4.5 Article

Sterol structure and sphingomyelin acyl chain length modulate lateral packing elasticity and detergent solubility in model membranes

Journal

BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 85, Issue 6, Pages 3788-3801

Publisher

BIOPHYSICAL SOCIETY
DOI: 10.1016/S0006-3495(03)74794-8

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Funding

  1. NHLBI NIH HHS [HL49180, R01 HL049180] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIGMS NIH HHS [GM45928, R01 GM045928] Funding Source: Medline

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Membrane microdomains, such as caveolae and rafts, are enriched in cholesterol and sphingomyelin, display liquid-ordered phase properties, and putatively function as protein organizing platforms. The goal of this investigation was to identify sterol and sphingomyelin structural features that modulate surface compression and solubilization by detergent because liquid-ordered phase displays low lateral elasticity and resists solubilization by Triton X-100. Compared to cholesterol, sterol structural changes involved either altering the polar headgroup (e.g., 6-ketocholestanol) or eliminating the isooctyl hydrocarbon tail (e.g., 5-androsten-3beta-ol). Synthetic changes to sphingomyelin resulted in homogeneous acyl chains of differing length but of biological relevance. Using a Langmuir surface balance, surface compressional moduli (C-s(-1)) were assessed at various surface pressures including those (pi greater than or equal to 30 mN/m) that mimic biomembrane conditions. Sphingomyelin-sterol mixtures generally were less elastic in a lateral sense than chain-matched phosphatidylcholine-sterol mixtures at equivalent high sterol mole fractions. Increasing content of 6-ketocholestanol or 5-androsten-3beta-ol in sphingomyelin decreased lateral elasticity but much less effectively than cholesterol. Our results indicate that cholesterol is ideally structured for maximally reducing the lateral elasticity of membrane sphingolipids, for enabling resistance to Triton X-100 solubilization, and for interacting with sphingomyelins that contain saturated acyl chains similar in length to their sphingoid bases.

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