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Small-scale structure in fluid cholesterol–lipid...
Journal article

Small-scale structure in fluid cholesterol–lipid bilayers

Abstract

Cholesterol is the single most abundant molecule in animal plasma membranes, in the range of 20–30mol%, where it is known to modulate the lipid-bilayer component of the membrane and lead to increased mechanical stability, lower permeability, larger thickness, and a distinct lateral organization. The phase equilibria of membranes with cholesterol and the associated large- and small-scale structure have turned out to be a particularly elusive problem. With the proposal that lipid domains and so-called ‘rafts’, characterized by high local levels of cholesterol in a liquid-ordered phase, are important for a wide range of cellular functions, an understanding and a quantitative assessment of the nature of these cholesterol-induced structures and their types of ordering have become urgent. Recent progress in neutron diffraction studies of lipid–cholesterol model membranes has now revealed details of the lateral ordering, and combined with earlier molecular model studies a picture emerges of the membrane as a locally structured liquid with small ordered ‘domains’ of a highly dynamic nature.

Authors

Rheinstädter MC; Mouritsen OG

Journal

Current Opinion in Colloid & Interface Science, Vol. 18, No. 5, pp. 440–447

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

October 1, 2013

DOI

10.1016/j.cocis.2013.07.001

ISSN

1359-0294

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