Cholesterol slows down the lateral mobility of an oxidized phospholipid in a supported lipid bilayer

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Abstract

We investigated the mobility and phase-partitioning of the fluorescent oxidized phospholipid analogue 1-palmitoyl-2-glutaroyl-sn-glycero-3-phospho-N- Alexa647-ethanolamine (PGPE-Alexa647) in supported lipid bilayers. Compared to the conventional phospholipid dihexadecanoylphosphoethanolamine (DHPE)-Bodipy we found consistently higher diffusion constants. The effect became dramatic when immobile obstacles were inserted into the bilayer, which essentially blocked the diffusion of DHPE-Bodipy but hardly influenced the movements of PGPE-Alexa647. In a supported lipid bilayer made of 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DOPC), the differences in probe mobility leveled off with increasing cholesterol content. Using coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations, we could ascribe this effect to increased interactions between the oxidized phospholipid and the membrane matrix, concomitant with a translation in the headgroup position of the oxidized phospholipid: at zero cholesterol content, its headgroup is shifted to the outside of the DOPC headgroup region, whereas increasing cholesterol concentrations pulls the headgroup into the bilayer plane. © 2010 American Chemical Society.

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Plochberger, B., Stockner, T., Chiantia, S., Brameshuber, M., Weghuber, J., Hermetter, A., … Schütz, G. J. (2010). Cholesterol slows down the lateral mobility of an oxidized phospholipid in a supported lipid bilayer. Langmuir, 26(22), 17322–17329. https://doi.org/10.1021/la1026202

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