Architecture of bacterial lipid A in solution. A neutron small-angle scattering study.

Eur J Biochem

Robert Koch-Institut des Bundesgesundheitsamtes, Berlin.

Published: June 1990

The phase structure of isolated bacterial lipid A, the lipid anchor of the lipopolysaccharides of the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria, has been investigated by neutron small-angle scattering. The shape of the scattering curves obtained at different H2O/2H2O ratios revealed a lamellar organisation of the lipid A at neutral pH both above and below its main phase temperature (approximately 40-45 degrees C). Analysis of the scattering curves and interpretation of the corresponding thickness distance distribution functions of the lamellar aggregates led to a model in which the lipid A molecules form a bilayer of about 5 nm in thickness. This value for the thickness of the bilayer, as well as the neutron-scattering density profile across the bilayer, can be explained by a molecular model which shows interdigitation of the fatty acid chains of the lipid A.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1432-1033.1990.tb15583.xDOI Listing

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