Abstract

By encapsulating a pH-sensitive dye, phenol red, in multilamellar liposomes of DMPC, DPPC and DMPC/DPPC mixtures, the permeability of these phospholipid bilayers to dye as a function of temperature has been studied. For both DMPC and DPPC liposomes, dye release begins well below the main gel-to-liquid-crystalline phase transition (24°C and 42°C, respectively) at temperatures corresponding to the onset of the pretransition (about 14°C and 36°C, respectively) with DPPC liposomes exhibiting a permeability anomaly at the main phase transition (42°C). The perturbation occurring in the bilayer structure that allows the release of encapsulated phenol red (approx. 5 Å diameter) is not sufficient to permit the release of encapsulated haemoglobin (approx. 20 Å diameter, negatively charged). In liposomes composed of a range of DMPC/DPPC mixtures, dye release commences at the onset of the pretransition range (determined by optical absorbance measurements) and increases with increasing temperature until the first appearance of liquid crystalline phase after which no further dye release occurs. Interestingly, the dye retaining properties of DMPC and DPPC liposomes well below their respective pretransition temperature regions are very different: DMPC liposomes release much encapsulated dye at incubation temperatures of 5°C whilst DPPC liposomes do not.

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