Effects of vitrified and nonvitrified sugars on phosphatidylcholine fluid-to-gel phase transitions

Citation
Kl. Koster et al., Effects of vitrified and nonvitrified sugars on phosphatidylcholine fluid-to-gel phase transitions, BIOPHYS J, 78(4), 2000, pp. 1932-1946
Citations number
50
Categorie Soggetti
Biochemistry & Biophysics
Journal title
BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL
ISSN journal
00063495 → ACNP
Volume
78
Issue
4
Year of publication
2000
Pages
1932 - 1946
Database
ISI
SICI code
0006-3495(200004)78:4<1932:EOVANS>2.0.ZU;2-L
Abstract
DSC was used to study the ability of glass-forming sugars to affect the gel -to-fluid phase transition temperature, T-m, of several phosphatidylcholine s during dehydration. In the absence of sugars, T-m increased as the lipid dried. Sugars diminished this increase, an effect we explain using the osmo tic and Volumetric properties of sugars. Sugars vitrifying around fluid pha se lipids lowered T-m below the transition temperature of the fully hydrate d lipid, T-o. The extent to which T-m was lowered below T-o ranged from 12 degrees to 57 degrees, depending on the lipids' acyl chain composition. Sug ars vitrifying around gel phase lipids raised T-m during the first heating scan in the calorimeter, then lowered it below T-o in subsequent scans of t he sample. Ultrasound measurements of the mechanical properties of a typica l sugar-glass indicate that it is sufficiently rigid to hinder the lipid ge l-to-fluid transition. The effects of vitrification on T-m are explained us ing the two-dimensional Clausius-Clapeyron equation to model the mechanical stress in the lipid bilayer imposed by the glassy matrix. Dextran and poly vinylpyrrolidone (PVP) also vitrified but did not depress T-m during drying . Hydration data suggest that the large molecular volumes of these polymers caused their exclusion from the interbilayer space during drying.