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Biophysical Journal 70: 2747-2757 (1996)
© 1996 the Biophysical Society

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Correlation between lipid plane curvature and lipid chain order.

M Lafleur, M Bloom, E F Eikenberry, S M Gruner, Y Han and P R Cullis

Département de chimie, Université de Montréal, Québec, Canada. lafleur@ere.umontreal.ca

ABSTRACT

The 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylethanolamine: 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine (POPE:POPC) system has been investigated by measuring, in the inverted hexagonal (HII) phase, the intercylinder spacings (using x-ray diffraction) and orientational order of the acyl chains (using 2H nuclear magnetic resonance). The presence of 20 wt% dodecane leads to the formation of a HII phase for the composition range from 0 to 39 mol% of POPC in POPE, as ascertained by x-ray diffraction and 2H nuclear magnetic resonance. The addition of the alkane induces a small decrease in chain order, consistent with less stretched chains. An increase in temperature or in POPE proportion leads to a reduction in the intercylinder spacing, primarily due to a decrease in the water core radius. A temperature increase also leads to a reduction in the orientational order of the lipid acyl chains, whereas the POPE proportion has little effect on chain order. A correlation is proposed to relate the radius of curvature of the cylinders in the inverted hexagonal phase to the chain order of the lipids adopting the HII phase. A simple geometrical model is proposed, taking into account the area occupied by the polar headgroup at the interface and the orientational order of the acyl chains reflecting the contribution of the apolar core. From these parameters, intercylinder spacings are calculated that agree well with the values determined experimentally by x-ray diffraction, for the variations of both temperature and POPE:POPC proportion. This model suggests that temperature increases the curvature of lipid layers, mainly by increasing the area subtended by the hydrophobic core through chain conformation disorder, whereas POPC content affects primarily the headgroup interface contribution. The frustration of lipid layer curvature is also shown to be reflected in the acyl chain order measured in the L alpha phase, in the absence of dodecane; for a given temperature, increased order is observed when the curling tendencies of the lipid plane are more pronounced.




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