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Nanosecond Lipid Dynamics in Membranes Containing Cholesterol...

by Clare Armstrong, Wolfgang Haeussler, Tilo Seydel, John Katsaras, Maikel Rheinstadter
Publication Type
Journal
Journal Name
Soft Matter
Publication Date
Page Numbers
2600 to 2611
Volume
10
Issue
15

Lipid dynamics in the cholesterol-rich (40 mol%) liquid-ordered (lo) phase of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine membranes were studied using neutron spin-echo and neutron backscattering. Recent theoretical and experimental evidence supports the notion of the liquid-ordered phase in phospholipid membranes as a locally structured liquid, with small ordered ‘domains’ of a highly dynamic nature in equilibrium with a disordered matrix [S. Meinhardt, R. L. C. Vink and F. Schmid, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A., 2013, 110(12), 4476–4481, C. L. Armstrong et al., PLoS One, 2013, 8(6), e66162]. This local structure was found to have a pronounced impact on the membranes' dynamical properties. We found that the long-wavelength
dynamics in the liquid-ordered phase, associated with the elastic properties of the membranes, were faster by two orders of magnitude as compared to the liquid disordered phase. At the same time, collective nanoscale diffusion was significantly slower. The presence of a soft-mode (a slowing down) in the longwavelength dispersion relationship suggests an upper size limit for the ordered lipid domain of ~220 °A. Moreover, from the relaxation rate of the collective lipid diffusion of lipid–lipid distances, the lifetime of these domains was estimated to be about 100 nanoseconds.