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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Electrostatic Contribution to the Surface Pressure of Charged Monolayers Containing Polyphosphoinositides

Paul A. JanmeyAndrejs CēbersIlya Levental

subject

Steric effectsModels MolecularMembrane FluiditySurface PropertiesLipid BilayersStatic ElectricityBiophysics010402 general chemistryBjerrum length01 natural sciences03 medical and health sciencesPhosphatidylinositol PhosphatesMonolayerMembrane fluidityPressureComputer SimulationLipid bilayer030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesChromatographyMembranesHydrogen bondChemistryBiological membrane0104 chemical sciencesModels ChemicalChemical physicsIonic strength

description

Structural and functional studies of lateral heterogeneity in biological membranes have underlined the importance of membrane organization in biological function. Most inquiries have focused on steric determinants of membrane organization, such as headgroup size and acyl-chain saturation. This manuscript reports a combination of theory and experiment that shows significant electrostatic contributions to surface pressures in monolayers of phospholipids where the charge spacing is smaller than the Bjerrum length. For molecules with steric cross sections typical of phospholipids in the cell membrane (approximately 50 A(2)), only polyphosphoinositides achieve this threshold. The most abundant such lipid is phosphatidylinositol bisphosphate, which has between three and four charged groups at physiological conditions. Theory and experiment show that surface pressure increases linearly with phosphatidylinositol bisphosphate net charge and reveal crossing of high and low ionic strength pressure-area isotherms, due to opposing effects of ionic strength in compressed and expanded monolayers. Theory and experiment show that electrostatic effects are negligible for monolayers of univalent lipids, emphasizing the unique importance of electrostatic effects for lateral organization of polyphosphoinositides. Quantitative differences between theory and experiment suggest that attractive interactions between polyphosphoinositides, possibly mediated by hydrogen bonding, can lessen the effect of electrostatic repulsions.

10.1529/biophysj.107.126615https://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2479586/