Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy has been used to characterize the carbonyl stretching vibration of DMPC, DMPE, DMPG, and DMPA, all labeled with 13C at the carbonyl group of the sn-2 chain. Due to the vibrational isotope effect, the 13C = O and the 12C = O vibrational bands are separated by ca. 40-43 cm-1. This frequency difference does not change when the labeling is reversed with the 13C = O group at the sn-1 chain. For lipids in organic solvents possible conformational differences between the sn-1 and sn-2 ester groups have no effect on the vibrational frequency of the C = O groups. In aqueous dispersion unlabeled phospholipids always show a superposition of two bands for the C = O vibration located at ca. 1740 and 1727 cm-1. These two bands have previously been assigned to the sn-1 and sn-2 C = O groups. FT-IR spectra of 13C-labeled phospholipids show that the vibrational bands of both, the sn-1 as well as the sn-2 C = O group, are clearly superpositions of at least two underlying components of different frequency and intensity. Band frequencies were determined by Fourier self-deconvolution and second-derivative spectroscopy. The difference between the component bands is ca. 11-17 cm-1. Again, the conformational effect as shown by reversed labeling is negligible with only 1-2 cm-1. The splitting of the C = O vibrational bands in H2O and D2O is caused by hydrogen bonding of water molecules to both C = O groups as shown by a comparison with spectra of model ester compounds in different solvents. To extract quantitative information about changes in hydration, band profiles were stimulated with Gaussian-Lorentzian functions. The chemical nature of the head group and its electronic charge have distinctive effects on the extent of hydration of the carbonyl groups. In the gel and liquid-crystalline phase of DMPC the sn-2 C = O group is more hydrated than the sn-1 C = O. This is accord with the conformation determined by X-ray analysis. In DMPG the sn-1 C = O group seems to be more accessible to water, indicating a different conformation of the glycerol backbone.
Oriented multilayers of 1-myristoyl-2(1-13C)-myristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine (2[1-13C]DMPC) and 1-palmitoyl-2(1-13C)-palmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine (2[1-13C]DPPC) were investigated by use of attenuated total reflection infrared spectroscopy with polarized light. Experiments were performed with the aim to determine the orientation of the two ester groups in these phospholipids in the solid state and in the hydrated state at temperatures below and above the respective gel to liquid-crystalline phase transitions. Substitution of the naturally occurring 12C carbonyl carbon atom by 13C in the ester group of the sn-2 chain of DMPC and DPPC shifts the infrared absorption of the carbonyl double bond stretching vibration to lower frequency. This results in two well-resolved ester C=O bands which can be assigned unequivocally to the sn-1 and sn-2 chains as they are separated by more than 40 cm-1. The two ester CO-O single bond stretching vibrations of the molecular fragments-CH2CO-OC-are also affected and the corresponding infrared absorption band shifts by 20 cm-1 on 13C-labeling of the carbonyl carbon atom. From the dichroic ratios of the individual ester bands in 2(1-13C)DMPC and 2(1-13C)DPPC we were able to demonstrate that the sn-1 and sn-2 ester C=O groups are similarly oriented with respect to the bilayer plane, with an angle greater than or equal to 60 degrees relative to the bilayer normal. The two CO-O single bonds on the other hand have very different orientations. The CH2CO-OC fragment of the sn-1 chain is oriented along the direction of the all-trans methylene chain, whereas the same molecular segment of the sn-2 carbon chain is directed toward the bilayer plane. This orientation of the ester groups is retained in the liquid-crystalline phase. The tilt angle of the hydrocarbon all-trans chains, relative to the membrane normal, is 25 degrees in the solid state of DMPC and DPPC multibilayers. In the hydrated gel state this angle varies between 26 degrees and 30 degrees, depending on temperature. Neither the orientation of the phosphate group, nor that of the choline group varies significantly in the different physical states of these phospholipids.
The interaction of aqueous phospholipid dispersions of negatively charged 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoglycerol, sodium salt (DMPG) with the divalent cations Mg(2+), Ca(2+) and Sr(2+) at equimolar ratios in 100 mM NaCl at pH 7 was investigated by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. The binding of the three cations induces a crystalline-like gel phase with highly ordered and rigid all-trans acyl chains. These features are observed after storage below room temperature for 24 h. When the gel phase is heated after prolonged incubation at low temperature phase transitions into the liquid crystalline phase are observed at 58 degrees C for the DMPG:Sr(2+), 65 degrees C for the DMPG:Mg(2+), and 80 degrees C for the DMPG:Ca(2+) complex. By subsequent cooling from temperatures above T(m) these complexes retain the features of a liquid crystalline phase with disordered acyl chains until a metastable gel phase is formed at temperatures between 38 and 32 degrees C. This phase is characterized by predominantly all-trans acyl chains, arranged in a loosely packed hexagonal or distorted hexagonal subcell lattice. Reheating the DMPG:Sr(2+) samples after a storage time of 2 h at 4 degrees C results in the transition of the metastable gel to the liquid crystalline phase at 35 degrees C. This phase transition into the liquid crystalline state at 35 degrees C is also observed for the Mg(2+) complex. However, for DMPG:Mg(2+) at higher temperatures, a partial recrystallization of the acyl chains occurs and the high temperature phase transition at 65 degrees C is also detected. In contrast, DMPG:Ca(2+) exhibits only the phase transition at 80 degrees C from the crystalline gel into the fluid state upon reheating. Below 20 degrees C, the rate of conversion from the metastable gel to a thermodynamically stable, crystalline-like gel phase decreases in the order Ca(2+)&z. Gt;Mg(2+)>Sr(2+). This conversion into the crystalline gel phase is accompanied by a complete dehydration of the phosphate groups in DMPG:Mg(2+) and by a reorientation of the polar lipid head groups in DMPG:Ca(2+) and in DMPG:Sr(2+). The primary binding sites of the cations are the PO(2)(-) groups of the phosphodiester moiety. Our infrared spectroscopic results suggest a deep penetration of the divalent cations into the polar head group region of DMPG bilayers, whereby the ester carbonyl groups, located in the interfacial region of the bilayers, are indirectly affected by strong hydrogen bonding of immobilized water molecules. In the liquid crystalline phase, the interaction of all three cations with DMPG is weak, but still observable in the infrared spectra of the DMPG:Ca(2+) complex by a slight ordering effect induced in the acyl chains, when compared to pure DMPG liposomes.
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