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Browsing by Author "Rader, Andrew J."
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Item The Effect of Acyl Chain Unsaturation on Phospholipid Bilayer(2010-02-26T17:51:02Z) Soni, Smita Pravin; Wassall, Stephen R.; Petrache, Horia; Kemple, Marvin D.; Rader, Andrew J.Each biological cell is surrounded by a membrane that consists of many different kinds of lipids. The lipids are mainly composed of phospholipids, which form a fluid bilayer that serves as the platform for the function of membrane bound proteins regulating cellular activity. In the research described in this thesis we employed solid state 2H NMR, complemented by DSC (differential scanning calorimetry) and MD (molecular dynamics) simulations, to study the effect of PUFA (polyunsaturated fatty acids) and TFA (trans fatty acids) on molecular organization in protein-free model membranes of controlled composition. These two classes of unsaturated fatty acid incorporate into membrane lipids and have, respectively, a beneficial and harmful impact on health. The aim is to gain insight into the molecular origin of this behavior. DHA (docosahexaenoic acid), which with 6 "natural" cis double bonds is the most highly unsaturated PUFA found in fish oils, and EA (elaidic acid), which with only a single "unnatural" trans double bond is the simplest manmade TFA often found in commercially produced food, were the focus. 2H NMR spectra for [2H31]-N-palmitoylsphingomyelin ([2H31]16:0SM) in SM/16:0-22:6PE (1-palmitoyl-2-docosahexaenoylphosphatidylethanolamine)/cholesterol (1:1:1 mol) mixed membranes were recorded. This system served as our PUFA-containing model. The spectra are consistent with lateral separation into nano-sized (< 20 nm) domains that are SM-rich/cholesterol-rich (raft), characterized by higher chain order, and DHA-rich/cholesterol-poor (non-raft), characterized by lower chain order. The aversion cholesterol has for DHA, as opposed to the affinity cholesterol has for predominantly saturated SM, excludes the sterol from DHA-containing PE-rich domains and DHA from SM-rich/cholesterol-rich domains. It is the formation of highly disordered membrane domains that we hypothesize is responsible, in part, for the diverse health benefits associated with dietary consumption of DHA. 2H NMR spectra for 1-elaidoyl-2-[2H35]stearoylphosphatidylcholine (t18:1-[2H35]18:0PC) and 1-oleoyl-2-[2H35]stearoylphosphatidylcholine (c18:1-[2H35]18:0PC) were recorded to compare membranes with respect to a trans vs. cis ("natural") double bond. The spectra indicate that while a trans double bond produces a smaller deviation from linear conformation than a cis double bond, membrane order is decreased by a comparable amount because the energy barrier to rotation about the C-C single bonds either side of a trans or cis double bond is reduced. Although EA adopts a conformation somewhat resembling a saturated fatty acid, the TFA is almost as disordered as its cis counterpart oleic acid (OA). We speculate that EA could be mistaken for a saturated fatty acid and infiltrate lipid rafts to disrupt the high order therein that is necessary for the function of signaling proteins.Item Near-Field Investigations of the Anisotropic Properties of Supported Lipid Bilayers(2012-07-24) Johnson, Merrell A.; Decca, Ricardo; Rader, Andrew J.; Ritchie, Ken; Petrache, Horia; Wassall, StephenThe details of Polarization Modulation Near-Field Scanning Optical Microscopy (PM-NSOM) are presented. How to properly calibrate and align the system is also introduced. A measurement of Muscovite crystal is used to display the capabilities of the setup. Measurements of supported Lβʹ 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC) lipid bilayers are presented, emphasizing how it was tooled in exploiting the anisotropic nature of the acyl chains. A discussion of how the effective retardance (ΔS = 2π( n_e-n_o )t/λ) and the direction of the projection of the acyl chains (θ) are measured simultaneously is given, (where t is the thickness of the bilayer and λ is the wavelength of light used). It is shown from ΔS the birefringence (ne-no) of the bilayer is determined, by assuming the acyl chain tilt with respect to the membrane's normal to be ϕ ≈ 32. Time varying experiments show lateral diffusions of ~ 2 x 10-12 cm2/s. Temperature controlled PM-NSOM is shown to be a viable way to determine the main phase transition temperature (Tm) for going from the gel Lβʹ to liquid disorder Lα state of supported DPPC bilayers. A change of ΔS ~ (3.8 +/- 0.3 mrad) at the main phase transition temperature Tm (≈41^o C) is observed. This agrees well with previous values of (ne-no) and translates to an assumed <ϕ> ~ 32^o when T < Tm and 0^o when T > Tm. Evidence of supper heating and supper cooling will be presented, along with a discussion of the fluctuations that occur around Tm. Finally it is shown how physical parameters such as the polarizability are extracted from the data. Values of the transverse (αt) and longitudinal (αl) polarizabilites of the acyl chains are shown to be, αt = 44.2 Å3 and αl = 94.4 Å3, which correspond well with the theoretical values of a single palmitic acid (C16) αt = 25.14 Å3 and αl = 45.8 Å3.