4.5 Article

Mesoscopic structure in the chain-melting regime of anionic phospholipid vesicles:: DMPG

Journal

BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 86, Issue 6, Pages 3722-3733

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CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1529/biophysj.103.033803

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In a range of low ionic strength, aqueous dispersions of the anionic phospholipid DMPG (dimyristoylphosphatidylglycerol) have a transparent intermediate phase (IP, between T-m(on) congruent to 20degreesC and T-m(off) congruent to 30degreesC) between the turbid gel and fluid membrane phases, evidenced in turbidity data. Small angle x-ray scattering results on DMPG dispersions show that, besides the bilayer peak present in all phases, a peak corresponding to a mesoscopic structure at similar to400 Angstrom is detected only in IP. The dependence of this peak position on DMPG concentration suggests a correlation in the bilayer plane, consistent with the stability of vesicles in IP. Moreover, observation of giant DMPG vesicles with phase contrast light microscopy show that vesicles disappear upon cooling below T-m(off) and reappear after reheating. This further proves that although vesicles cannot be visualized in IP, their overall structure is maintained. We propose that the IP in the melting regime corresponds to unilamellar vesicles with perforations, a model which is consistent with all described experimental observations. Furthermore, the opening of pores across the membrane tuned by ionic strength, temperature, and lipid composition is likely to have biological relevance and could be used in applications for controlled release from nanocompartments.

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