Abstract

Charge-pulse relaxation experiments of valinomycin-mediated Rb + transport have been carried out in order to study the influence of membrane structure on carrier kinetics. From the experimental data the rate constants of association ( k R) and dissociation ( k D) of the ion-carrier complex as well as the rate constants of translocation of the complex ( k MS) and of the free carrier ( k S) could be obtained. The composition of the planar bilayer membrane was varied in a wide range. In a first series of experiments, membranes made from glycerolmonooleate dissolved in different n-alkanes ( n-decane to n-hexadecane), as well as solvent-free membranes made from the same lipid by the Montal-Mueller technique were studied. The translocation rate constants k S and k MS were found to differ by less than a factor of two in the membranes of different solvent content. Much larger changes of the rate constants were observed if the structure of the fatty acid residue was varied. For instance, an increase in the number of double bonds in the C 20 fatty acid from one to four resulted in an increase of k S by a factor of seven and in an increase of k MS by a factor of twenty-four. The stability constant K = k R/ k D of the ion-carrier complex as well as the translocation rate constants k S and k MS were found to depend strongly on the nature of the polar headgroup of the lipid. The incorporation of cholesterol into glycerolmonooleate membranes reduced k R, k MS and k S up to seven-fold.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call