The degree of domain registration in a liquid-ordered/liquid-disordered phase-separating lipid mixture consisting of 1-stearoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-3-phosphocholine, egg sphingomyelin, and cholesterol (molar mixing ratio of 1:1:1) was studied using three different planar lipid bilayer architectures distinguished by their bilayer-substrate distance d using epifluorescence microscopy. The bilayer systems, which were built layer by layer using Langmuir-Blodgett/Schaefer film depositions, included a solid-supported bilayer (d approximately 15 A) and two polymer-supported bilayers with d approximately 30 A and d approximately 58 A, respectively. Complete domain registration between Langmuir-Blodgett and Schaefer monolayer domains was observed for d approximately 58 A but not in the cases when d approximately 15 A and d approximately 30 A. Building the bilayer layer by layer guaranteed that any preexisting domains were not in registration initially; our data show that the domain registration observed was not caused by lipid flip-flop or by lateral rearrangement of preexisting large-scale domains. Instead, additional studies on bilayer systems with asymmetric lipid composition indicate that preexisting domains in the Langmuir-Blodgett monolayer induce the formation of completely registered domains in the opposite Schaefer monolayer. This study provides insight into possible biophysical mechanisms of transbilayer domain coupling. Our findings support the concept that the formation of transbilayer signaling platforms based on registered raft domains may occur without the active involvement of membrane-spanning proteins.
We report a simple method to confine transmembrane cell receptors in stripe micropatterns of a lipid/lipopolymer monolayer, which are formed as result of the transfer onto a solid substrate. The stripes are aligned perpendicular to the meniscus, whose periodicity can systematically be tuned by the transfer velocity. This strongly suggests the dominant role of the cooperative interaction between the film and substrate. Selective fluorescence labeling of lipids and lipopolymers confirms that the observed patterns coincide with the demixing of two species. Covalent coupling of polymer headgroups enables us to use the stripe patterns as a support for a lipid bilayer membrane. Spreading of lipid vesicles with platelet integrin alphaIIbbeta3 on a self-assembled membrane micropattern demonstrates that cell adhesion receptors are selectively incorporated into the lipopolymer-rich region. The method established here provides us with a tunable template for the confinement of receptor proteins to geometrically control the cell adhesion.
The micelle formation of five poly(2‐oxazoline) diblock, triblock and gradient copolymers in water was investigated using fluorescence correlation spectroscopy. The polymers were synthesized by consecutive or simultaneous living cationic polymerization of 2‐methyl‐2‐oxazoline for the hydrophilic and 2‐nonyl‐2‐oxazoline for the hydrophobic polymer segments. Fractions of the polymers were fluorescence‐labeled at the polymer termini with TRITC for the FCS measurements. The hydrodynamic radii of solubilized polymer unimers and of the aggregates (micelles) were determined in a concentration range of 10−8–10−3 M and were found to depend in a characteristic way on the polymer architecture.
Amphiphilic poly(2‐alkyl‐2‐oxazoline) diblock copolymers of 2‐methyl‐2‐oxazoline (MOx) building the hydrophilic block and either 2‐nonyl‐2‐oxazoline (NOx) for the hydrophobic or 2‐(1H,1H′,2H,2H′‐perfluorohexyl)‐2‐oxazoline (FOx) for the fluorophilic block were synthesized by sequential living cationic polymerization. The polymer amphiphiles form core/shell micelles in aqueous solution as evidenced using small‐angle neutron scattering (SANS). Whereas the diblock copolymer micelles with a hydrophobic NOxn block are spherical, the micelles with the fluorophilic FOxn are slightly elongated, as observed by SANS and TEM. In water, the micelles with fluorophilic and lipophilic cores do not mix, but coexist.
The current study reports on the inter-leaflet coupling of obstructed lipid diffusion in a polymertethered phospholipid bilayer, where the obstruction of diffusion is caused by lipopolymers which form non-bilayer-spanning membrane pinning sites in the bottom leaflet of the bilayer. Monolayer-specific wide-field single molecule fluorescence microscopy experiments of fluorescence-tagged phospholipids (TRITC-DHPE) over a wide range of lipopolymer concentrations, c tether , reveal a strong, polymerinduced inter-leaflet coupling of obstructed lipid diffusion for different types of lipopolymers, including those based on poly(ethylene glycol), poly(2-methyl-2-oxazoline), and poly(2-ethyl-2-oxazoline) as the hydrophilic polymer moiety. Remarkably, the degree of inter-leaflet diffusional coupling can be regulated by the cholesterol (CHOL) content which affects membrane bending elasticity. This latter finding suggests that the inter-leaflet coupling of obstructed diffusion is caused by polymer-induced bilayer deformations around membrane pinning sites, thus creating membrane-spanning regions of high membrane tension. Because the inter-leaflet coupling of obstructed diffusion at an elevated CHOL molar concentration also decreases with increasing c tether , we hypothesize that both leaflets of the bilayer are morphologically decoupled at high c tether with the outer (lipopolymer-free) monolayer being flatter than the inner one. Our findings could be of biological relevance because a similar mechanism of transbilayer coupling of obstructed diffusion may occur in some regions of cellular membranes.
We present the synthesis of novel 2-oxazoline monomers with different 2-substituents and their consecutive conversion into lipopolymers by living cationic polymerization. The side functions of these monomers were varied to realize different steric needs and hydrogen bonding interactions of the polymer side chains. 2-(2'-N-pyrrolidonyl-ethyl)-2-oxazoline, 2-(3'-methoxymonoethyleneglycol)propyl-2-oxazoline, and 2-(3'-methoxytriethyleneglycol)propyl-2-oxazoline were synthesized. All of the monomers could be converted into the corresponding lipopolymers by living cationic polymerization using 2,3-di-O-octadecyl-1-trifluormethansulfonyl-sn-glycerol as the initiator. The characterization of the 2,3-di-O-octadecyl-glycerol-poly(2-oxazoline) lipopolymers by NMR spectroscopy, IR spectroscopy, and gel permeation chromatography revealed that the targeted molar masses and compositions can be controlled by the initial initiator/monomer ([M](0)/[I](0)) ratio for all the synthesized lipopolymers. The polydispersities were found to be narrow (polydispersity indices from 1.06-1.3). The amphiphilic lipopolymers were spread at the air-water interface (Langmuir-Blodgett film balance) and the effect of the polymer side groups and chain lengths upon the Pi-area (A) isotherms of the corresponding lipopolymer monolayers were compared and analyzed. The impact of the polymer side functionalities on a 2D gel formation was examined using an interfacial rheometer operated in an oscillating stress-strain mode. Interestingly enough, none of the newly synthesized lipopolymers showed a rheological transition. This somewhat surprising result not only verified that these 2D gels are not established by hydrogen bonding among hydrophilic polymer moieties, as earlier proposed, but also supported the concept of jammed surface micelles as the more likely origin for the gelation phenomenon. [Diagram: see text]
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