Abstract

Infrared spectroscopy has been applied to the study of a number of aqueous systems of model and natural biomembranes. The absorption bands arising from water and buffer solutions were eliminated by means of an infrared spectrometer data station. Spectra were examined using H 2O and 2H 2O aqueous buffer systems. Pure lecithin-water systems, and various model biomembranes containing cholesterol, gramicidin A, bacteriorhodopsin or Ca 2+-ATPase were examined. The infrared spectra of the reconstituted biomembranes were compared with those of the corresponding natural biomembranes, i.e. the purple membrane of Halobacterium halobium and also sarcoplasmic reticulum membranes, respectively. Changes in lipid chain conformation caused by the various intrinsic molecules incorporated within the model lipid bilayer structures were monitored by studying the shifts in frequency (cm −1) of the CH 2 symmetric and asymmetric absorption bands arising from the lipid chains. The effect of gramicidin A and also the intrinsic proteins, as indicated by the shift of band frequencies, are quite different from that of cholesterol at temperatures above the main lipid transition temperature t c. Cholesterol causes a reduction in gauche isomers which increases with concentration of cholesterol within the lipid bilayer. Whilst gramicidin A and the intrinsic proteins at low concentration cause a reduction of gauche isomers, at higher concentrations of these molecules, however, there is little difference in gauche isomer content when the intrinsic molecule is present compared with that of the fluid lipid alone. These results are considered and compared with previously published studies using deuterium nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy on similar model biomembrane systems. Below the lipid t c value, all the intrinsic molecules produce an increase in gauche isomers presumably by disturbing the lipid chain packing in the crystalline lipid arrangement. Information about the polypeptide structure within gramicidin A. the reconstituted proteins and also the proteins in the natural biomembranes was obtained by examining the region of the infrared spectrum between 1600 and 1700 cm −1 associated with the amide I and amide II bands. An examination of the infrared band frequencies of the different systems in this region leads to the conclusions: (1) that gramicidin A within a phospholipid bilayer structure probably has a single helix rather than a double helix structure; (2) that there are differences in band widths of the reconstituted Ca 2+-ATPase and bacteriorhodopsin compared with the spectra of the corresponding sarcoplasmic reticulum and purple membrane; (3) different membrane proteins adopt different conformations as evinced by a comparison of the spectra of the sarcoplasmic reticulum and purple membrane; (4) the polypeptide arrangement in the purple membrane is mainly helical but the abnormal frequency of the amide I band suggests that some distortion of the helix occurs: and (5) the sarcoplasmic reticulum membrane contains unordered as well as α-helix polypeptide arrangements.

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