The X-ray scattering study of a cubic phase of extinction symbol Fd--, recently performed on a lipid extract (PFL) from Pseudomonas fluorescens [Mariani et al. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 6799-6810] has been extended to several other systems, all consisting of mixtures of water-miscible (MO, PC, PE, oleate) and of water-immiscible (FA, DG) lipids, plus water. In all of these systems the cubic phase was observed in the presence of excess water. Some inconsistencies observed between PFL and the other systems, the fact that in PFL one of the reflections of the cubic phase happened to coincide with the strongest reflection of the hexagonal phase, and the finding, in one of the original cubic samples of PFL kept in the cold for more than 3 years, that the intensity of one of the reflections had decreased dramatically all indicated that a nonnegligible amount of a hexagonal impurity was in fact present in the samples of PFL originally thought to contain a pure cubic phase. The intensities were corrected for that impurity and analyzed again using a pattern recognition approach based upon the axiom that the histogram of the electron density maps is invariant with respect to physical structure, when different phases are compared whose chemical composition is the same. The hexagonal phase provided the reference phase for the comparison. The moments mean value of (delta rho)n were used to compare the histograms.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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