TY - JOUR
T1 - Order and fluidity in the terminal methyl region of dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine multibilayers
T2 - A comparison of raman and 2H-NMR spectroscopy
AU - Mendelsohn, R.
AU - Dluhy, R.
AU - Curatolo, W.
AU - Sears, B.
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported through grants to R.M. from the National Science Foundation (USA), (grant No. PCM-7907524) and from the Busch Memorial Fund of Rutgers University. W. Curatolo is a Fellow of the Muscular Dystrophy Association. The NMR Facility at the F.W. Bitter Magnet Laboratory is supported by the Division of Research Resources of the N.I.H. (Grant No. RR-00995) and by the National Science Foundation.
PY - 1982/6
Y1 - 1982/6
N2 - Deuterium magnetic resonance (2H-NMR) and Raman spectroscopy are used to investigate order and fluidity at the terminal methyl position in 16-d3, 16′-d3 dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (16-d6 DPPC) multibilayers. These methods reveal substantial motion and disorder in the gel phase, 5-10°C below the gel-liquid crystal phase transition temperature (Tm). The phase transition is sensed in the 2H-NMR spectrum as a reduction in the quadrupole splitting from 14 kHz to ∼3 kHz. In contrast, the Raman parameter used to characterize the CD3 vibrations is quite insensitive to the melting process, although an analogous parameter does sense disordering at Tm at the 10 and 10′ position in 10-d2, 10′-d2 DPPC. The difference in the response of the NMR and Raman parameters may arise because the vibrational spectrum of the CD3 group is inhomogenously broadened and is therefore quite sensitive to alterations in the local environment around the methyl group. In contrast, the NMR quadrupole splitting is sensitive to both local motion of the methyl group and, near Tm, to motions of the CD2 group induced by transgauche isomerizations further up the chain. The difficulties that arise when results from different spectroscopic techniques are compared are demonstrated.
AB - Deuterium magnetic resonance (2H-NMR) and Raman spectroscopy are used to investigate order and fluidity at the terminal methyl position in 16-d3, 16′-d3 dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (16-d6 DPPC) multibilayers. These methods reveal substantial motion and disorder in the gel phase, 5-10°C below the gel-liquid crystal phase transition temperature (Tm). The phase transition is sensed in the 2H-NMR spectrum as a reduction in the quadrupole splitting from 14 kHz to ∼3 kHz. In contrast, the Raman parameter used to characterize the CD3 vibrations is quite insensitive to the melting process, although an analogous parameter does sense disordering at Tm at the 10 and 10′ position in 10-d2, 10′-d2 DPPC. The difference in the response of the NMR and Raman parameters may arise because the vibrational spectrum of the CD3 group is inhomogenously broadened and is therefore quite sensitive to alterations in the local environment around the methyl group. In contrast, the NMR quadrupole splitting is sensitive to both local motion of the methyl group and, near Tm, to motions of the CD2 group induced by transgauche isomerizations further up the chain. The difficulties that arise when results from different spectroscopic techniques are compared are demonstrated.
KW - nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy
KW - phospholipid phase behavior
KW - vibrational spectroscopy
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U2 - 10.1016/0009-3084(82)90023-8
DO - 10.1016/0009-3084(82)90023-8
M3 - Article
C2 - 6896846
AN - SCOPUS:0020150196
SN - 0009-3084
VL - 30
SP - 287
EP - 295
JO - Chemistry and Physics of Lipids
JF - Chemistry and Physics of Lipids
IS - 4
ER -