Abstract

The ESR spectra from different positional isomers of sphingomyelin and phosphatidylcholine spin-labeled in their acyl chain have been studied in sphingomyelin(cerebroside)-phosphatidylcholine mixed membranes that contain cholesterol. The aim was to investigate mechanisms by which cholesterol could stabilize possible domain formation in sphingolipid-glycerolipid membranes. The outer hyperfine splittings in the ESR spectra of sphingomyelin and phosphatidylcholine spin-labeled on the 5 C atom of the acyl chain were consistent with mixing of the components, but the perturbations on adding cholesterol were greater in the membranes containing sphingomyelin than in those containing phosphatidylcholine. Infrared spectra of the amide I band of egg sphingomyelin were shifted and broadened in the presence of cholesterol to a greater extent than the carbonyl band of phosphatidylcholine, which was affected very little by cholesterol. Two-component ESR spectra were observed from lipids spin-labeled on the 14 C atom of the acyl chain in cholesterol-containing membranes composed of sphingolipids, with or without glycerolipids (sphingomyelin/cerebroside and sphingomyelin/cerebroside/phosphatidylcholine mixtures). These results indicate the existence of gel-phase domains in otherwise liquid-ordered membranes that contain cholesterol. In the gel phase of egg sphingomyelin, the outer hyperfine splittings of sphingomyelin spin-labeled on the 14-C atom of the acyl chain are smaller than those for the corresponding spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine. In the presence of cholesterol, this situation is reversed; the outer splitting of 14-C spin-labeled sphingomyelin is then greater than that of 14-C spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine. This result provides some support for the suggestion that transbilayer interdigitation induced by cholesterol stabilizes the coexistence of gel-phase and "liquid-ordered" domains in membranes containing sphingolipids.

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