Jf. Faucon et al., ACYL-CHAIN LENGTH DEPENDENCE IN THE STABILITY OF MELITTIN-PHOSPHATIDYLCHOLINE COMPLEXES - A LIGHT-SCATTERING AND P-31-NMR STUDY, Biochimica et biophysica acta. Biomembranes, 1234(2), 1995, pp. 235-243
Light scattering and P-31-NMR have been used to monitor the effect of
the bee-toxin, melittin, on phosphatidylcholine (PC) bilayers of varia
ble acyl chain length (from C-16:0 to C-20:0). Melittin interacts with
all lipids provided the interaction is initiated in the lipid fluid p
hase. For low-to-moderate amounts of toxin (lipid-peptide molar ratios
, R(i) greater than or equal to 15), the system takes the form of larg
e spheroidal vesicles, in the fluid phase, whose radius increases from
750 Angstrom A with dipalmitoyl-PC (DPPC) to 1500 Angstrom A with dia
rachinoyl-PC (DAPC). These vesicles fragment into small discoids of 10
0-150 Angstrom A radius when the system is cooled down below T-c (the
gel-to-fluid phase transition temperature). Little chain length depend
ence is observed for the small objects. Small structures are also dete
cted independently of the physical state of lipids (gel or fluid) when
R(i) less than or equal to 5 and provided the interaction has been ma
de above T-c. Small discs clearly characterized for DPPC and distearoy
l-PC (DSPC) lipids are much less stable with DAPC. However in the long
term, all these small structures fuse into large lipid lamellae. Disc
s are thermodynamically unstable and kinetics of disappearance of the
small lipid-toxin complexes increases as the chain length increases in
the sense: DAPC >> DSPC > DPPC. Kinetics of fusion of the small discs
into extended bilayers is described by a pseudo-first-order law invol
ving a lag time after which fusion starts. Increasing the chain length
decreases the lag time and increases the rate of fusion. Formation of
both the large vesicles in the fluid phase and the small discs in the
gel phase as well as their stability is discussed in terms of relativ
e shapes and dynamics of both lipids and toxin.