Effect of Altered Polar Headgroup of Phosphatidylethanolamines on Transbilayer Aminophospholipid Distribution in Sonicated Vesicles


Autoria(s): Kumar, Ajay; Gupta, C M
Data(s)

23/03/2008

23/03/2008

1983

Resumo

The transbilayer aminophospholipid distributions in small unilamellar vesicles comprising of phosphatidylethanolamine or its analogs (bearing modifications in the polar headgroup) and egg hosphatidylcholine were ascertained using trinitrobenzenesulfonic acid as external membrane probe. These vesicles, containing 10-30 mol% phosphatidylethanolamine or its analogs, were formed by sonication and fractionated by centrifugation. Phosphatidylethanolamine at low concentrations (10 mol%) preferentially localized in the outer monolayer. This preference appeared to be reversed at higher phosphatidylethanolamine concentrations (30 mol%). Unlike this finding, phosphatidylethanolamine bearing ethyl, phenyl and benzyl substituents at the carbon atom adjacent to the amino group distributed mainly in the outer surface irrespective of their concentrations. Similar results were obtained when the phosphate and amino groups were separated by three methylene residues. These observations suggest that the effective polar headgroup volume and/or hydrogen-bonding capacity of phospholipids are the important factors that determine their distribution in small unilamellar vesicles.

Formato

3518994 bytes

application/pdf

Identificador

Biochimica el Biophysica Acta (1983), 730, 1-9

http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/114

Idioma(s)

en

Relação

CDRI Communication No. 2718

Palavras-Chave #Phospholipid distribution #Phosphatidylethanolamine analog #Aminophospholipid #Headgroup #Membrane vesicle
Tipo

Article