Roth L G, Chen C H
Wadsworth Center for Laboratories and Research, New York State Department of Health, Albany.
Arch Biochem Biophys. 1992 Jul;296(1):207-13. doi: 10.1016/0003-9861(92)90564-d.
Comparative thermodynamic studies on the interactions of aqueous dispersions of dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) bilayer vesicles with hydrophobic and amphipathic species were conducted to elucidate the nature of the solute-induced interdigitated lipid phase. Cyclohexanol, a strong hydrophobic species, lowers the temperature (tm) of the lipid main phase transition from the gel to the liquid-crystalline phase. Unlike ethanol (an amphipathic species), as reported previously, cyclohexanol does not exert a biphasic effect on tm (lowering tm at lower concentrations and raising tm at higher concentrations). At cyclohexanol greater than or equal to 15.4 mg/ml or 0.154 M, the thermogram of DPPC vesicles exhibits a small transition adjacent to the main phase transition but at a lower temperature. In contrast, ethanol does not promote such a small transition. Furthermore, the enthalpy (delta H) of the transition is increased in the presence of cyclohexanol. The sign of the enthalpy change (delta H-delta Ho) is positive and that of the free energy change (delta G-delta Go) is negative, a characteristic of solute-solute hydrophobic interaction. In contrast, DPPC bilayer vesicles exhibit both (delta H-delta Ho) and (delta G-delta Go) greater than 0 in the presence of ethanol in a concentration range where lipid vesicles exist in an interdigitated phase. To support the above distinct thermodynamic observations, fluorescence steady-state polarization (P) measurements were also performed. At the temperature below tm, the value of P decreases as cyclohexanol concentration increases, while a biphasic effect on P was found in the presence of ethanol. These findings support the postulation that the solute-induced interdigitated lipid phase requires the solute molecule to be amphipathic in nature.