The current interest in mixed cationic-zwitterionic lipid membranes derives from their potential use as transfer vectors in nonviral gene therapy. Mixed cationic-zwitterionic lipid membranes have a number of structural properties that are distinct from the corresponding anionic-zwitterionic lipid membranes. As known from experiment and reproduced by computer simulations, the average cross-sectional area per lipid changes nonmonotonically with the mole fraction of the charged lipid, passing through a minimum at a roughly equimolar mixture. At the same time, the average orientation of the zwitterionic headgroup dipoles changes from more parallel to the membrane plane to more perpendicular. We suggest a simple mean-field model that reveals the physical mechanisms underlying the observed structural properties. To backup the mean-field calculations, we have also performed Monte Carlo simulations. Our model extends Poisson-Boltzmann theory to include (besides the cationic headgroup charges) the individual charges of the zwitterionic lipid headgroups. We model these charges to be arranged as dipoles of fixed length with rotational degrees of freedom. Our model includes, in a phenomenological manner, the changes in steric headgroup interactions upon reorientation of the zwitterionic headgroups. Our numerical results suggest that two different mechanisms contribute to the observed structural properties: one involves the lateral electrostatic pressure and the other the zwitterionic headgroup orientation, the latter modifying steric headgroup interactions. The two mechanisms operate in parallel as they both originate in the electrostatic properties of the involved lipids. We have also applied our model to a mixed anionic-zwitterionic lipid membrane for which neither a significant headgroup reorientation nor a nonmonotonic change in the average lateral cross-sectional area is predicted.
We studied the kinetics of hepatic uptake of liposomes during serum-free recirculating perfusion of rat livers. Liposomes consisted of phosphatidylcholine, cholesterol and phosphatidylserine in a 6:4:0 or a 3:4:3 molar ratio and were radiolabelled with [3H]cholesteryl oleyl ether. The negatively charged liposomes were taken up to a 10-fold higher extent than the neutral ones. Hepatic uptake of fluorescently labelled liposomes was examined by fluorescence microscopy. The neutral liposomes displayed a typical Kupffer cell distribution pattern, in addition to weak diffuse staining of the parenchyma, while the negatively charged liposomes showed a characteristic sinusoidal lining pattern, consistent with an endothelial localization. In addition, scattered Kupffer cell staining was distinguished as well as diffuse parenchymal fluorescence. The mainly endothelial localisation of the negatively charged liposomes was confirmed by determining radioactivity in endothelial and Kupffer cells isolated following a 1-h perfusion. Perfusion in the presence of polyinosinic acid, an inhibitor of scavenger receptor activity, reduced the rate of uptake of the negatively charged liposomes twofold, indicating the involvement of this receptor in the elimination mechanism. These results are compatible with earlier in vitro studies on liposome uptake by isolated endothelial cells and Kupffer cells, which showed that in the absence of serum also endothelial cells in situ are able to take up massive amounts of negatively charged liposomes. The present results emphasize that the high in vitro endothelial cell uptake in the absence of serum from earlier observations was not an artifact induced by the cell isolation procedure.
The immortalized human cerebral microvessel endothelial cell line hCMEC/D3 has been repeatedly used as a model of human blood-brain barrier (BBB). hCMEC/D3 cells between passage 25 and 35 are most often applied in research, remained phenotypically nontransformed, and cells maintained many characteristics of human brain endothelial cells. Also hCMEC/D3 was thought to have conserved a normal diploid karyotype over all these passages. Here we characterized the cell line using high-resolution multicolor fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) approaches and revealed a complex karyotype in the 30th passage. Clonal cryptic unbalanced structural rearrangements and numerical aberrations were discovered and described as follows: 45∼48,XX, –X,del(5)(q11)[2],del(9)(q11)[3],+9[3],del(11)(q13∼14)[2], der(14)t(14;21)(q32.33;q22.3)[28],der(15)t(9;15)(p11;p11)[13], dup(15)(p11q11)[5],der(21)t(17;21)(p12;q22)[9],–22[6][cp28]. In summary, a complex karyotype with clonal unbalanced chromosomal rearrangements is present in hCMEC/D3. Thus, we solicit to include molecular cytogenetics in the testing of all cell lines prior to application of their use in complex studies.
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