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Mixed bilayers calorimetry

A similar study by O Brien and coworkers utilized bilayers composed of a shorter chain diacetylenicPC (9) and DSPC or DOPC [37]. Phase separation was demonstrated in bilayers by calorimetry and photopolymerization behavior. DSC of the 9/DSPC (1 1) bilayers exhibited transitions at 40 °C and 55 °C, which were attributed to domains of the individual lipids. Polymerization at 20 °C proceeded at similar rates in the mixed bilayers and pure 9 bilayers. A dramatic hysteresis effect was observed for this system, if the bilayers were first incubated at T > 55 °C then cooled back to 20 °C, the DSC peak for the diacetylenicPC at 40 °C disappeared and the bilayers could no longer be photopolymerized. The phase transition and polymerizability of the vesicles could be restored simply by cooling to ca. 10 °C. A similar hysteretic behavior was also observed for pure diacetylenicPC bilayers. Mixtures of 9 and DOPC exhibited phase transitions for both lipids (T = — 18 °C and 39 °C) plus a small peak at intermediate temperatures. Photopolymerization at 20 °C initially proceeded at a similar rate as observed for pure 9 but slowed after 10% conversion. These results were attributed to the presence of mixed lipid domains... [Pg.63]

In mixed bilayer vesicles diacetylenic and natural lipids exhibit the same miscibility behavior as in monomolecular films. This can be demonstrated using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). The neutral lipid (23) is immiscible with DSPC or DOPC as indicated by the two phase transitions of the mixed liposomes which occur at the same temperatures as those of the pure components (Fig. 33 a). [Pg.35]


See other pages where Mixed bilayers calorimetry is mentioned: [Pg.336]    [Pg.3142]    [Pg.95]    [Pg.63]    [Pg.139]    [Pg.26]    [Pg.352]    [Pg.90]    [Pg.59]    [Pg.396]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.336 ]




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Mixed bilayer

Mixed bilayers

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