Abstract

In this work, we report on the interaction of polyacrylic acid with phosphatidylcholine bilayers and monolayers in slightly acidic medium. We found that adsorption of polyacrylic acid on liposomes composed of egg lecithin at pH 4.2 results in the formation of small pores permeable for low molecular weight solutes. However, the pores were impermeable for trypsin indicating that no solubilization of liposomes occurred. The pores were permeable for both positively charged trypsin substrate N-benzoyl-l-arginine ethyl ester and negatively charged pH-indicator pyranine. Two lines of evidence were obtained confirming the involvement of the membrane dipole potential in the insertion of polyacrylic acid into lipid bilayer. (i) Addition of phloretin, a molecule which is known to decrease dipole potential of lipid bilayer, reduced the rate of a polyacrylic acid induced leakage of pyranine from liposomes. (ii) Direct measurements of air/lipid monolayer/water interface surface potential using Kelvin probe showed that adsorption of polyacrylic acid at pH 4.2 induced a decrease in both boundary and dipole potential by 37 and 62mV for ester lipid dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC). Replacement of DOPC by ether lipid 1,2-di-O-oleyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DiOOPC) which is known to form monolayers and bilayers with only minor dipole component of membrane potential showed that addition of PAA produced similar response in the boundary potential (by 50mV) but negligible response in dipole potential of monolayer. These observations agree with our assumption that dipole potential is an important driving force for the insertion of polyacids into biological membranes.

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