9 resultados para Lipid merging
em ArchiMeD - Elektronische Publikationen der Universität Mainz - Alemanha
Resumo:
Festkörperunterstützte Lipid-Modellmembranen auf Goldzur Rekonstitution von Membranproteinen Ziel der Arbeit war der Aufbau von Lipid-Modellmembranen auf Goldelektroden in welchen die funktionelle Aktivität von rekonstituierten Membranproteinen über elektrochemische Methoden nachgewiesen werden kann.Im Rahmen der Arbeit wurden Lipidbilayer mit und ohne hydrophile Ethylenglykol-Spacer durch Kombination von Selbstorganisation, Langmuir-Blodgett-Kuhn-Techniken und Vesikelfusion aufgebaut. Dabei dienten Thiolipide zur Verankerung der Membranen auf der Goldelektrode und es wurden diverse Wege verfolgt, deren Ankerdichte auf dem Substrat einzustellen.Eine Studie zum Aufbau von festkörperunterstützten Lipidbilayern durch Fusion von Vesikeln auf binäre Alkanthiol-/Hydroxythiol-Monolagen mit definierter Oberflächenenergie zeigte, daß eine minimale Grenzflächenenergie (Monolayer/Wasser) existiert, unterhalb welcher die Fusion nicht mehr zu einer zusätzlichen Monolage, sondern lediglich zur Ausbildung von adsorbierten oder teilgespreiteten Vesikeln führt.Zur Charakterisierung der Membranen wurden Oberflächenplasmonenresonanz, Impedanzspektroskopie, zyklische Voltammetrie, elektrochemische reduktive Desorption, Rasterkraftmikroskopie und Kontaktwinkelmessungen herangezogen.In die Modellmembranen wurden Membranproteine (Porin, Annexin V, H+-ATPase) sowie ganze Membranfragmente (Bande 3 aus roten Blutzellen) rekonstituiert und mittels elektrochemischer Methoden auf ihre funktionelle Aktivität überprüft.
Resumo:
Es wurden funktionalisierte polymerunterstützte planare Phospholipid-Modellmembran-Systeme hergestellt und auf jeder Präparationsstufe eingehend charakterisiert. Dünne Polysaccharidfilme wurden in der Form von quellbaren Gelen auf oxidische Oberflächen aufgebracht und bezüglich ihres Quellungsverhaltens und der Oberflächeneigenschaften in Abhängigkeit vom Wassergehalt untersucht. Lipidmonoschichten unterschiedlicher Zusammensetzung wurden mittels Langmuir-Blodgett-Tranfer auf Polymersubstrate übertragen und bezüglich der Stärke der Lipid/Polymer Wechselwirkung, der lateralen Selbstdiffusion in Abhängigkeit von der Wasseraktivität, dem Spreitverhalten der monomolekularen Membran auf dem Substrat in Abhängigkeit von der Wasseraktivität und dem Lateraldruck der Monoschicht, sowie des Ausmaßes der Hydratation im Kopfgruppenbereich der Lipidmembran in Abhängigkeit von der Wasseraktivität mittels Fluoreszensondenmethoden (Fluoreszenzerholung nach Photobleichung (FRAP), Fluoreszenzmikroskopie und Fluoreszenzspektroskopie) untersucht. Diffusions- und Spreitverhalten von amphiphilen Monoschichten auf Polymersubstraten wurden auf der Basis von in dieser Arbeit entwickelten physikalischen Modellen diskutiert. Mittels Langmuir-Schäfer Transfer wurde auf polymerunterstützte Lipidmonoschichten eine zweite Monoschicht übertragen. Die somit erhaltenen Lipid-Doppelschichtmembranen wurden bezüglich ihrer Stabilität, der lateralen Struktur, der lateralen Selbstdiffusion, des Spreitverhaltens auf unbedeckte Bereiche sowie der Stärke der Membran/Substrat Wechselwirkung vermittels Fluoreszenzmikroskopie, FRAP und Interferenz-Kontrast-Mikroskopie (RICM) untersucht. Schließlich wurden substratgestützte Doppelschicht-Lipidmembranen mit als Protonenpumpen fungierenden integralen Membranproteinen versehen. Die laterale Selbstdiffusion der rekonstituierten Proteinmoleküle wurde mittels FRAP, die funktionale Aktivität der Protonenpumpen mit einem Ionen-sensitiven Feldeffekttransistor-Array analysiert.
