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Lipid bilayers temperature effect

The development of monoalkyl phosphate as a low skin irritating anionic surfactant is accented in a review with 30 references on monoalkyl phosphate salts, including surface-active properties, cutaneous effects, and applications to paste and liquid-type skin cleansers, and also phosphorylation reactions from the viewpoint of industrial production [26]. Amine salts of acrylate ester polymers, which are physiologically acceptable and useful as surfactants, are prepared by transesterification of alkyl acrylate polymers with 4-morpholinethanol or the alkanolamines and fatty alcohols or alkoxylated alkylphenols, and neutralizing with carboxylic or phosphoric acid. The polymer salt was used as an emulsifying agent for oils and waxes [70]. Preparation of pharmaceutical liposomes with surfactants derived from phosphoric acid is described in [279]. Lipid bilayer vesicles comprise an anionic or zwitterionic surfactant which when dispersed in H20 at a temperature above the phase transition temperature is in a micellar phase and a second lipid which is a single-chain fatty acid, fatty acid ester, or fatty alcohol which is in an emulsion phase, and cholesterol or a derivative. [Pg.611]

Recently, due to increased interest in membrane raft domains, extensive attention has been paid to the cholesterol-dependent liquid-ordered phase in the membrane (Subczynski and Kusumi 2003). The pulse EPR spin-labeling DOT method detected two coexisting phases in the DMPC/cholesterol membranes the liquid-ordered and the liquid-disordered domains above the phase-transition temperature (Subczynski et al. 2007b). However, using the same method for DMPC/lutein (zeaxanthin) membranes, only the liquid-ordered-like phase was detected above the phase-transition temperature (Widomska, Wisniewska, and Subczynski, unpublished data). No significant differences were found in the effects of lutein and zeaxanthin on the lateral organization of lipid bilayer membranes. We can conclude that lutein and zeaxanthin—macular xanthophylls that parallel cholesterol in its function as a regulator of both membrane fluidity and hydrophobicity—cannot parallel the ability of cholesterol to induce liquid-ordered-disordered phase separation. [Pg.203]

Figure 3. Temperature effects on permeability of calcein through lipid bilayer membranes of Mals(Phyt)2 and DPPC. Figure 3. Temperature effects on permeability of calcein through lipid bilayer membranes of Mals(Phyt)2 and DPPC.
The chemical compositions and isomeric structures of the fatty acid chains of phospholipids is well known to have large effects on the physical properties of lipid bilayers, such as the temperatures of endothermic chain melting phase transitions. Lipid vesicles sensitized with lipid haptens can be agglutinated with specific antibodies directed against the haptens (see Fig. 1). [Pg.280]

From the data presented here several conclusions may be reached regarding the effect of cholesterol on lipid bilayers. It is shown that, even if the presence of cholesterol in bilayers serves to moderate temperature-induced changes, its ability to affect the location of solubilized molecules is highly temperature dependent We have also shown, in accord with previous work (11), that the presence of cholesterol in the gel phase results in a larger separation between the lipid polar groups and this in turn allows water to penetrate into the lipid hydrophobic core. [Pg.69]

Release of liposome-encapsulated CF from HA/PLL films has been observed at temperatures above the lipid transition temperature (Fig. 4f). Below this temperature, the vesicles were stable at least for a few hours. The polyelectrolyte network destabilizes the embedded vesicles, which show higher lipidic bilayer permeability upon heating than do vesicles in solution [84], No change in film properties upon heating has been reported as proof of the polyelectrolyte destabilization effect. [Pg.142]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.211 , Pg.212 ]




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