonance spectra of n-PCSL in frozen DPPC/Lyso-PPC mixtures at 77 K. The ESEEM data reveal that H-bonding formation between the –NO group of the spin-label and the D 2 O molecules is favored in the intergitated phase with respect to the micellar phase and, in any lipid dispersion, the fraction of nitroxides that are singly H-bonded to deuterons is higher than the fraction that are doubly H-bonded. The overall results highlight the differences in the accessibility and properties of the solvent in the hydrocarbon region of lipid bilayers, interdigitated bilayers and micelles.

Solvent accessibility in interdigitated and micellar phases formed by DPPC/Lyso-PPC mixtures: D 2 O-ESEEM of chain labeled lipids

Aloi, Erika;Bartucci, Rosa
2019-01-01

Abstract

Electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) spectroscopy was used to investigate binary mixtures of single-chain micelle-forming lipids and diacyl bilayer-forming lipids dispersed in D 2 O at 77 K. Mixtures of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and lyso-palmitoylphosphatidylcholine (Lyso-PPC) over the entire composition range (0–100 mol%) and phosphatidylcholine spin-labeled at selected carbon atom position along the sn-2 chain (n-PCSL) were considered. On increasing the content of the lysolipids incorporated in DPPC, the lipid bilayers are first transformed in interdigitated lamellae and then converted in micelles of Lyso-PPC. In the interdigitated phase, the profile of translamellae water accessibility is rather uniform as all the hydrocarbon segments are equally exposed to the solvent. In Lyso-PPC micelle, water penetrates at any depth of the hydrocarbon region with a tendency to increase toward the chain termini. The extent of water penetration is higher in the interdigitated DPPC/Lyso-PPC dispersions than in Lyso-PPC micelles. The profiles of water permeation revealed directly by D 2 O-ESEEM are also confirmed by more indirect evaluation of the polarity profiles based on the 14 N-hyperfine splitting in the conventional electron paramagnetic resonance spectra of n-PCSL in frozen DPPC/Lyso-PPC mixtures at 77 K. The ESEEM data reveal that H-bonding formation between the –NO group of the spin-label and the D 2 O molecules is favored in the intergitated phase with respect to the micellar phase and, in any lipid dispersion, the fraction of nitroxides that are singly H-bonded to deuterons is higher than the fraction that are doubly H-bonded. The overall results highlight the differences in the accessibility and properties of the solvent in the hydrocarbon region of lipid bilayers, interdigitated bilayers and micelles.
2019
D2O-ESEEM; DPPC; Interdigitated lamellae; Lyso-PPC; Micelles; Spin-label; Water penetration profile; Biochemistry; Molecular Biology; Organic Chemistry; Cell Biology
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11770/291092
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