posted on 2017-01-11, 00:00authored byImad Younus Hasan, Adam Mechler
Partitioning of lipid
molecules in biomimetic membranes is a model
system for the study of naturally occurring domains, such as rafts,
in biological membranes. The existence of nanometer scale membrane
domains in binary lipid mixtures has been shown with microscopy methods;
however, the nature of these domains has not been established unequivocally.
A common notion is to ascribe domain separation to thermodynamic phase
equilibria. However, characterizing thermodynamic phases of single
bilayer membranes has not been possible due to their extreme dimensions:
the size of the domains falls to the order of tens to hundreds of
nanometers whereas the membrane thickness is only a few nanometers.
Here, we present direct measurements of phase transitions in single
bilayers of 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine
(DMPC)/1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine
(DPPC) phospholipid mixtures using quartz crystal microbalance-based
nanoviscosity measurements. Coexisting thermodynamic phases have been
successfully identified, and a phase diagram was constructed for the
single bilayer binary lipid system. It was demonstrated that domain
separation only takes place in planar membranes, and thus, it is absent
in liposomes and not detectable in calorimetric measurements on liposome
suspensions. On the basis of energetic analysis, the main transition
was identified as the breaking of van der Waals interactions between
the acyl chains.