Artificial lipid membranes are widely used as a model system to study single ion channel activity using electrophysiological techniques. In this study, we characterize the properties of the artificial bilayer system with respect to its dynamics of lipid phase separation using single-molecule fluorescence fluctuation and electrophysiological techniques. We determined the rotational motions of fluorescently labeled lipids on the nanosecond timescale using confocal time-resolved anisotropy to probe the microscopic viscosity of the membrane. Simultaneously, long-range mobility was investigated by the lateral diffusion of the lipids using fluorescence correlation spectroscopy. Depending on the solvent used for membrane preparation, lateral diffusion coefficients in the range D(lat) = 10-25 mum(2)/s and rotational diffusion coefficients ranging from D(rot) = 2.8 - 1.4 x 10(7) s(-1) were measured in pure liquid-disordered (L(d)) membranes. In ternary mixtures containing saturated and unsaturated phospholipids and cholesterol, liquid-ordered (L(o)) domains segregated from the L(d) phase at 23 degrees C. The lateral mobility of lipids in L(o) domains was around eightfold lower compared to those in the L(d) phase, whereas the rotational mobility decreased by a factor of 1.5. Burst-integrated steady-state anisotropy histograms, as well as anisotropy imaging, were used to visualize the rotational mobility of lipid probes in phase-separated bilayers. These experiments and fluorescence correlation spectroscopy measurements at different focal diameters indicated a heterogeneous microenvironment in the L(o) phase. Finally, we demonstrate the potential of the optoelectro setup to study the influence of lipid domains on the electrophysiological properties of ion channels. We found that the electrophysiological activity of gramicidin A (gA), a well-characterized ion-channel-forming peptide, was related to lipid-domain partitioning. During liquid-liquid phase separation, gA was largely excluded from L(o) domains. Simultaneously, the number of electrically active gA dimers increased due to the increased surface density of gA in the L(d) phase.
Artificial bilayer containing reconstituted ion channels, transporters and pumps serve as a well-defined model system for electrophysiological investigations of membrane protein structure–function relationship. Appropriately constructed microchips containing horizontally oriented bilayers with easy solution access to both sides provide, in addition, the possibility to investigate these model bilayer membranes and the membrane proteins therein with high resolution fluorescence techniques up to the single-molecule level. Here, we describe a bilayer microchip system in which long-term stable horizontal free-standing and hydrogel-supported bilayers can be formed and demonstrate its prospects particularly for single-molecule fluorescence spectroscopy and high resolution fluorescence microscopy in probing the physicochemical properties like phase behavior of the bilayer-forming lipids, as well as in functional studies of membrane proteins.
A novel technique is described which comprises a base-specific DNA duplex formation at a lipid bilayer-H(2) O-phase boundary layer. Two different probes of oligonucleotides both carrying a double-tailed lipid at the 5'-terminus were incorporated into stable artificial lipid bilayers separating two compartments (cis/trans-channel) of an optically transparent microfluidic sample carrier with perfusion capabilities. Both the cis- and trans-channels are filled with saline buffer. Injection of a cyanine-5-labeled target DNA sequence, which is complementary to only one of the oligonucleotide probes, into the cis-channel, followed by a thorough perfusion, leads to an immobilization of the labeled complementary oligonucleotide on the membrane as detected by single-molecule fluorescence spectroscopy and microscopy. In the case of fluorescent but non-complementary DNA sequences, no immobilized fluorescent oligonucleotide duplex could be detected on the membrane. This clearly verifies a specific duplex formation at the membrane interface.
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The effect of Ba-substitution at Sr site on the structure, magnetoresistance and magnetic properties of Lao 67(Sri.,;BaJo.33Mn03 samples with x = 0.00, 0.25, 0.50, 0.75 and 1.00 has been investigated. Single phase samples were obtained by a conventional solid state reaction method with rhombohedral (x = 0.00) and orthorombic (x = 1.00) structure. The grain size increases with Ba content. Low field magnetoresistance phenomenon at low temperature can be observed for all samples. However it vanishes at 300 K for x = 0.75 and 1.00. The variation of MR% value is small ranging between 16 to 18% at 100 K in an applied field of 1 T. All samples show a single magnetic transition from the ferromagnetic (FM) state to the paramagnetic (PM) state as the temperature increases. Curie temperature, Tc decrease with increasing Ba concentration.
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