Abstract

A study of the molar ratio dependence of the incorporation of alpha-tocopherol into single-lamellar vesicles showed that the number of molecules which the bilayers can accommodate increased linearly with increasing alpha-tocopherol/phosphatidylcholine initial molar ratios till about 0.05, then approached a saturation limit. At 5 mol%, one alpha-tocopherol molecule per 60 phospholipids can be incorporated into the membranes. Up to this limit the distribution of alpha-tocopherol in the bilayers is uniform, while at initial molar ratios higher than 0.05 a disproportionation toward the inner monolayer of the vesicles is observed. The average outer/total ratio is found to be 0.27 +/- 0.03 at alpha-tocopherol/phosphatidylcholine molar ratios above 0.07 and is similar to asymmetrical distributions that have been reported in vesicles containing other one-chain amphiphiles (e.g., cholesterol). This large disproportionation is in contrast with the packing distribution of certain two-chain amphiphiles, and indicates that one of the driving forces for asymmetry formation in lipid bilayers might be dependent on the number of hydrocarbon chains per amphiphile molecule. A possible reason for the disproportionation effect observed in our experiments is the displacement of unsaturated phospholipids to the outer monolayer of the single-lamellar vesicles, by the more rigid isoprene units of alpha-tocopherol.

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