Abstract

The structure and thermotropic phase behaviour of aqueous dispersions of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine and glucosylceramide rich in C-24 fatty acyl residues was investigated by synchrotron X-ray diffraction methods. Binary mixtures comprised of molar ratios 2.5:100, 6.5:100, 12.6:100, 25:100, 40:100 and 50:100, glucolipid:phospholipid were examined in heating and cooling scans of 2°/min between 25 and 85 °C. Small-angle reflections indicated coexisting lamellar structures over the entire temperature range investigated. Reversible thermotropic changes were observed in one lamellar structure that is consistent with transitions between gel, ripple and fluid lamellar phases of pure phospholipid. The temperature of these transitions, however, were progressively shifted up by about 5 °C in the mixture containing the highest proportion of glucolipid and coincided with a published endothermic peak observed in this mixture. A higher-temperature endotherm was associated with molecular rearrangements on transition of the gel phase phospholipid to the fluid phase. This rearrangement was associated with the appearance of identifiable transient intermediate structures in the small-angle scattering region. The glucolipid formed stoichiometric mixtures with the phospholipid at all temperatures investigated and there was no evidence of phase separation of pure glucolipid. Analysis of the wide-angle scattering profiles during an initial heating scan of a binary mixture comprised of 40:60 glucolipid:phospholipid was consistent with a phase transition of pure phospholipid at about 43 °C coexisting with a liquid-ordered phase formed from the two lipids. This was confirmed by analysis of the small-angle scattering peaks of this mixture recorded at 25 and 65 °C which showed that a glucolipid-rich phase coexisted with almost pure bilayers of phospholipid at both temperatures. The glucolipid-rich phase consisted of 45:55 mole ratio glucolipid:phospholipid at 25 °C with pure phospholipid in gel phase and 42:58 mole ratio at 65 °C when the phospholipid was in the fluid phase. The results are discussed with reference to the role of the length of the N-acyl substituent of the sphingolipids in formation of complexes with phospholipids.

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