Abstract

We have determined ζ-potentials for dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) membranes by measuring the electrophoretic mobility of multilayered vesicles and the temperatures of the gel-to-ripple-to-fluid phase transitions of sonicated vesicles by a photometric method. Some conclusions are: (1) The ζ-potentials of DMPC and DPPC vesicles become negative due to adsorption of ionized pentachlorophenol (PCP), (2) their magnitude changes, step-like, on gel-to-fluid transition and (3) the temperature of the step-like change in ζ-potential decreases with an increase in PCP concentration. (4) PCP exhibits a large effect on membrane structure: It induces an isothermal phase change from the ordered to disordered state, which is enhanced by monovalent salt in the aqueous phase. (5) Both ionized and unionized PCP decrease the melting phase transition temperature and abolish the pretransition, (6) the unionized species increases the melting transition width and (7) the ionized species is more potent in abolishing the pretransition. (8) The shorter chain lipid (DMPC) is more sensitive to the presence of PCP; the maximum decrease in ΔT t is 13 K (DMPC) and 7 K (DPPC) in the presence of ionized PCP. We have shown experimentally, by comparing the ΔT t from photometric studies with the density of adsorbed PCP derived from ζ-potential isotherms, that (9) the shift of the melting phase transition temperature increases linearly with the density of adsorbed PCP. (10) In contrast to membranes made of negatively charged lipids, the transition temperature of DMPC and DPPC membranes in the presence of PCP further decreases in the presence of monovalent salt. The salt effect is due to screening of the membrane surface leading to enhanced adsorption of ionized PCP and a depression in transition temperature. (11) It is shown that both the adsorption and the changes of gel-to-fluid phase transition temperature can be described in terms of the Langmuir-Stern-Grahame model and (12) proposed that future studies of membrane toxicity of PCP should be focused on its pH dependence.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call