Abstract

The combined effects of high pressure (up to 300 bar) and a homologous series of 1-alkanols (ethanol C 2 to 1-tridecanol C 13) were studied on the main phase-transition temperature of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) vesicle membranes. It is known that short-chain alkanols depress and long-chain alkanols elevate the main transition temperature. The crossover from depression to elevation occurs at the carbon-chain length about C 10–C 12 in DPPC vesicle membranes coinciding with the cutoff chain-length where anesthetic potency suddenly disappears. Alkanols shorter than C 8 linearly decreased the transition temperature and high pressure antagonized the temperature depression. Alkanols longer than C 10 showed biphasic dose-response curves. High pressure enhanced the biphasic response. In addition, alkanols longer than the cutoff length depressed the transition temperature under high pressure at the low concentration range. These non-anesthetic alkanols may manifest anesthetic potency under high pressure. At higher concentrations, the temperature elevatory effect was accentuated by pressure. This biphasic effect of long-chin alkanols is not related to the ‘interdigitation’ associated with short-chain alkanols. The increment of the transition temperature by pressure was 0.0242 K bar −1 in the absence of alkanols. The volume change of the transition was estimated to be 27.7 cm 3 mol −1. This value stayed constant to the limit of the present study of 300 bar.

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