“…Various biophysical methods have been used to study lipid-cholesterol interactions, including electron spin resonance (ESR) (Cheng et al, 2014; Delmelle et al, 1980; Hubbell and McConnell, 1971; Lai and Freed, 2014; Manukovsky et al, 2013; Semer and Gelerinter, 1979; Stepien et al, 2015; Vitiello et al, 2015; Williams et al, 2013), Raman (Lippert and Peticolas, 1971; Mendelsohn, 1972; Tantipolphan et al, 2006), Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) (Umemura et al, 1980), fluorescence spectroscopy (Xu and London, 2000; Yasuda et al, 2015a), atomic force microscopy (AFM), multidimensional NMR spectroscopy (Holland and Alam, 2006; Leftin et al, 2013; Leftin et al, 2014a; Warschawski and Devaux, 2005), solid-state 2 H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) (Bartels et al, 2008; Brown, 1990; Bunge et al, 2008; Martinez et al, 2004; Martinez et al, 2002; Matsumori et al, 2012; Stockton et al, 1976; Vogel et al, 2016; Weisz et al, 1992; Yasuda et al, 2015a), and neutron diffraction methods (Armstrong et al, 2014; Toppozini et al, 2014). However, a thorough understanding of the physical basis for these observations in relation to the intricate lipid compositions of many biological membranes to some extent remains an enigma (Feigenson, 2015; McConnell, 2005; Meinhardt et al, 2013; Sodt et al, 2014; Stanich et al, 2013).…”