Octyl-beta-thioglucopyranoside (octyl thioglucoside, OTG) is a nonionic surfactant used for the purification, reconstitution, and crystallization of membrane proteins. The thermodynamic properties of the OTG-membrane partition equilibrium are not known and have been investigated here with high-sensitivity titration calorimetry. The critical concentration for inducing the bilayer <==> micelle transition was determined as cD* = 7.3 mM by 90 degree light scattering. All thermodynamic studies were performed well below this limit. Sonified, unilamellar lipid vesicles composed of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC) with and without cholesterol were employed in the titration calorimetry experiments, and the temperature was varied between 28 degrees C and 45 degrees C. Depending on the surfactant concentration in the membrane, the partition enthalpy was found to be exothermic or endothermic, leading to unusual titration patterns. A quantitative interpretation of all titration curves was possible with the following model: 1) The partitioning of OTG into the membrane follows a simple partition law, i.e., Xb = Kc(D,f), where Xb denotes the molar amount of detergent bound per mole of lipid and c(D,f) is the detergent concentration in bulk solution. 2) The partition enthalpy for the transfer of OTG from the aqueous phase to the membrane depends linearly on the mole fraction, R, of detergent in the membrane. All calorimetric OTG titration curves can be characterized quantitatively by using a composition-dependent partition enthalpy of the form deltaHD(R) = -0.08 + 1.7 R (kcal/mol) (at 28 degrees C). At low OTG concentrations (R < or = 0.05) the reaction enthalpy is exothermic; it becomes distinctly endothermic as more and more surfactant is incorporated into the membrane. OTG has a partition constant of 240 M(-1) and is more hydrophobic than its oxygen-containing analog, octyl-beta-D-glucopyranoside (OG). Including a third nonionic amphiphile, octa(ethyleneoxide) dodecylether (C12EO8), an empirical relation can be established between the Gibbs energies of membrane partitioning, deltaGp, and micelle formation, deltaGmic, with deltaGp = 1.398 + 0.647 deltaGmic (kcal/mol). The partition constant of OTG is practically independent of temperature and of the cholesterol content of the membrane. In contrast, the partition enthalpy shows a strong temperature dependence. The molar specific heat capacity of the transfer of OTG from the aqueous phase to the membrane is deltaCp = -98 cal/(mol x K). The OTG partition enthalpy is also dependent on the cholesterol content of the membrane. It increases by approximately 1 kcal/mol at 50 mol% cholesterol. As the partition constant remains unchanged, the increase in enthalpy is compensated for by a corresponding increase in entropy, presumably caused by a restructuring of the membrane hydration layer.
The proton-induced isothermal fusion of unilamellar lipid vesicles (Duzgunes et al., Biochemistry 24 (1985) 3091-3098) is compared with the lamellar (Lalpha)-->hexagonal (HII) phase transition of multilamellar lipid dispersions. Both lipid systems are composed of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (POPE) and oleic acid (OA) at a 7:3 molar ratio. Using solid-state phosphorus-31 nuclear magnetic resonance (31P-NMR) it is demonstrated that the multilamellar lipid dispersions are in the bilayer state at physiological pH and undergo a Lalpha-->HII phase transition between pH 6.3 and 5.7. This phase transition can also be induced at constant pH by increasing the temperature. The midpoint of the temperature-induced Lalpha-->HII transition is Th=56 degrees C (at pH 7.4) and the corresponding transition enthalpy is DeltaH=0. 7+/-0.1 kcal/mol as determined with differential scanning calorimetry. Both the proton-induced and the temperature-induced phase transition can be completely inhibited by addition of 30 mol% of 1-palmitoyl-2-hydroxy-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (LPC). In a second set of experiments unilamellar vesicles are prepared either by sonication or by extrusion through polycarbonate filters at pH 7. 4 and are titrated into buffer at pH 5.7. The proton-induced fusion of the lipid vesicles is monitored with isothermal titration calorimetry, light scattering and fluorescence spectroscopy. The fusion reaction is characterized by an endothermic enthalpy of DeltaH=0.5+/-0.2 kcal/mol (at 28 degrees C). The fusion enthalpy is independent of the vesicle diameter and is only slightly reduced by an increase in temperature to 50 degrees C. Vesicle fusion is accompanied by an increase in light scattering, indicating the formation of larger lipid structures. The transition from unilamellar vesicles to fused lipid structures occurs in the same narrow pH range of 6.3-5.7 as observed for the Lalpha-->HII transition of multilamellar dispersions. Vesicle fusion can be inhibited with 30% LPC. The virtually identical set of parameters found for the Lalpha-->HII phase transition and the vesicle fusion reaction suggests that vesicle fusion also entails a Lalpha-->HII phase transition.
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