Coexisting gel and liquid-crystalline phospholipid phase domains can be observed in synthetic phospholipid vesicles during the transition from one phase to the other and, in vesicles of mixed phospholipids, at intermediate temperatures between the transitions of the different phospholipids. The presence of cholesterol perturbs the dynamic properties of both phases to such an extent as to prevent the detection of coexisting phases. 6-Lauroyl-2-dimethylaminopahthalene (Laurdan) fluorescence offers the unique advantage of well resolvable spectral parameters in the two phospholipid phases that can be used for the detection and quantitation of coexisting gel and liquid-crystalline domains. From Laurdan fluorescence excitation and emission spectra, the generalized polarization spectra and values were calculated. By the generalized polarization phospholipid phase domain coexistence can be detected, and each phase can be quantitated. In the same phospholipid vesicles where without cholesterol domain coexistence can be detected, above 15 mol% and, remarkably, at physiological cholesterol concentrations, > or = 30 mol%, no separate Laurdan fluorescence signals characteristic of distinct domains can be observed. Consequences of our results on the possible size and dynamics of phospholipid phase domains and their biological relevance are discussed.
The effect of cholesterol on the gel, the liquid-crystalline, and mixed phospholipid phases has been studied using the fluorescence properties of 2-dimethylamino-6-lauroylnaphthalene (Laurdan). Laurdan sensitivity to the polarity and to the dynamics of its environment reveals that cholesterol affects phospholipid bilayers in the gel phase by expelling water and by increasing the amount of dipolar relaxation. In the liquid-crystalline phase, the effect of cholesterol is a reduction of both water concentration and amount of dipolar relaxation. Detailed studies of Laurdan excitation and emission spectral contours as a function of cholesterol concentration show that there are some cholesterol concentrations at which Laurdan spectral properties changes discontinuously. These peculiar cholesterol concentrations are in agreement with recent observations of other workers showing the formation of local order in the liquid-crystalline phase of phospholipids upon addition of phospholipid derivatives of pyrene. A local organization of phospholipids around cholesterol molecule seems to be produced by the presence of peculiar concentrations of cholesterol itself. This local organization is stable enough to be observed during the excited state lifetime of Laurdan of approximately 5-6 ns.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.