Abstract
Monolayers of charged and neutral phospholipids at the air/water interface containing the cytochromes b 5 and c are studied by film balance techniques and by fluorescence microscopy. A new technique is introduced to obtain a defined and homogeneous protein distribution within the membrane. It is shown that both proteins preferentially partition into the fluid membrane phases coexisting with solid lipid domains, thus allowing formation of periodic protein distributions. Protein reconstitution in protein/lipid ratios up to 1:50 does not change the pressure, π c , corresponding to the main lipid transition but changes the slope in the pressure/area isotherms. It also affects the pressure-induced lipid crystallization, in that the monolayer can be viewed as segregated into a protein-free and a protein-enriched phase. Whereas penetration of cytochrome c into the monolayer is highly dependent on lipid head group charge, this does not hold for cytochrome b. In both cases, monolayer penetration is monotonously reduced with increasing surface pressure, pointing to the dependence of hydrophobic protein-lipid interactions on hydrocarbon chain density.
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More From: Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Biomembranes
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