Abstract

Pressure-jump experiments were performed on vesicles and liposomes of dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine and dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine following the time course of solution turbidity. For both lipids two relaxation effects were evaluated the time constants of which exhibit clear maxima at the midpoint of the phase transition. The time constants lie for vesicles in the 100 μs and 1 ms ranges and for liposomes in the 1 ms and 10 ms ranges. The processes are slightly faster for dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine than for dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine. All relaxation times are concentration-independent. The time constant and amplitude behaviours indicate that all processes are cooperative in agreement with previous interpretations. It is demonstrated that cooperative units can be evaluated from the relaxation amplitudes. These are of the same order of magnitude as those obtained from static experiments. On the grounds of the present kinetic investigation we can state that the application of the linear Ising model to two-dimensional processes as attempted for the static lipid phase transition is inadequate.

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