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Influence of the Lipid Backbone on Electrochemical Phase Behavior.


ABSTRACT: Sphingolipids are an important class of lipids found in mammalian cell membranes with important structural and signaling roles. They differ from another major group of lipids, the glycerophospholipids, in the connection of their hydrocarbon chains to their headgroups. In this study, a combination of electrochemical and structural methods has been used to elucidate the effect of this difference on sphingolipid behavior in an applied electric field. N-Palmitoyl sphingomyelin forms bilayers of similar coverage and thickness to its close analogue di-palmitoyl phosphatidylcholine. Grazing incidence diffraction data show slightly closer packing and a smaller chain tilt angle from the surface normal. Electrochemical IR results at low charge density show that the difference in tilt angle is retained on deposition to form bilayers. The bilayers respond differently to increasing electric field strength: chain tilt angles increase for both molecules, but sphingomyelin chains remain tilted as field strength is further increased. This behavior is correlated with disruption of the hydrogen-bonding network of small groups of sphingomyelin molecules, which may have significance for the behavior of molecules in lipid rafts in the presence of strong fields induced by ion gradients or asymmetric distribution of charged lipids.

SUBMITTER: Jemmett PN 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC9686133 | biostudies-literature | 2022 Nov

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Influence of the Lipid Backbone on Electrochemical Phase Behavior.

Jemmett Philip N PN   Milan David C DC   Nichols Richard J RJ   Howitt Thomas T   Martin Alexandra L AL   Arnold Thomas T   Rawle Jonathan L JL   Nicklin Christopher L CL   Dafforn Timothy R TR   Cox Liam R LR   Horswell Sarah L SL  

Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids 20221110 46


Sphingolipids are an important class of lipids found in mammalian cell membranes with important structural and signaling roles. They differ from another major group of lipids, the glycerophospholipids, in the connection of their hydrocarbon chains to their headgroups. In this study, a combination of electrochemical and structural methods has been used to elucidate the effect of this difference on sphingolipid behavior in an applied electric field. <i>N</i>-Palmitoyl sphingomyelin forms bilayers  ...[more]

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