Resumo:
Tethered bilayer lipid membranes provide an efficient, stable and versatile platform for the investigation of integrated membrane proteins. However, the incorporation of large proteins, as well as of proteins with a large submembrane part is still a very critical issue and therefore, further optimisation of the system is necessary. The central element of a tBLM is a lipid bilayer. Its proximal leaflet is, at least to some extend, covalently attached to a solid support via a spacer group. The anchor lipid consists of three distinct parts, a lipid headgroup, a spacer group and an anchor. All parts together influence the final bilayer properties. In the frame of this work, the synthesis of new thiolipids for tBLMs on gold has been investigated. The aim was to obtain molecules with longer spacers in order to increase the submembrane space. The systems obtained have been characterized using SPR and EIS. The results obtained during this study are multiple. First, the synthesis of a previously synthesized architecture was successfully scaled up in an industrial lab using a new synthetic approach. The synthesis of large amounts is now feasible. Then, the synthesis of the new thiolipids was carried out taking into account the following requirements: the increase of the submembrane space by having longer ethyleneglycol spacers, the attachment of the molecules to a gold substrate via a thiol bond, and the tunability of the lateral mobility by changing the lipid headgroup. Three different synthetic strategies have been investigated. The polymeric approach did not prove to be successful, merely because of the broad molecular weight distribution. The synthesis of heterofunctionally protected oligoethyleneglycols allowed to obtain ethyleneglycol moieties with 6 and 8 units, but the tedious purification steps gave very low yields. Finally, the block by block synthesis using ethyleneglycol precursors proved to be an efficient and fast method to synthesize the target molecules. Indeed, these were obtained with very high yields, and the separation was very efficient. A whole family of new compounds was obtained, having 6, 8 and 14 ethyleneglycol units and with mono- or diphytanyl lipid headgroups. This new pathway is a very promising synthetic strategy that can be used further in the development of new compounds of the tether system. The formation of bilayers was investigated for the different thiolipids mainly by using EIS. The electrical properties of a bilayer define the quality of the membrane and allow the study of the functionality of proteins embedded in such a system. Despite multiple trials to improve the system using self assembly, Langmuir Blodgett transfer, and detergent mixed vesicles, the new polymer thiolipids did not show as high electrical properties as tBLMs reported in the literature. Nevertheless, it was possible to show that a bilayer could be obtained for the different spacer lengths. These bilayers could be formed using self assembly for the first monolayer, and two different methods for bilayer formation, namely vesicle fusion and solvent exchange. We could furthermore show functional incorporation of the ion carrier valinomycin: the selective transport of K+ ions could be demonstrated. For DPHL, it was even possible to show the functional incorporation of the ion channel gramicidin. The influence of the spacer length is translated into an increase of the spacer capacitance, which could correspond to an increase in the capacity of charge accumulation in the submembrane space. The different systems need to be further optimised to improve the electrical properties of the bilayer. Moreover, the incorporation of larger proteins, and proteins bearing submembrane parts needs to be investigated.
