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Download fileInfluence of External NaCl Salt on Membrane Rigidity of Neutral DOPC Vesicles
journal contribution
posted on 2020-08-04, 17:44 authored by Judith
U. De Mel, Sudipta Gupta, Rasangi M. Perera, Ly Ngo, Piotr Zolnierczuk, Markus Bleuel, Sai Venkatesh Pingali, Gerald J. SchneiderSodium
chloride (NaCl) is a very common molecule in biotic and
abiotic aqueous environments. In both cases, variation of ionic strength
is inevitable. In addition to the osmotic variation posed by such
perturbations, the question of whether the interactions of monovalent
ions Na+ and Cl–, especially with the
neutral head groups of phospholipid membranes are impactful enough
to change the membrane rigidity, is still not entirely understood.
We investigated the dynamics of 1,2-di-(octadecenoyl)-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DOPC) vesicles with zwitterionic neutral
head groups in the fluid phase with increasing external salt concentration.
At higher salt concentrations, we observe an increase in bending rigidity
from neutron spin echo (NSE) spectroscopy and an increase in bilayer
thickness from small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS). We compared different
models to distinguish membrane undulations, lipid tail motions, and
the translational diffusion of the vesicles. All of the models indicate
an increase in bending rigidity by a factor of 1.3–3.6. We
demonstrate that even down to t > 10 ns and for Q > 0.07 Å–1, the observed NSE
relaxation
spectra are influenced by translational diffusion of the vesicles.
For t < 5 ns, the lipid tail motion dominates
the intermediate dynamic structure factor. As the salt concentration
increases, this contribution diminishes. We introduced a time-dependent
analysis for the bending rigidity that highlights only a limited Zilman–Granek
time window in which the rigidity is physically meaningful.