Abstract

The distribution of cholesterol in asymmetric lipid bilayers was studied by extensive coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations. The effects of the lipid head group charge, acyl chain saturation, spontaneous membrane curvature and surface tension of the membrane were investigated. Four asymmetric bilayers containing DOPC, DOPS, DSPC or DSPS lipids were simulated on a time scale extended to tens of microseconds. We show that cholesterol strongly prefers anionic lipids to neutral and saturated lipid tails to unsaturated with a distribution ratio of ~0.7 in neutral/anionic bilayers and of ~0.4 in unsaturated/saturated bilayers. Multiple flip-flop transitions of cholesterol were observed directly, and their mean times ranged from 80 to 250 ns. It was shown that the distribution of cholesterol in the asymmetric membrane depends not only on the type of lipid, but also on the local membrane curvature and the surface tension. The membrane curvature enhances the influence of the lipid head groups on cholesterol distribution, while non-optimal surface tension caused by different areas per lipid in different monolayers increases the effect of the lipid tail saturation. It was clearly seen that the monolayers of asymmetric bilayers are interdependent. Mean distances from the bilayer center to cholesterol molecules depend not only on the type of the lipid in the considered monolayer but also on the composition of the opposite monolayer.

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