- Phase and surface properties of lipid bilayers containing neoglycolipids.
Phase and surface properties of lipid bilayers containing neoglycolipids.
The physical properties conferred to DPPC bilayers by including neoglycolipids composed by two different trisaccharides: mannose-mannose-mannose (3M) and glucose-mannose-glucose (GMG) attached to a cholesterol (cho) and a distearylglycerol (diC18) lipid moiety by a spacer were evaluated by means of the measurement of the electrokinetic potential and interfacial fluorescent probes. The phase properties measured with diphenylhexatriene (DPH) were correlated with the surface properties measured with merocyanine 540, dansyl, and Laurdan probes. The results show that the surface properties of large unilamellar vesicles depend on the sugar exposure to the water phase and also on the hydrocarbon moiety by which it is anchored to the bilayer. The combination of the cholesterol moiety with the saccharide attenuates the cooperativity decrease induced by the cholesterol moiety without the sugar portion. The neoglycolipid GMG-diC18 promotes opposite effects affecting slightly the cooperativity at the hydrocarbon core of DPPC and displacing the phase transition temperature to higher values. The presence of neoglycolipid with diC18 introduces defects in the packing at the interface of the membrane in the gel state. It is concluded that a relatively low proportion of neoglycolipids affects significantly the interfacial properties of DPPC bilayers in large unilamellar vesicles in the absence of changes at the membrane bulk at 25 degrees C.