Electroporation relates to the cascade of events that follows the application of high electric fields and that leads to cell membrane permeabilization. Despite a wide range of applications, little is known about the electroporation threshold, which varies with membrane lipid composition. Here, using molecular dynamics simulations, we studied the response of dipalmitoyl-phosphatidylcholine, diphytanoyl-phosphocholine-ester and diphytanoylphosphocholine-ether lipid bilayers to an applied electric field. Comparing between lipids with acyl chains and methyl branched chains and between lipids with ether and ester linkages, which change drastically the membrane dipole potential, we found that in both cases the electroporation threshold differed substantially. We show, for the first time, that the electroporation threshold of a lipid bilayer depends not only on the ''electrical'' properties of the membrane, i.e., its dipole potential, but also on the properties of its component hydrophobic tails.
The lipid bilayer is a basic building block of biological membranes and can be pictured as a barrier separating two compartments filled with electrolyte solution. Artificial planar lipid bilayers are therefore commonly used as model systems to study the physical and electrical properties of the cell membranes in contact with electrolyte solution. Among them the glycerol-based polar phospholipids which have dipolar, but electrically neutral head groups, are most frequently used in formation of artificial lipid bilayers. In this work the electrical properties of the lipid layer composed of zwitterionic lipids with non-zero dipole moments are studied theoretically. In the model, the zwitterionic lipid bilayer is assumed to be in contact with aqueous solution of monovalent salt ions. The orientational ordering of water, resulting in spatial variation of permittivity, is explicitly taken into account. It is shown that due to saturation effect in orientational ordering of water dipoles the relative permittivity in the zwitterionic headgroup region is decreased, while the corresponding electric potential becomes strongly negative. Some of the predictions of the presented mean-field theoretical consideration are critically evaluated using the results of molecular dynamics (MD) simulation.
Aeropyrum pernix is an aerobic hyperthermophilic archaeon that grows in harsh environmental conditions and as such possesses unique structural and metabolic features. Its membrane interfaces with the extreme environment and is the first line of defense from external factors. Therefore, lipids composing this membrane have special moieties that increase its stability. The membrane of A. pernix is composed predominantly of two polar lipids 2,3-di-O-sesterterpanyl-sn-glicerol-1-phospho-1'(2'-O-α-D-glucosyl)-myo-inositol (AGI) and 2,3-di-O-sesterterpanyl-sn-glicerol-1-phospho-myo-inositol (AI). Both have methyl branches in their lipid tails and ether linkages and carbohydrates in their headgroup. These moieties significantly affect the structure and dynamics of the bilayer. To provide a molecular level insight into these characteristics, we used here Molecular Dynamics (MD) simulations of lipid bilayers of composition similar to those of the archaeal membranes. First, we show that the electron density profiles along the normal to the bilayers derived from the simulations are in good agreement with the profiles obtained by the small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) technique, which provides confidence in the force fields used. Analyses of the simulation data show that the archaeal lipid bilayers are less hydrated than conventional phosphatidylcholine (PC) lipids and that their structure is not affected by the salt present in the surrounding solution. Furthermore, the lateral pressure in their hydrophobic core, due to the presence of the branched tails, is much higher than that at PC-based lipid bilayers. Both the methyl branched tails and the special headgroup moieties contribute to slow drastically the lateral diffusion of the lipids. Furthermore, we found that the lipid head groups associate via hydrogen bonding, which affects their reorientational dynamics. All together, our data provide links between the microscopic properties of these membranes and their overall stability in harsh environments.
Electroporation relates to a phenomenon in which cell membranes are permeabilized after being exposed to high electric fields. On the molecular level, the mechanism is not yet fully elucidated, although a considerable body of experiments and molecular dynamic (MD) simulations were performed on model membranes. Here we present the results of a combined theoretical and experimental investigation of electroporation of palmitoy-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine (POPC) bilayers with incorporated polyoxyethylene glycol (C12E8) surfactants. The experimental results show a slight increase of the capacitance and a 22% decrease of the voltage breakdown upon addition of C12E8 to pure POPC bilayers. These results were qualitatively confirmed by the MD simulations. They later revealed that the polyoxyethylene glycol molecules play a major role in the formation of hydrophilic pores in the bilayers above the electroporation threshold. The headgroup moieties of the latter are indeed embedded in the interior of the bilayer, which favors formation of water wires that protrude into its hydrophobic core. When the water wires extend across the whole bilayer, they form channels stabilized by the C12E8 head groups. These hydrophilic channels can transport ions across the membrane without the need of major lipid head-group rearrangements.
We present a system for measuring planar lipid bilayer properties. The system is composed of a control unit, an output stage, an LCR meter, pumps for filling reservoirs, a bath with temperature regulation and a measurement chamber with four electrodes. The planar lipid bilayer is automatically formed using a folding method on apertures of different sizes. The automatization is assured by two syringes, which are clamped in actuators. Actuators are driven and controlled by a control unit via RS-232 communication. The temperature of the planar lipid bilayer can be regulated between 15 and 55 °C. The regulation is assured by insertion of the measurement chamber into the temperature-regulated bath. Different shapes of voltage- or current-clamp signals can be applied to the planar lipid bilayer. By measuring the response of the planar lipid bilayer to the applied signal, the capacitance and breakdown voltage of the planar lipid bilayer can be determined. The cutoff frequencies of the system output stage for voltage- and current-clamp methods are 11 and 17 kHz, respectively.
We demonstrate how GaAs can be selectively oxidized in a plasma to control the physical and chemical properties of the oxides. Electrical measurements indicate that charged traps can be removed.
SynopsisGraph theory methods are shown to complement group additivity methods of predicting oxygen permeability in certain types of polymers. Graph theory is a topological approach that assigns a set of indices to a molecule to describe its structure. Since many physical properties of molecules depend upon their structure, graph theory indices can be used to describe important properties of molecules. In this work a set of graph theory indices are used to describe the property of a polymer based on a modified representation of the monomer unit. More specifically, Randic indices are used to describe the log of the oxygen permeability with 3.2% average relative error. Polymers comprising the basis set contain backbones of s$, s$, or aromatic carbons, oxygen, or silicon and have substituents that contain chloride, fluoride, alkyl groups, hydrogen, oxygen, aromatic carbons, or chloro and/or fluoro substituted alkyl groups. The correlation coefficient ( R2) (0 I R2 s 1) of a nonlinear model is 0.91. The graph theory method for describing the oxygen permeability of these selected groups of polymers is in good agreement with that predicted by the permachor model. The permachor method makes oxygen permeability predictions based upon group additivity and distinguishes the degree of crystallinity of a polymer by empirically assigning different permachor (T) values to identical groups based upon the polymer crystallinity. The inability of graph theory to explain the remaining 9% of the scatter in the data is probably due to failure to incorporate into the graph theory model terms which quantify crystallinity.
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