| Photogating of ionic currents across lipid bilayers. Hydrophobic ion conductance by an ion chain mechanism Biophysical Journal, Volume 63, Issue 6, 1 December 1992, Pages 1556-1563 C.M. Drain and D.C. Mauzerall Abstract The photogating of hydrophobic ion currents across the lipid bilayer membrane allows the direct study of their kinetics by symmetrically forming charge within the membrane and across each interface, rather than across the membrane. We find that the photoinduced conductance continues to increase beyond the region where the tetraphenylboride charge density in the membrane exceeds the estimated porphyrin cation density. This photoconductance is proportional to the tetraphenylboride charge density raised to the second to third power. The risetime of the photogating effect increases with increasing concentration of tetraphenyl boride. The porphyrin cation mobility is increased when the tetraphenylboride anion is present, and low concentrations of tetraphenylphosphonium cation increase the dark conductivity while inhibiting the photoconductivity. The activation energy for both the porphyrin and phosphonium cation induced conductance is more positive than that of the tetraphenylboride conductance. From these results we conclude that in addition to some cancellation of space charge within the membrane, the mechanism of increased conductance involves the transport of these hydrophobic anions via an alternating anion-cation chain, analogous to the Grotthuss mechanism for excess proton conduction in water. This ion chain conductance can be viewed as an evolutionary prototype of an ion channel across the membrane. It also underscores the importance of the counter ion in the transport of large ions such as peptides across the lipid bilayer. Abstract | PDF (894 kb) |
| Interaction of Lipophilic Ions with the Plasma Membrane of Mammalian Cells Studied by Electrorotation Biophysical Journal, Volume 74, Issue 6, 1 June 1998, Pages 3031-3043 Markus Kürschner, Katja Nielsen, Christian Andersen, Vladimir L. Sukhorukov, Wolfdieter A. Schenk, Roland Benz and Ulrich Zimmermann Abstract The electrical properties of biological and artificial membranes were studied in the presence of a number of negatively charged tungsten carbonyl complexes, such as [W(CO)(CN)], [W(CO)(NCS)], [W(CO)(CN)], and [W(CO)(SCHCH)], using the single-cell electrorotation and the charge-pulse relaxation techniques. Most of the negatively charged tungsten complexes were able to introduce mobile charges into the membranes, as judged from electrorotation spectra and relaxation experiments. This means that the tungsten derivatives act as lipophilic anions. They greatly contributed to the polarizability of the membranes and led to a marked dielectric dispersion (frequency dependence of the membrane capacitance and conductance). The increment and characteristic frequency of the dispersion reflect the structure, environment, and mobility of the charged probe molecule in electrorotation experiments with biological membranes. The partition coefficients and the translocation rate constants derived from the electrorotation spectra of cells agreed well with the corresponding data obtained from charge-pulse experiments on artificial lipid bilayers. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (239 kb) |
| Effect of Fluorine Substitution on the Interaction of Lipophilic Ions with the Plasma Membrane of Mammalian Cells Biophysical Journal, Volume 79, Issue 3, 1 September 2000, Pages 1490-1497 Markus Kürschner, Katja Nielsen, Johannes R.G. von Langen, Wolfdieter A. Schenk, Ulrich Zimmermann and Vladimir L. Sukhorukov Abstract The effects of the anionic tungsten carbonyl complex [W(CO)SCH] and its fluorinated analog [W(CO)SCF] on the electrical properties of the plasma membrane of mouse myeloma cells were studied by the single-cell electrorotation technique. At micromolar concentrations, both compounds gave rise to an additional antifield peak in the rotational spectra of cells, indicating that the plasma membrane displayed a strong dielectric dispersion. This means that both tungsten derivatives act as lipophilic ions that are able to introduce large amounts of mobile charges into the plasma membrane. The analysis of the rotational spectra allowed the evaluation not only of the passive electric properties of the plasma membrane and cytoplasm, but also of the ion transport parameters, such as the surface concentration, partition coefficient, and translocation rate constant of the lipophilic anions dissolved in the plasma membrane. Comparison of the membrane transport parameters for the two anions showed that the fluorine-substituted analog was more lipophilic, but its translocation across the plasma membrane was slower by at least one order of magnitude than that of the parent hydrogenated anion. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (140 kb) |
Copyright © 1996 The Biophysical Society. All rights reserved.
Biophysical Journal, Volume 71, Issue 1, 295-308, 1 July 1996
doi:10.1016/S0006-3495(96)79225-1
Research Article
K. Sun and D. Mauzerall
Rockefeller University, New York, New York 10021, USA.
The conductivity across a lipid bilayer by tetraphenylborate anion is increased 10-fold on the photoformation of lipophilic porphyrin cations. The cations alone have negligible conductivity. This nonlinear photogenerated increase of ion conductivity is termed the photogating effect. Substitution of H by Cl in the para position of tetraphenylborate leads to a 100-fold enhancement of conductivity, whereas the dark conductivities for this and other substituted borates are the same. Moreover, the halo-substituted borates show a large enhancement of conductivity in the low concentration range (10(-8) M), whereas that of tetraphenylborate is small and space charge is negligible. The enhanced ion conductivity has great structural sensitivity to the structure of the anion, the cation, and the lipid, whereas the partition coefficient of all the borates and the concentration of photoformed cations are only slightly affected. The photogated ion transport has a twofold larger activation energy than transport in the dark. Time-resolved photocurrents and voltages demonstrate that the translocation rate of the porphyrin cation is also enhanced 100-fold by the Cl-borate anion but only 10-fold by the H-borate anion. For these reasons the nonlinear gating effect cannot be explained by electrostatics alone, but requires an ion chain or ion aggregate mechanism. Kinetic modeling of the photoinduced current with a mixed cation-anion ion chain can fit the data well. The photogating effect allows the direct study of ion interactions within the bilayer.