The structural phases of magnetically alignable lipid mixtures were investigated as a function of
temperature and lipid concentration using small-angle neutron scattering (SANS). Two systems were
examined: (a) an aqueous mixture of DMPC (dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine) and DHPC (dihexanoyl
phosphatidylcholine) lipids doped with Tm3+ ions resulting in the positive alignment of the system with
the applied magnetic field and (b) the above aqueous Tm3+ doped lipid mixture containing a negatively
charged lipid, DMPG (dimyristoylphosphatidylglycerol). For both systems, three different scattering patterns
were observed corresponding to distinct structural phases at specific temperatures and lipid concentrations.
At 45 °C and a lipid concentration of >0.05 g/mL, the high-viscosity liquid crystalline phase was found
to be a perforated and possibly undulating lamellar phase consistent with NMR results. Upon dilution
(<0.05 g/mL) at the same temperature (45 °C), the perforated lamellar phase transformed into a unilamellar
vesicular phase, in which the bilayers may also be perforated. Below about 25 °C, the viscosity decreases
considerably and the scattering data suggest that the lamellae present at higher temperatures break up
into smaller entities characterized by the bicellar morphology proposed previously for the nondoped system.
The structural dimensions of the vesicular and bicellar phases have been determined as a function of lipid
concentrations from the SANS data. In the lamellar phase, the influence of Tm3+ ions and DMPG on bilayer
structure (e.g., lamellar repeat spacing, bilayer rigidity, and magnetic alignment) were also investigated.
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