Abstract

The proportionality constant between the equipotency concentrations of a series of solutes and the fraction of a solute in the membrane phase is directly related to the solute to lipid mol ratio. Experimental measurements of partition coefficient and of several alkanol-induced effects show that the solute/lipid mol ratlos for a series of alkanols are not constant at their equipotency concentrations. The deviations in the solute/lipid ratios are similar in the various systems, and these deviations seem to depend primarily upon the chain length and branching in alkanols. It is suggested that such intrinsic differences in the perturbing ability of alcohols arise from a specificity of interaction between alkanols and lipid bilayer. We have correlated partition coefficients (in n-octanol, in egg phosphatidylcholine liposomes, and in dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine liposomes) for thirteen alkanols to the equipotency concentrations for their ability to modify the order-disorder thermotropic transition in dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine, ability to stimulate the hydrolysis of phosphatidylcholine in a bilayer by bee venom phospholipase A 2, and for the activation of the galactoside transport system in Escherichia coli. Significant correlation is found between equipotency concentrations for perturbing the order-disorder transition, the activation of phospholipase A 2-catalyzed hydrolysis and the activation of galactoside transport system.

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