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Solubility of cholesterol in lipid membranes and...
Journal article

Solubility of cholesterol in lipid membranes and the formation of immiscible cholesterol plaques at high cholesterol concentrations

Abstract

The molecular in-plane and out-of-plane structure of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) membranes containing up to 60 mol% of cholesterol was studied using X-ray diffraction. Up to 37.5 mol% cholesterol could be dissolved in the membranes, resulting in a disordered lateral membrane structure. Highly ordered cholesterol structures were observed at cholesterol concentrations of more than 40 mol% cholesterol. These structures were characterized as immiscible cholesterol plaques, i.e., bilayers of cholesterol molecules coexisting with the lipid bilayer. The cholesterol molecules were found to form a monoclinic structure at 40 mol% cholesterol, which transformed into a triclinic arrangement at the highest concentration of 60 mol%. Monoclinic and triclinic structures were found to coexist at cholesterol concentrations between 50 and 55 mol%.

Authors

Barrett MA; Zheng S; Toppozini LA; Alsop RJ; Dies H; Wang A; Jago N; Moore M; Rheinstädter MC

Journal

Soft Matter, Vol. 9, No. 39, pp. 9342–9351

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)

Publication Date

October 21, 2013

DOI

10.1039/c3sm50700a

ISSN

1744-683X

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