Abstract

Temperature-jump relaxation experiments on Na + transport by (221)C 10-cryptand were carried out in order to study the influence of cholesterol and its temperature-dependence on ion transport through thin lipid membranes. The experiments were performed on large, negatively charged unilamellar vesicles (LUV) prepared from mixtures of dioleoylphosphatidylcholine, phosphatidic acid and cholesterol (mole fractions 0–0.43), at various temperatures and carrier concentrations. The initial rates of Na + transport and the apparent rate constants of its translocation by (221)C 10 increased with the carrier concentration and the temperature. The incorporation of cholesterol into the membranes significantly reduced the carrier concentration- and temperature-dependence of these two parameters. The apparent energy required to activate the transport decreased significantly with increasing carrier concentrations at any given cholesterol molar fraction, and increased significantly with the cholesterol molar fraction at any given carrier concentration. Our interpretation of the action of cholesterol on this transport system is based on the assumption that the binding cavity of cryptands is likely to be located towards the aqueous side of the dipole layer. The results are discussed in terms of the structural, physico-chemical and electrical characteristics of carriers and complexes, and of the interactions occurring between an ionizable mobile carrier and the membrane.

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