The interfacial structure of phospholipid bilayers: differential scanning calorimetry and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopic studies of 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphorylcholine and its dialkyl and acyl-alkyl analogs.

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The thermotropic phase behavior of aqueous dispersions of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and its 1,2-dialkyl, 1-acyl 2-alkyl and 1-alkyl 2-acyl analogs was examined by differential scanning calorimetry, and the organization of these molecules in those hydrated bilayers was studied by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. The calorimetric data indicate that substitution of either or both of the acyl chains of DPPC with the corresponding ether-linked hydrocarbon chain results in relatively small increases in the temperature (< 4 degrees C) and enthalpy (< 1 kcal/mol) of the lipid chain-melting phase transition. The spectroscopic data reveal that replacement of one or both of the ester-linked hydrocarbon chains of DPPC with its ether-linked analog causes structural changes in the bilayer assembly, which result in an increase in the polarity of the local environments of the phosphate headgroups and of the ester carbonyl groups at the bilayer polar/apolar interface. The latter observation is unexpected, given that ester linkages are considered to be intrinsically more polar that ether linkages. This finding cannot be satisfactorily rationalized unless the conformation of the glycerol backbones of the analogs containing ether-linked hydrocarbon chains differs significantly from that of diacyl glycerolipids such as DPPC. A comparison of the alpha-methylene scissoring bands and the methylene wagging band progressions of these lipids with the corresponding absorption bands of specifically chain-perdeuterated analogs of DPPC also supports the conclusion that replacement of the ester-linked hydrocarbon chains of DPPC with the corresponding ether-linked analog induces conformational changes in the lipid glycerol backbone. The suggestion that the conformation of glycerol backbones in the alkyl-acyl and dialkyl derivatives of DPPC differs from that of the naturally occurring 1,2-diacyl glycerolipid suggests that mono- and di-alkyl glycerolipids may not be good models of their diacyl analogs. These results, and previously published evidence that DPPC analogs with ether-linked hydrocarbon chains spontaneously form chain-interdigitated gel phases at low temperatures, clearly indicate that the properties of lipid bilayers can be substantially altered by small changes in the chemical structures of their polar/polar interfaces, and highlight the critical role of the interfacial region as a determinant of the structure and organization of lipid assemblies.

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