Abstract

Cholesterol crystals are the building blocks of cholesterol gallstones. The exact structure of early-forming crystals is still controversial. We combined cryogenic-temperature transmission electron microscopy with cryogenic-temperature electron diffraction to sequentially study crystal development and structure in nucleating model and native gallbladder biles. The growth and long-term stability of classic cholesterol monohydrate (ChM) crystals in native and model biles was determined. In solutions of model bile with low phospholipid-to-cholesterol ratio, electron diffraction provided direct proof of a novel transient polymorph that had an elongated habit and unit cell parameters differing from those of classic triclinic ChM. This crystal is exactly the monoclinic ChM phase described by Solomonov and coworkers (Biophysical J., In press) in cholesterol monolayers compressed on the air-water interface. We observed no evidence of anhydrous cholesterol crystallization in any of the biles studied. In conclusion, classic ChM is the predominant and stable form in native and model biles. However, under certain (low phospholipid) conditions, transient intermediate polymorphs may form. These findings, documenting single-crystal analysis in bulk solution, provide an experimental approach to investigating factors influencing biliary cholesterol crystal nucleation and growth as well as other processes of nucleation and crystallization in liquid systems.

Highlights

  • Cholesterol crystals are the building blocks of cholesterol gallstones

  • We show in this study that the crystalline structure of microscopic single crystals nucleating in model as well as in native human biles can be determined by cryogenic electron diffraction in their natural state, without drying or chemical fixation

  • It is generally accepted that cholesterol gallstones are composed of cholesterol monohydrate (ChM) crystals, held together by a mucin glycoprotein-rich matrix [25]

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Summary

Introduction

Cholesterol crystals are the building blocks of cholesterol gallstones. The exact structure of early-forming crystals is still controversial. A variety of cholesterol crystal habits were later observed in nucleating model and native biles [10, 11]. Diffraction data from single cholesterol crystals have been obtained in bulk solutions of nucleating bile in its fully preserved native state.

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