Abstract

The dissolution and formation of egg phosphatidylcholine (PC) vesicles by the detergent octyl glucoside were examined systematically by using resonance energy transfer between fluorescent lipid probes, turbidity, and gel filtration chromatography. Resonance energy transfer was exquisitely sensitive to the intermolecular distance when the lipids were in the lamellar phase and to the transitions leading to mixed micelles. Turbidity measurements provided information about the aggregation of lipid and detergent. Several reversible discrete transitions between states of the PC-octyl glucoside system were observed by both methods during dissolution and vesicle formation. These states could be described as a series of equilibrium structures that took the forms of vesicles, open lamellar sheets, and mixed micelles. As detergent was added to an aqueous suspension of vesicles, the octyl glucoside partitioned into the vesicles with a partition coefficient of 63. This was accompanied by leakage of small molecules and vesicle swelling until the mole fraction of detergent in the vesicles was just under 50% (detergent:lipid ratio of 1:1). Near this point, a transition was observed by an increase in turbidity and release of large molecules like inulin, consistent with the opening of vesicles. Both a turbidity maximum and a sharp increase in fluorescence were observed at a detergent to lipid mole ratio of 2.1:1. This was interpreted as the lower boundary of a region where both lamellar sheets and micelles are at equilibrium. At a detergent:lipid ratio of 3.0:1, another sharp change in resonance energy transfer and clarification of the suspension were observed, demarcating the upper boundary of this two-phase region. This latter transition is commonly referred to as solubilization.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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