5 results on '"Porteus R"'
Search Results
2. Electrophysiological Characterization of Monoolein-Fatty Acid Bilayers.
- Author
-
Scott C, Porteus R, Takeuchi S, Osaki T, and Lee S
- Abstract
Understanding the evolution of protocells, primitive compartments that distinguish self from nonself, is crucial for exploring the origin of life. Fatty acids and monoglycerides have been proposed as key components of protocell membranes due to their ability to self-assemble into bilayers and vesicles capable of nutrient exchange. In this study, we investigate the electrophysiological properties of planar bilayers composed of monoglyceride and fatty acid mixtures, using a droplet interface bilayer system. Three fatty acids with varying hydrocarbon chain lengths─oleic acid (C18), palmitoleic acid (C16), and myristoleic acid (C14)─in combination with monoolein (C18) are examined to evaluate the influence of chain length and composition on bilayer stability, thickness, and ion permeability. The results show that pure monoolein bilayers exhibit enhanced ion permeability compared to phospholipid bilayers, which are characteristic of modern cellular membranes. Furthermore, the incorporation of fatty acids into monoolein bilayers destabilizes the membrane structure and further increases ion permeability. We consider that this increased permeability is likely driven by three molecular characteristics. First, the wedge-like shape of monoolein may disrupt bilayer packing and induce transient pore formation. Second, the rapid flip-flop of fatty acids between bilayer leaflets likely facilitates ion transport. Third, the chain-length mismatch between monoolein and myristoleic acid further destabilizes the bilayer, promoting the formation of structural defects. These findings suggest that compositional motifs in monoglyceride-fatty acid bilayers may provide an alternative ion transport mechanism, such as the flip-flop of amphiphilic molecules, in early protocell membranes before the evolution of protein-based transporters.
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The Role of Lipid Intrinsic Curvature in the Droplet Interface Bilayer.
- Author
-
Gudyka J, Ceja-Vega J, Krmic M, Porteus R, and Lee S
- Subjects
- Phospholipids chemistry, Lipid Bilayers chemistry
- Abstract
Model bilayers are constructed from lipids having different intrinsic curvatures using the droplet interface bilayer (DIB) method, and their static physicochemical properties are determined. Geometrical and tensiometric measurements are used to derive the free energy of formation (ΔF) of a two-droplet DIB relative to a pair of isolated aqueous droplets, each decorated with a phospholipid monolayer. The lipid molecules employed have different headgroup sizes but identical hydrophobic tail structure, and each is characterized by an intrinsic curvature value ( c
0 ) that increases in absolute value with decreasing size of headgroup. Mixtures of lipids at different ratios were also investigated. The role of curvature stress on the values of ΔF of the respective lipid bilayers in these model membranes is discussed and is illuminated by the observation of a decrement in ΔF that scales as a near linear function of c0 2 . Overall, the results reveal an association that should prove useful in studies of ion channels and other membrane proteins embedded in model droplet bilayer systems that will impact the understanding of protein function in cellular membranes composed of lipids of high and low curvature.- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Aspirin Interacts with Cholesterol-Containing Membranes in a pH-Dependent Manner.
- Author
-
Krmic M, Perez E, Scollan P, Ivanchenko K, Gamez Hernandez A, Giancaspro J, Rosario J, Ceja-Vega J, Gudyka J, Porteus R, and Lee S
- Subjects
- Cholesterol chemistry, Lipid Bilayers chemistry, Water, Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Aspirin pharmacology, Phosphatidylcholines chemistry
- Abstract
Aspirin has been used for broad therapeutic treatment, including secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease associated with increased cholesterol levels. Aspirin and other nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs have been shown to interact with lipid membranes and change their biophysical properties. In this study, mixed lipid model bilayers made from 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl- sn -glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine (POPC) or 1,2-dioleoyl- sn -glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine (DOPC) comprising varying concentrations of cholesterol (10:1, 4:1, and 1:1 mole ratio of lipid:chol), prepared by the droplet interface bilayer method, were used to examine the effects of aspirin at various pH on transbilayer water permeability. The presence of aspirin increases the water permeability of POPC bilayers in a concentration-dependent manner, with a greater magnitude of increase at pH 3 compared to pH 7. In the presence of cholesterol, aspirin is similarly shown to increase water permeability; however, the extent of the increase depends on both the concentration of cholesterol and the pH, with the least pronounced enhancement in water permeability at high cholesterol levels at pH 7. A fusion of data from differential scanning calorimetry, confocal Raman microspectrophotometry, and interfacial tensiometric measurements demonstrates that aspirin can promote significant thermal, structural, and interfacial property perturbations in the mixed-lipid POPC or DOPC membranes containing cholesterol, indicating a disordering effect on the lipid membranes. Our findings suggest that aspirin fluidizes phosphocholine membranes in both cholesterol-free and cholesterol-enriched states and that the overall effect is greater when aspirin is in a neutral state. These results confer a deeper comprehension of the divergent effects of aspirin on biological membranes having heterogeneous compositions, under varying physiological pH and different cholesterol compositions, with implications for a better understanding of the gastrointestinal toxicity induced by the long term use of this important nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory molecule.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Differential Interaction of Cannabidiol with Biomembranes Dependent on Cholesterol Concentration.
- Author
-
Perez E, Ceja-Vega J, Krmic M, Gamez Hernandez A, Gudyka J, Porteus R, and Lee S
- Subjects
- Calorimetry, Differential Scanning, Cell Membrane metabolism, Cholesterol metabolism, Phosphatidylcholines chemistry, Cannabidiol pharmacology, Lipid Bilayers metabolism
- Abstract
Cannabidiol (CBD), the major nonpsychoactive component of plant-derived cannabinoids, has been reported to have a broad range of potential beneficial pharmacological effects on the central nervous system (CNS). In this study, the droplet interface bilayer, a model cell membrane, is used to examine the effects of CBD on passive water permeability, a fundamental membrane biophysical property. The presence of CBD decreases the water permeability of model lipid membranes composed of 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DOPC) and at low concentrations of cholesterol (Chol) (20 mol %) in DOPC, whereas when higher concentrations of Chol are present (33 mol %), CBD has an opposing effect, increasing water permeability. The diametric effect in water permeability change upon addition of CBD to Chol-low and Chol-high bilayers signifies a variant interaction of CBD, depending on the initial state of bilayer packing and fluidity. Additionally, differential scanning calorimetry studies provide evidence that there are selective changes in thermotropic behavior for CBD with DOPC and with DOPC/Chol membranes, respectively, supportive of these varying membrane interactions of CBD dependent upon cholesterol. The intriguing ability of CBD to sensitively respond to membrane Chol concentrations in modifying physical properties highlights the significant impact that CBD can have on heterogeneous biomembranes including those of the CNS, the neurons of which are enriched in Chol to a point where up to a quarter of the body's total Chol is in the brain, and defective brain Chol homeostasis is implicated in neurodegenerative diseases.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.