The synthesis and properties of new fluorescent analogs of glycosphingolipids (galactosylcerebrosides, gangliosides GMI, GM3, GDI a and GD3 bearing a 9-anthrylvinyl or 3-perylenoyl residue in the awl chain are described. The synthesis includes steps: (i) hydrolytic removal of the fatty acyl from the
Orientation and rotational freedom of fluorescent probes in lecithin bilayers
β Scribed by E. Carbone; F. Malerba; M. Poli
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1976
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 960 KB
- Volume
- 2
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1432-1017
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β¦ Synopsis
The fluorescence polarization properties of lecithin bilayers stained with 2,6-MANS and 1,8 ANS under applied potential steps have been studied. The fluorescence signal components of both dyes were found to have different sign and relative amplitude, suggesting that 1,8-ANS and 2,6-MANS behave differently when bound to black lipid membranes. In order to determine the location and the extent of rotational brownian motions of the bound chromophores, the experimental data were analyzed by using a simplified physico-mathematical model. According to it 2,6-MANS appears to have a ratio rho/tau higher than 1.8-ANS (rho being the rotational relaxation of in plane rotations and tau the lifetime of the excited singlet state of the bound molecules), suggesting that the former chromophore is more tightly held inside the bilayers. Furthermore, 2,6-MANS is found to possess the absorption and emission oscillators more closely oriented to the normal of membrane surface, while 1,8-ANS has both oscillators almost near the plane of the bilayers. The results furnish also a fair estimate of the random molecular motion own by the phospholipid molecules at room temperature. The comparison of the present data with those obtained from squid axon membranes confirms the validity of the proposed physical model, yielding a rough estimate of the axon membrane-area covered by integral protein macromolecules. These preliminary results derived from lecithin model membranes suggest that fluorescence polarization techniques can provide valuable informations if applied to study the macromolecular organization of in vitro reconstituted membranes.
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