Compositional Heterogeneity in Ternary Models for the Cell Membrane
ORAL
Abstract
Ternary models for the cell membrane comprised of cholesterol (Chol) plus high and low melting temperature lipids exhibit rich phase behavior as a function of temperature and composition. Of particular interest is a region of coexisting disordered and ordered fluid phases that is thought to indicate how lipids organize to promote protein function in the cell membrane. We have used fluorescence resonance energy transfer to investigate the ternary mixtures DOPC(1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine)/bSM (porcine brainsphingomyelin)/Chol and POPC (1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine)/bSM/Chol at high compositional resolution. We confirmed liquid coexistence for DOPC/bSM/Chol at 15 and 25C that melts by 35C, but in contrast to previous studies we detected no fluid-phase compositional heterogeneity for POPC/bSM/Chol from 5-35C. If domains exist, they must be smaller than the approximately 5 nm sensitivity provided by the fluorescent lipid analogs employed. We propose electron spin resonance and x-ray scattering for measuring whether liquid-phase compositional heterogeneity occurs for POPC/bSM/Chol. Understanding POPC/bSM/Chol phase behavior will provide a framework for investigating peptide/lipid interactions in a biologically relevant lipid mixture.
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Authors
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Robin Smith
Department of Physics, Cornell University
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Frederick Heberle
Field of Biophysics, Cornell University
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Jing Wu
Field of Biophysics, Cornell University
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Gerald Feigenson
Field of Biophysics, Cornell University