Abstract

The thermotropic phase behavior of a homologous series of saturated diacyl phosphatidylethanolamines in which the headgroup is N-derivatized with biotin has been investigated by differential scanning calorimetry. In 1 M NaCl, derivatives with acyl chainlengths from C(12:0) to C(20:0) all exhibit sharp chain-melting phase transitions, which are reversible with a hysteresis of 1.5 degrees or less, except for the C(12:0) lipid which has a transition temperature below 0 degree C. The transition enthalpy and the transition entropy depend approximately linearly on the lipid chainlength, with incremental values per CH2 group that are very similar to those obtained for the corresponding underivatized phosphatidylethanolamines in aqueous dispersion. The chainlength-independent contribution to the transition enthalpy is significantly smaller than that for the underivatized phosphatidylethanolamines, and that for the transition entropy is much smaller; the latter suggesting that the N-biotinylated phosphatidylethanolamine headgroups are differently hydrated from those of the underivatized lipids. The gel-to-fluid phase transition temperatures of the N-biotinylated lipids are lower than those of the parent phosphatidylethanolamines, and their chainlength dependence conforms well with that predicted by assuming that the transition enthalpy and entropy are linearly dependent on chainlength. Although the chain-melting phase behavior is generally similar to that of the parent phosphatidylethanolamines, the gel phases (and the fluid phases in the case of chainlengths C(12:0) to C(16:0)) have a different lyotropic structure in the two cases, and this is reflected in the chainlength-independent contributions to the thermodynamic parameters. In the absence of salt, the thermotropic phase behavior of aqueous dispersions of the N-biotinyl phosphatidylethanolamines is considerably more complex. The transition temperatures are consistently lower than those in 1 M NaCI, but the transitions are broader, contain multiple peaks and exhibit a much larger hysteresis between heating and cooling scans. Additionally, the lipids with shorterchainlengths exhibit metastability in the absence of salt, converting from a micellar solution to a lamellar gel phase only after incubation at low temperature with freeze-thaw cycling.

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