Abstract

Mixtures of long-chain and short-chain phosphatidylcholine (PC) were characterized by multinuclear (13C, 31P, 2H) solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance. This work complements and extends previous characterization of such mixtures by focusing on concentrated mixtures at temperatures above the gel to liquid crystalline phase transition temperature (Tm) of the long-chain PC component. Above Tm it was observed that highly oriented, bilayer-like assemblies could be formed of mixtures of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and dihexanoylphosphatidylcholine (DHPC) in molar ratios ranging from approximately 1:3.5 to 1:2 (DHPC:DMPC) over a considerable range of lipid concentrations (at least 3-40% w/v total lipid, for a 1:2.5 sample). Orientation was observed to occur only in an L alpha-like phase. The NMR data can be accounted for by a general model of the DHPC-DMPC aggregates in which DHPC can be found in two distinct populations (one highly ordered, one not). The averaged conformations of the glycerol backbone/headgroup regions of the long- and short-chain PC composing the assemblies were judged by solid-state 13C NMR to be similar to each other. The information gleaned about these mixtures and the quality of the oriented NMR spectra obtained suggest that DHPC-DMPC mixtures may prove to be useful as model membrane media in solid-state NMR studies of biomembranes.

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