Abstract

Sum Frequency Generation (SFG) spectroscopy is widely used for studying the di-chain phospholipid monolayers incorporated in model cell membranes. In this context, it is frequently assumed, without justification, that the chains are identical, so their individual contributions to the SFG spectra are indistinguishable. However, the combination of both attractive and repulsive Van der Waals interactions between the chains results in a finite angle between their two terminal methyl groups, resulting in non-equivalent contributions to the non-linear susceptibility. This work describes the application of the underlying non-linear theory required to produce the accurate SFG spectral simulations needed to test this assertion and therefore provides the necessary quantitative validation. For phospholipids comprising two identical saturated chains, which typically have small angles of divergence, these simulations predict only small deviations in the SFG intensities from those calculated assuming a single methyl orientation. Non-identical tails, however, with differences in the degree or type of chain unsaturation, or in the parity of the chain lengths, show much larger discrepancies than the assumption of a single chain. In these cases, the two tails must be treated as separate entities, and their structural relationship must be incorporated into the interpretation of their SFG spectra. A second important result from the simulations arises from the systematic nature of the deviations, which shows that even small intensity changes should not be quickly dismissed on the basis of being subsumed by the uncertainties associated with spectral noise.

Highlights

  • Phospholipids are of significant importance in nature due to their abundance in biological membranes

  • Previous work on odd and even chain length self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) has shown that the direction of the methyl groups is determined by the parity of the chain length

  • Most phospholipids having identical acyl chains, or more generally chains with the same parity, suggest that their two methyl groups will be oriented in the same direction, with a minimum subtended angle

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Summary

Introduction

Phospholipids are of significant importance in nature due to their abundance in biological membranes. This is a reasonable approximation for high packing densities where there is significant conformational restriction, lifting the degeneracy of the antisymmetric stretching modes and resulting in Cs symmetry for the methyl groups (evidence for this arises, for example, in experimental SFG spectra of surfactants or lipids where the r+ to d+ ratio is generally very large, indicating a well-ordered monolayer with low concentrations of gauche defects and very narrow orientational distribution functions).

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