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Biomembranes properties

This increased stability, however, is combined with the presence of a polymer chain introducing increased viscosity and thus reduced flexibility into the membrane system. How does this reduced membrane affect one of the most vital biomembrane properties, i.e. the phase transition temperature ... [Pg.86]

Experimental techniques based on the application of mechanical forces to single molecules in small assemblies have been applied to study the binding properties of biomolecules and their response to external mechanical manipulations. Among such techniques are atomic force microscopy (AFM), optical tweezers, biomembrane force probe, and surface force apparatus experiments (Binning et al., 1986 Block and Svoboda, 1994 Evans et ah, 1995 Israelachvili, 1992). These techniques have inspired us and others (see also the chapters by Eichinger et al. and by Hermans et al. in this volume) to adopt a similar approach for the study of biomolecules by means of computer simulations. [Pg.40]

Malkia A, Murtomaki L, Urtti A and Kontturi K. Drug permeation in biomembranes in vitro and in silico prediction and influence of physicochemical properties. Eur J Pharm Sci 2004 23 13-47. [Pg.509]

The fluidity is one of the most vital properties of biological membranes. It relates to many functions involved in biological system, and effective biomembrane mimetic chemistry depends on the combination of both stability and mobility of the model membranes. However, in the polymerized vesicles the polymer chain interferes with the motion of the side groups and usually causes a decrease or even the loss of the fluid phases inside the polymerized vesicle (72,13). [Pg.291]

There are several reports concerning the modification of the physicochemical properties of biomembranes by the presence of a carotenoid within the lipid phase. Under physiological conditions, all of... [Pg.26]

How well can continuum solvation models distinguish changes in one or another of these solvent properties This is illustrated in Table 2, which compares solvation energies for three representative solutes in eight test solvents. Three of the test solvents are those shown in Table 1, one is water, and the other four were selected to provide useful comparisons on the basis of their solvent descriptors, which are shown in Table 3. Notice that all four solvents in Table 3 have no acidity, which makes them more suitable, in this respect, than 1-octanol or chloroform for modeling biomembranes. Table 2 shows that the SM5.2R model, with gas-phase geometries and semiempirical molecular orbital theory for the wave function, does very well indeed in reproducing all the trends in the data. [Pg.86]

The difficulty with HLB as an index of physicochemical properties is that it is not a unique value, as the data of Zaslavsky et al. (1) on the haemolytic activity of three alkyl mercaptan polyoxyethylene derivatives clearly show in Table 1. Nevertheless data on promotion of the absorption of drugs by series of nonionic surfactants, when plotted as a function of HLB do show patterns of behaviour which can assist in pin-pointing the necessary lipophilicity required for optimal biological activity. It is evident however, that structural specificity plays a part in interactions of nonionic surfactants with biomembranes as shown in Table 1. It is reasonable to assume that membranes with different lipophilicities will"require" surfactants of different HLB to achieve penetration and fluidization one of the difficulties in discerning this optimal value of HLB resides in the problems of analysis of data in the literature. For example, Hirai et al. (8 ) examined the effect of a large series of alkyl polyoxyethylene ethers (C4,C0, Cj2 and C 2 series) on the absorption of insulin through the nasal mucosa of rats. Some results are shown in Table II. [Pg.192]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.184 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.184 ]




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