Resumo:
Tethered bilayer lipid membranes (tBLMs) are a promising model system for the natural cell membrane. They consist of a lipid bilayer that is covalently coupled to a solid support via a spacer group. In this study, we developed a suitable approach to increase the submembrane space in tBLMs. The challenge is to create a membrane with a lower lipid density in order to increase the membrane fluidity, but to avoid defects that might appear due to an increase in the lateral space within the tethered monolayers. Therefore, various synthetic strategies and different monolayer preparation techniques were examined. Synthetical attempts to achieve a large ion reservoir were made in two directions: increasing the spacer length of the tether lipids and increasing the lateral distribution of the lipids in the monolayer. The first resulted in the synthesis of a small library of tether lipids (DPTT, DPHT and DPOT) characterized by 1H and 13C NMR, FD-MS, ATR, DSC and TGA. The synthetic strategy for their preparation includes synthesis of precursor with a double bond anchor that can be easily modified for different substrates (e.g. metal and metaloxide). Here, the double bond was modified into a thiol group suitable for gold surface. Another approach towards the preparation of homogeneous monolayers with decreased two-dimensional packing density was the synthesis of two novel anchor lipids: DPHDL and DDPTT. DPHDL is “self-diluted” tether lipid containing two lipoic anchor moieties. DDPTT has an extended lipophylic part that should lead to the preparation of diluted, leakage free proximal layers that will facilitate the completion of the bilayer. Our tool-box of tether lipids was completed with two fluorescent labeled lipid precursors with respectively one and two phytanyl chains in the hydrophobic region and a dansyl group as a fluorophore. The use of such fluorescently marked lipids is supposed to give additional information for the lipid distribution on the air-water interface. The Langmuir film balance was used to investigate the monolayer properties of four of the synthesized thiolated anchor lipids. The packing density and mixing behaviour were examined. The results have shown that mixing anchor with free lipids can homogeneously dilute the anchor lipid monolayers. Moreover, an increase in the hydrophylicity (PEG chain length) of the anchor lipids leads to a higher packing density. A decrease in the temperature results in a similar trend. However, increasing the number of phytanyl chains per lipid molecule is shown to decrease the packing density. LB-monolayers based on pure and mixed lipids in different ratio and transfer pressure were tested to form tBLMs with diluted inner layers. A combination of the LB-monolayer transfer with the solvent exchange method accomplished successfully the formation of tBLMs based on pure DPOT. Some preliminary investigations of the electrical sealing properties and protein incorporation of self-assembled DPOT and DDPTT-based tBLMs were conducted. The bilayer formation performed by solvent exchange resulted in membranes with high resistances and low capacitances. The appearance of space beneath the membrane is clearly visible in the impedance spectra expressed by a second RC element. The latter brings the conclusion that the longer spacer in DPOT and the bigger lateral space between the DDPTT molecules in the investigated systems essentially influence the electrical parameters of the membrane. Finally, we could show the functional incorporation of the small ion carrier valinomycin in both types of membranes.
Resumo:
Mixed tethered bilayer lipid membranes (tBLMs) are described based on the self-assembly of a monolayer on template stripped gold, of an archea analogue thiolipid, 2,3-di-o-phytanyl-sn-glycerol-1-tetraethylene glycol-D,L--lipoic acid ester lipid (DPTL), and a newly designed dilution molecule, tetraethylene glycol-D,L--lipoic acid ester (TEGL). The usage of spacer and addition of extra dilution molecules between the substrate and the bilayer is that this architecture provides an ionic reservoir underneath the membrane, avoiding direct contact of the embedded membrane proteins with the gold electrodes and increasing the lateral diffusion of the bilayer, thus allowing for the incorporation of complex channels proteins which are failed in non-diluted systems. The tBLM is completed by fusion of liposomes made from a mixture of 1,2-diphythanolyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPhyPC), cholesterol, and 1,2-diphytanoyl-sn-Glycero-3-phosphate (DPhyPG) in a molar ratio of 6:3:1. Varying the mixing ratio, the optimum mixing ratio was obtained at a dilution factor of DPTL and TEGL at 90%:10%. Only under these conditions, the mixed tBLM showed electrical properties, as shown by EIS, which are comparable to a BLM. With higher dilution factors, a defect-free lipid bilayer was not formed. Formation of bilayers have been characterized by different techniques, such as surface plasmon resonance (SPR), electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS), atomic force microscopy (AFM), and quartz crystal microbalance (QCM). Different proteins such as hemolysin, melittin, gramicidin, M2, Maxi-K, nAChR and bacteriohodopsin are incorporated into these tBLMs as shown by SPR and EIS studies. Ionic conductivity at 0 V vs. Ag|AgCl, 3M KCl were measured by EIS measurements. Our results indicate that these proteins have been successfully incorporated into a very stable tBLM environment in a functionally active form. Therefore, we conclude that the mixed tBLMs have been successfully designed as a general platform for biosensing and screening purposes of membrane proteins.
