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Localization of Cholesterol within Supported Lipid Bilayers Made of a Natural Extract of Tailor-Deuterated Phosphatidylcholine

Authors :
Harald Pichler
Sarah Waldie
Michael Haertlein
Martine Moulin
Tania Kjellerup Lind
Selma Maric
V. Trevor Forsyth
Kathryn L. Browning
Marité Cárdenas
Gernot Strohmeier
Alessandra Luchini
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Cholesterol is an essential component of mammalian membranes and is known to induce a series of physicochemical changes in the lipid bilayer. Such changes include the formation of liquid-ordered phases with an increased thickness and a configurational order as compared to liquid-disordered phases. For saturated lipid membranes, cholesterol molecules localize close to the lipid head group-tail interface. However, the presence of polyunsaturated lipids was recently shown to promote relocation of cholesterol toward the inner interface between the two bilayer leaflets. Here, neutron reflection is used to study the location of cholesterol (both non-deuterated and per-deuterated versions are used) within supported lipid bilayers composed of a natural mixture of phosphatidylcholine (PC). The lipids were produced in a genetically modified strain of Escherichia coli and grown under specific deuterated conditions to give an overall neutron scattering length density (which depends on the level of deuteration) of the lipids matching that of D

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....55dd3d440e21b6596238885d204514df