Thermal behavior of synthetic sphingomyelin-cholesterol dispersions - PubMed (original) (raw)

Thermal behavior of synthetic sphingomyelin-cholesterol dispersions

T N Estep et al. Biochemistry. 1979.

Abstract

The thermotropic behavior of aqueous dispersions of palmitoylsphingomyelin-cholesterol and lignoceryl-sphingomyelin-cholesterol mixtures has been examined by high-sensitivity differential scanning calorimetry. When less than 25 mol % cholesterol is mixed with either sphingomyelin, the calorimetric endotherm is composed of a sharp and a broad component. The sharp-component enthalpy change decreases as the mole percent cholesterol increases with the extrapolated zero enthalpy point being 25 to 30 mol %. With palmitoylsphingomyelin, the temperature of maximum heat capacity of the sharp component decreases monotonically with increasing cholesterol content, while the lignocerylsphingomyelin sharp-component maximum remains constant until more than 20 mol % sterol is present. The broad-component enthalpy change maximizes at 3--4 kcal/mol between 10 and 20 mol % cholesterol and decreases as the ratio of cholesterol is increased or decreased from this range for both sphingomyelins. The results are compared with those from a previous study on dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine-cholesterol mixtures and are interpreted as evidence for the coexistence of cholesterol-rich and cholesterol-poor phases.

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