Abstract
The effect of temperature on the permeability of nonelectrolytes across liposomal membranes above and below their transition temperature has been studied by using an osmotic method. Below their transition temperature, liposomes are osmotically insensitive structures but, on addition of gramicidin A, the water permeability so increased that the permeability of solutes could be studied. The measured activation energies for permeation of a variety of nonelectrolytes has been found to increase when a) there is an increase in the capability of the solutes to form hydrogen bonds in water, b) the cholesterol concentration in the membranes increases and c) the membranes pass from a liquid-crystalline to a solid-crystalline state. The change in the activation energy for permeation per hydrogen bond is about 1.8 kcal/mole for all the different liposome systems investigated; the only solute tested that deviated from this correlation was urea, whose activation energy for permeation across a gramicidin-containing system was much lower than expected from its hydrogen-bonding capacity. This finding suggests that urea is permeating across the gramicidin pore. Although the literature contains only incomplete data relating the activation energies for permeation of nonelectrolytes across biological membranes to their hydrogen-bonding capacity, the available evidence suggests that there is a similar correlation to that found in liposomes. Thus, the average increase in the activation energy per hydrogen bond for permeation across ox red cell membranes (Jacobs, Glassman & Parpart, J. Cell. Comp. Physiol. 7:197, 1935) is 2.2 plus or minus 0.4 kcal/mole, a value that is similar to that obtained in liposomes. However, the activation energies for water and urea are - in such a system - very much lower than expected, suggesting that they, too, are permeating by some parallel route such as an aqueous pore.
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