Abstract

The phase behavior of bovine brain sphingomyelin in water has been determined by polarizing light microscopy, differential scanning calorimetry, and X-ray diffraction. Lamellar phases, in which water is intercalated between sheets of lipid molecules arranged in the classical bilayer fashion, are present over much of the phase diagram. An order-disorder transition separates the high temperature, liquid crystalline, lamellar phase from a more ordered lamellar phase at low temperatures. The hydration characteristics of sphingomyelin are similar to the structurally related lecithin in that only limited amounts of water are incorporated above and below the transition. Above the transition at 47 degrees C, a maximum of 35% by weight of water can be incorporated between the lipid bilayers, the total thickness at maximum hydration being 60.2 A, the lipid thickness 38 A, and the surface area per lipid molecule at the interface 60 A(2). Water in excess of 35% by weight is present as a separate phase. Below the phase transition, at 25 degrees C a maximum of 42% by weight of water may be incorporated between the lipid bilayers. On increasing the hydration, the lamellar repeat distance increases from 63.5 A to a limiting value of 76 A. Within this hydration range the calculated lipid thickness decreases from 63.5 to 42.5 A, and the surface area per lipid molecule increases from 36.1 to 53.6 A(2). Although these changes may be accounted for by a structure in which the hexagonally packed ordered hydrocarbon chains tilt progressively with respect to the normal to the bilayer plane on increasing hydration, it is possible that changes in other more complex lamellar structures may be responsible for these variations in lipid thickness and surface area.

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