Abstract
Several saturated asymmetric and symmetric phosphatidylcholines were studied by ESR spectroscopy and differential scanning calorimetry in order to determine the behavior of a fatty acid spin labeled near its terminal methyl, 16-doxylstearate, in the mixed interdigitated gel phase and the L c subgel phase and other properties of these lipids. This spin label was motionally restricted in the mixed interdigitated gel phases of 18:10PC and 18:12PC. The motional restriction was similar to that reported earlier for fully interdigitated phases. This spin label was motionally restricted almost to the same degree in 10:18PC suggesting that this asymmetric lipid may also form a mixed interdigitated bilayer. In contrast the spin label had more motion in the gel phase of 18:14PC than in symmetric forms of PC, consistent with conclusions from X-ray diffraction studies that this less asymmetric lipid does not form a mixed interdigitated phase. The spin label was partially frozen out of the L c subgel phases of symmetric forms of PC and 18:14PC formed by storage at low temperature. The phase behavior of the other asymmetric lipids also depended on the sample history. Storage at low temperature caused 10:18PC and 18:12PC to go into ordered phases. The enthalpy of the transition of these ordered phases to the liquid-crystalline phase was 2–2.4-times greater than that of the transition of the gel phase formed on cooling back from the liquid-crystalline phase. The temperature of this high enthalpy transition was 0.8 K below that of the lower enthalpy get to liquid-crystalline phase transition for 18:12PC, but 4.6 K higher for 10:18PC. The spin label was frozen out of these ordered phases, as it was out of the L c subgel phases, suggesting that 18:12PC and 10:18PC may also form an L c phase. 18:10PC was not observed to form an ordered phase although storage of the sample at low temperatures did affect the temperature of its transition from the liquid-crystalline phase back to the gel phase upon cycling through its phase transition.
Published Version
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