Lipid Concentration and Molar Ratio Boundaries for the Use of Isotropic Bicelles

Bicelles are model membranes generally made of long-chain dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and short-chain dihexanoyl-PC (DHPC). They are extensively used in the study of membrane interactions and structure determination of membrane-associated peptides, since their composition and morphology mi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Langmuir 2014-06, Vol.30 (21), p.6162-6170
Hauptverfasser: Beaugrand, Maïwenn, Arnold, Alexandre A, Hénin, Jérôme, Warschawski, Dror E, Williamson, Philip T. F, Marcotte, Isabelle
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container_end_page 6170
container_issue 21
container_start_page 6162
container_title Langmuir
container_volume 30
creator Beaugrand, Maïwenn
Arnold, Alexandre A
Hénin, Jérôme
Warschawski, Dror E
Williamson, Philip T. F
Marcotte, Isabelle
description Bicelles are model membranes generally made of long-chain dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and short-chain dihexanoyl-PC (DHPC). They are extensively used in the study of membrane interactions and structure determination of membrane-associated peptides, since their composition and morphology mimic the widespread PC-rich natural eukaryotic membranes. At low DMPC/DHPC (q) molar ratios, fast-tumbling bicelles are formed in which the DMPC bilayer is stabilized by DHPC molecules in the high-curvature rim region. Experimental constraints imposed by techniques such as circular dichroism, dynamic light scattering, or microscopy may require the use of bicelles at high dilutions. Studies have shown that such conditions induce the formation of small aggregates and alter the lipid-to-detergent ratio of the bicelle assemblies. The objectives of this work were to determine the exact composition of those DMPC/DHPC isotropic bicelles and study the lipid miscibility. This was done using 31P nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and exploring a wide range of lipid concentrations (2–400 mM) and q ratios (0.15–2). Our data demonstrate how dilution modifies the actual DMPC/DHPC molar ratio in the bicelles. Care must be taken for samples with a total lipid concentration ≤250 mM and especially at q ∼ 1.5–2, since moderate dilutions could lead to the formation of large and slow-tumbling lipid structures that could hinder the use of solution NMR methods, circular dichroism or dynamic light scattering studies. Our results, supported by infrared spectroscopy and molecular dynamics simulations, also show that phospholipids in bicelles are largely segregated only when q > 1. Boundaries are presented within which control of the bicelles’ q ratio is possible. This work, thus, intends to guide the choice of q ratio and total phospholipid concentration when using isotropic bicelles.
doi_str_mv 10.1021/la5004353
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source MEDLINE; American Chemical Society Journals
subjects Biochemistry, Molecular Biology
Biophysics
Chemical Sciences
Circular Dichroism
Detergents - chemistry
Dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine - chemistry
Environmental Sciences
Life Sciences
Light
Lipid Bilayers - chemistry
Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
Materials Testing
Micelles
Molecular Dynamics Simulation
Phospholipid Ethers - chemistry
Phospholipids - chemistry
Scattering, Radiation
Solutions
Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared
Temperature
title Lipid Concentration and Molar Ratio Boundaries for the Use of Isotropic Bicelles
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