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Condensing and fluidizing effects of ganglioside GM1 on phospholipid films. | LitMetric

Condensing and fluidizing effects of ganglioside GM1 on phospholipid films.

Biophys J

Department of Chemistry, Institute for Biophysical Dynamics and James Franck Institute, The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637, USA.

Published: April 2008

Mixed monolayers of the ganglioside G(M1) and the lipid dipalmitoylphosphatidlycholine (DPPC) at air-water and solid-air interfaces were investigated using various biophysical techniques to ascertain the location and phase behavior of the ganglioside molecules in a mixed membrane. The effects induced by G(M1) on the mean molecular area of the binary mixtures and the phase behavior of DPPC were followed for G(M1) concentrations ranging from 5 to 70 mol %. Surface pressure isotherms and fluorescence microscopy imaging of domain formation indicate that at low concentrations of G(M1) (<25 mol %), the monolayer becomes continually more condensed than DPPC upon further addition of ganglioside. At higher G(M1) concentrations (>25 mol %), the mixed monolayer becomes more expanded or fluid-like. After deposition onto a solid substrate, atomic force microscopy imaging of these lipid monolayers showed that G(M1) and DPPC pack cooperatively in the condensed phase domain to form geometrically packed complexes that are more ordered than either individual component as evidenced by a more extended total height of the complex arising from a well-packed hydrocarbon tail region. Grazing incidence x-ray diffraction on the DPPC/G(M1) binary mixture provides evidence that ordering can emerge when two otherwise fluid components are mixed together. The addition of G(M1) to DPPC gives rise to a unit cell that differs from that of a pure DPPC monolayer. To determine the region of the G(M1) molecule that interacts with the DPPC molecule and causes condensation and subsequent expansion of the monolayer, surface pressure isotherms were obtained with molecules modeling the backbone or headgroup portions of the G(M1) molecule. The observed concentration-dependent condensing and fluidizing effects are specific to the rigid, sugar headgroup portion of the G(M1) molecule.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2275696PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1529/biophysj.107.119990DOI Listing

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