Interactions of tocopherols and ubiquinones with monolayers of phospholipids.
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ABSTRACT: 1. The penetration of alpha-tocopherol and seven of its derivatives, and five compounds in the ubiquinone series, having differing chain lengths, into monolayers at the air/water interface of 11 different synthetic phospholipids and cholesterol was investigated; the properties of mixed monolayers of the tocopherols and of ubiquinones with phospholipids were also studied. 2. Penetration of alpha-tocopherol into diarachidonylglycerylphosphorycholine was approximately constant for molar ratios of tocopherol/phospholipid ranging from 0.4:1.0 to 2.0:1.0. 3. Tocopherols with shorter or longer side chains than alpha-tocopherol had a lesser ability to penetrate monolayers of phospholipid molecules with 16 or more carbon atoms in their acyl chains. 4. All the tocopherols penetrated more readily as unsaturation in the phospholipids was increased, and their penetration into mixed monolayers of phospholipids was greatly facilitated by the presence of relatively small quantities of unsaturated phospholipid molecules. 5. There was relatively little interaction between the tocopherols and cholesterol, or between the ubiquinones and phospholipids. 6. The possible significance of the observed interactions between alpha-tocopherol and polyunsaturated phospholipids is discussed in relation to the biochemical actions of alpha-tocopherol in vivo. 7. It is suggested that fluidity of the lipid bilayer in membranes containing polyunsaturated phospholipids may allow alpha-tocopherol to interact in a dynamic manner with a number of phospholipid molecules.
SUBMITTER: Maggio B
PROVIDER: S-EPMC1164479 | biostudies-other | 1977 Jan
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other
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