Resumo:
The aim of this thesis was to apply the techniques of the atomic force microscope (AFM) to biological samples, namely lipid-based systems. To this end several systems with biological relevance based on self-assembly, such as a solid-supported membrane (SSM) based sensor for transport proteins, a bilayer of the natural lipid extract from an archaebacterium, and synaptic vesicles, were investigated by the AFM. For the characterization of transport proteins with SSM-sensors proteoliposomes are adsorbed that contain the analyte (transport protein). However the forces governing bilayer-bilayer interactions in solution should be repulsive under physiological conditions. I investigated the nature of the interaction forces with AFM force spectroscopy by mimicking the adsorbing proteoliposome with a cantilever tip, which was functionalized with charged alkane thiols. The nature of the interaction is indeed repulsive, but the lipid layers assemble in stacks on the SSM, which expose their unfavourable edges to the medium. I propose a model by which the proteoliposomes interact with these edges and fuse with the bilayer stacks, so forming a uniform layer on the SSM. Furthermore I characterized freestanding bilayers from a synthetic phospholipid with a phase transition at 41°C and from a natural lipid extract of the archaebacterium Methanococcus jannaschii. The synthetic lipid is in the gel-phase at room temperature and changes to the fluid phase when heated to 50°C. The bilayer of the lipid extract shows no phase transition when heated from room temperature to the growth temperature (~ 50°C) of the archeon. Synaptic vesicles are the containers of neurotransmitter in nerve cells and the synapsins are a family of extrinsic membrane proteins, that are associated with them, and believed to control the synaptic vesicle cycle. I used AFM imaging and force spectroscopy together with dynamic light scattering to investigate the influence of synapsin I on synaptic vesicles. To this end I used native, untreated synaptic vesicles and compared them to synapsin-depleted synaptic vesicles. Synapsin-depleted vesicles were larger in size and showed a higher tendency to aggregate compared to native vesicles, although their mechanical properties were alike. I also measured the aggregation kinetics of synaptic vesicles induced by synapsin I and found that the addition of synapsin I promotes a rapid aggregation of synaptic vesicles. The data indicate that synapsin I affects the stability and the aggregation state of synaptic vesicles, and confirm the physiological role of synapsins in the assembly and regulation of synaptic vesicle pools within nerve cells.
Resumo:
We present a coarse grained model for computer simulations of lipid mixtures, which we use to study generic mechanisms for the formation of nanoscale membrane structures (lipid rafts). We observe that even a two component system can separate into rafts of finite size, and we study these rafts and other membrane structures in detail. We look at the characteristics of our model that enable these phenomena and how they may relate to lipid-cholesterol or lipid-lipid mixtures. We propose an explanation for our findings using elastic theory to describe a possible mechanism of raft stabilization via curvature differences between coexisting lipid phases and we investigate whether this theory can be used to explain the results of our computer simulations.
Resumo:
Aquaporine sind hochselektive Transmembrankanäle, die in allen Lebensformen den Fluss von Wasser und kleinen, polaren Molekülen wie Glycerol über Lipidmembranen ermöglichen. Obwohl die Kanalpore für den Substratfluss im Monomer lokalisiert ist, liegen Aquaporine innerhalb biologischer Membranen als Homotetramere vor. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurden proteinbezogene und lipidmembranassoziierte Einflüsse auf die Oligomerisierung und Funktion des bakteriellen Aquaglyceroporins GlpF sowohl in vitro als auch in vivo untersucht. rnDie erhöhte Stabilität der Aquaporinpore sowie Interaktion zwischen den GlpF-Monomeren sind Triebkräfte der Aquaporin-Tetramerisierung. Ferner erfordern die GlpF-Tetramerisierung und -Aktivität bei Abschirmung der Ladung anionischer Lipide und einer minimalen Membrandicke von 27 Å keine spezielle Lipidumgebung. Da anionische Lipide die GlpF-Funktion jedoch störten, kann die GlpF-Aktivität in vivo möglicherweise durch die selektive Anreicherung von anionischen Lipiden in der unmittelbaren Proteinumgebung reguliert werden. Ungünstige Lipid-GlpF-Interaktionen können jedoch in Lipidumgebungen mit hoher Ordnung in der Acylkettenregion entstehen, die zu einer Aggregation der GlpF-Tetramere und reduzierten Aktivität führen. rnFerner wurde die Auswirkung der nephrogenen Diabetes insipidus verursachenden Aquaporin 2-Punktmutation V71M auf die Oligomerisierung und Funktion des homologen, bakteriellen Aquaglyceroporins GlpF untersucht. Da weder die Oligomierisierung noch die Aktivität des homologen, bakteriellen Aquaglyceroporins eingeschränkt sind, beruht der Krankheitsmechanismus der Aquaporin 2-Mutante V71M vermutlich auf einem defekten Transportmechansimus im Menschen. rn