Ceramide N-acyl chain length: a determinant of bidimensional transitions, condensed domain morphology, and interfacial thickness.

Langmuir

Centro de Investigaciones en Química Biológica de Córdoba (CIQUIBIC, UNC-CONICET), Departamento de Química Biológica, Facultad de Ciencias Químicas, Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, Haya de la Torre y Medina Allende, Ciudad Universitaria, X5000HUA Córdoba, República Argentina.

Published: April 2011

Several lipids of biological interest are able to form monomolecular surfaces with a rich variety of thickness and lateral topography that can be precisely controlled by defined variations of the film composition. Ceramide is one of the simplest sphingolipids, consisting of a sphingosine base N-linked to a fatty acid, and is a membrane mediator for cell-signaling events. In this work, films of ceramides N-acylated with the saturated fatty acids C10, C12, C14, and C16 were studied at the air-aqueous interface. The dipole moment contribution (from surface potential measurements) and the surface topography and thickness (as revealed by Brewster angle microscopy) were measured simultaneously with the surface pressure at different molecular areas. Several surface features were observed depending on the asymmetry between the sphingosine and the N-linked acyl chains. At 21 °C, the C16:0 and C14:0 ceramides showed condensed isotherms and the film topography revealed solid film patches (17.3-15.7 Å thick) that coalesced into a homogeneous surface by further compression. On the other hand, in the more asymmetric C12:0 and C10:0 ceramides, liquid expanded states and liquid expanded-condensed transitions occurred. In the phase coexistence region, the condensed state of these compounds formed flowerlike domains (11.1-13.3 Å thick). C12:0 ceramide domains were larger and more densely branched than those of C10:0 ceramide. Both the film thickness and the surface dipole moment of the condensed state increased with ceramide N-acyl chain length. Bending of the sphingosine chain over the N-linked acyl chain in the more asymmetric ceramides can account for the variation of the surface electrostatics, topography, and thickness of the films with the acyl chain mismatch.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/la105011xDOI Listing

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