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Biophysical Journal 48: 899-906 (1985)
© 1985 the Biophysical Society

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Structure of Lipid Tubules Formed from a Polymerizable Lecithin

Paul Yager, Paul E. Schoen, Carol Davies, Ronald Price and Alok Singh

ABSTRACT

We have studied tubules formed from a polymerizable lipid in aqueous dispersion using freeze-fracture replication and transmission electron microscopy. The polymerizable diacetylenic lecithin 1,2-bis(10,12-tricosadiynoyl)-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine converts from liposomes to hollow cylinders, which we call tubules, on cooling through its chain melting phase transition temperature. These tubules differ substantially from cochleate cylinders formed by phosphatidylserines on binding of calcium. The tubules have diameters that range from 0.3 to 1 µm and lengths of up to hundreds of micrometers depending on conditions of formation. The thickness of the walls varies from as few as two bilayers to tens of bilayers in some longer tubules. Their surfaces may be either smooth, gently rippled, or with spiral steps depending on sample preparation conditions, including whether the lipids have been polymerized. The spiral steps may reflect the growth of the tubules by rolling up of flattened liposomes.




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B. N. Thomas, C. R. Safinya, R. J. Plano, and N. A. Clark
Lipid Tubule Self-Assembly: Length Dependence on Cooling Rate Through a First-Order Phase Transition
Science, March 17, 1995; 267(5204): 1635 - 1638.
[Abstract] [PDF]




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Copyright © 1985 by the Biophysical Society.