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Title: On two-dimensional passive random walk in lipid bilayers and fluid pathways in biomembranes. Author: Galla HJ, Hartmann W, Theilen U, Sackmann E. Journal: J Membr Biol; 1979 Jul 31; 48(3):215-36. PubMed ID: 40032. Abstract: The lateral mobility of pyrene, pyrene decanoic acid, and 1-palmitoyl-2-pyrene decanoyl-phosphatidyl choline (pyrene lecithin) in lipid bilayers is determined by the excimer formation technique. This method is applied to vesicles of lecithins differing in chain length and in the degree of saturation of the hydrocarbon chains. These values are compared with results in cephalins of different chain length and in dipalmitoyl phosphatidic acid at variable pH. The influence of cholesterol is investigated. The results are analyzed in terms of the Montroll model of two-dimensional random walk. The jump frequency of the probe molecule within the lipid lattice is obtained. The advantage of this measure of transport in lipid layers is that it does not involve lipid lattice parameters. The main results of the present work are: (i) The lateral mobility of a given solute molecule in lamellae of saturated lecithins is independent of hydrocarbon chain length and rather a universal function of temperature. (ii) In unsaturated dioleyl lecithin the amphiphatic molecules have lateral mobilities of the same size as in saturated lipids. The jump frequency of pyrene, however, is by a factor of two larger in the unsaturated lecithin. (iii) The jump frequencies in phosphatidyl ethanolamines are about equal to those in lecithins. (iv) In phosphatidic acid layers the hopping frequencies depend on the charges of the head groups of both the lipids and the probes. (v) Cholesterol strongly reduces the jump frequency in fluid layers. (vi) The lateral mobility in biological membranes is comparable to that in artificial lipid bilayers. The experimental results are discussed in terms of the free volume model of diffusion in fluids. Good agreement with the predictions made from this model is found. A striking result is the observation of a tilt in dioleyl-lecithin bilayer membranes from the hopping frequencies of pyrene and pyrene lecithin. A tilt angle of phi = 17 degrees is estimated.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]