Freezing point depression of water in phospholipid membranes: a solid-state NMR study.
Lee. Dong-Kuk DK; Kwon. Byung Soo BS; Ramamoorthy. Ayyalusamy A
Key Findings
- Cholesterol further lowers the freezing point of water in POPC lipid bilayers
- Unfrozen water molecules remain mobile in the membrane even well below 0 °C
- Low‑temperature solid‑state NMR can still detect LL‑37 with better signal‑to‑noise when cholesterol is present
Practical Outcomes
- For hobbyist biohackers there’s no direct action to take; the study is about improving laboratory measurements, not dosing or efficacy of LL‑37. It may hint that cholesterol could help stabilize peptide formulations at cold temperatures, but it isn’t a usable protocol for personal use.
Summary
The paper shows that adding cholesterol to lipid membranes keeps the water inside them liquid at much lower temperatures, which helps scientists study membrane proteins like the antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 using low‑temperature NMR. This is a lab‑technique finding and doesn’t give any new advice on how to use LL‑37 for health or performance.
Abstract
Lipid-water interaction plays an important role in the properties of lipid bilayers, cryoprotectants, and membrane-associated peptides and proteins. The temperature at which water bound to lipid bilayers freezes is lower than that of free water. Here, we report a solid-state NMR investigation on the freezing point depression of water in phospholipid bilayers in the presence and absence of cholesterol. Deuterium NMR spectra at different temperatures ranging from -75 to + 10 degrees C were obtained from fully (2)H2O-hydrated POPC (1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine) multilamellar vesicles (MLVs), prepared with and without cholesterol, to determine the freezing temperature of water and the effect of cholesterol on the freezing temperature of water in POPC bilayers. Our 2H NMR experiments reveal the motional behavior of unfrozen water molecules in POPC bilayers even at temperatures significantly below 0 degrees C and show that the presence of cholesterol further lowered the freezing temperature of water in POPC bilayers. These results suggest that in the presence of cholesterol the fluidity and dynamics of lipid bilayers can be retained even at very low temperatures as exist in the liquid crystalline phase of the lipid. Therefore, bilayer samples prepared with a cryoprotectant like cholesterol should enable the performance of multidimensional solid-state NMR experiments to investigate the structure, dynamics, and topology of membrane proteins at a very low temperature with enhanced sample stability and possibly a better sensitivity. Phosphorus-31 NMR data suggest that lipid bilayers can be aligned at low temperatures, while 15N NMR experiments demonstrate that such aligned samples can be used to enhance the signal-to-noise ratio of is 15N chemical shift spectra of a 37-residue human antimicrobial peptide, LL-37.
Study Information
pubmed
2008
2008-12-02T00:00:00.000Z
10.1021/la8023698
30
11