Abstract

The kinetics of the lamellar (L alpha)-inverse hexagonal (HII) phase transition in diacylphosphatidylethanolamine (PE)--water systems were probed with time-resolved X-ray diffraction. Transition kinetics in the fast time regime (approximately 100 ms) were studied by initiating large temperature jumps (up to 30 degrees C) with a 50-ms electrical current pulse passed through a lipid-salt water dispersion, resulting in ohmic heating of the sample. Diffraction with a time resolution to 10 ms was acquired at the National Synchrotron Light Source. The time constant for the phase transition for 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (DOPE) was on the order of 100 ms for the largest temperature jumps recorded. Faster transition behavior was found for a 1,2-dielaidoyl-sn-glycero-3-PE mixture. The HII lattice parameters for both systems were seen to swell from an initial value commensurate with the lamellar lattice to the final equilibrium value. The rate of swelling was seen to be independent of the magnitude of the temperature jump. For small temperature jumps (less than 10 degrees C), the phase transition kinetics slow dramatically, and transition studies can readily be performed on a conventional rotating anode X-ray source. At 4 degrees C, a DOPE sample was observed to slowly convert to the hexagonal phase over the course of a week, with the decay in the lamellar intensity fitting a power law behavior over four decades of time. This power law behavior is shown to have interesting consequences to the determination of the phase transition temperature of lipid-water dispersions by conventional methods such as calorimetry.

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