Abstract

Bolaamphiphiles are well-known naturally occurring structures that can increase the thermal and mechanical stability of the phospholipid membrane by incorporation in a transmembrane manner. Modifications of bolaamphiphiles to introduce particular structural elements such as a conjugated aromatic backbone and lateral side chains in the hydrophobic region lead to bolapolyphiles (BPs). We investigated the ability of BPs to form lyotropic phases in water. The BPs had an identical backbone and side chains, but different headgroup structures, leading to different abilities to act as hydrogen bond donors and acceptors. BPs with hydrophilic headgroups capable of acting as hydrogen bond donors as well as acceptors did not form lyotropic phases and were insoluble in water, independent of whether the polar groups were small or large. The extended lipophilic core structure and the multiple intermolecular hydrogen bonds between the headgroups prevented the formation of well-hydrated lyotropic aggregates. A BP with two large hydrophilic headgroups of several ethylene oxide moieties terminated by methyl groups formed sheet- and vesicle-like aggregates in water. These headgroups act only as hydrogen bond acceptors and cannot form hydrogen bonds in the absence of water. The miscibility of BPs with vesicles of 1,2-dipalmitoyl- sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC) in water and the resulting aggregate structures were also investigated. For BPs with headgroups acting as donors and acceptors of hydrogen bonds, macroscopic phase separation occurred in the mixed membranes, and two different membrane domains, a DPPC-rich one containing only little polyphile and a BP-rich one containing varying amounts of lipid, were formed. For headgroups without the ability to act as hydrogen bond donors, small BP aggregates were formed that were homogeneously distributed over the membrane. The lateral organization of BPs in lipid membranes can thus be controlled by the nature of the BP headgroup.

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