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ECB-ART-51983
Colloids Surf B Biointerfaces 2023 Feb 01;222:113045. doi: 10.1016/j.colsurfb.2022.113045.
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Unsaturation pattern of phosphatidylglycerols modulating the interaction of lysicamine with cells membrane models at the air-water interface.

Machado AC , Cipriano da Silva TR , Raminelli C , Caseli L .


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Lysicamine, an alkaloid with tumorigenic activity, was incorporated in cell membrane models made of lipid Langmuir monolayers. Dipalmitoylphosphocholine (DPPC), dioleoylphosphocholine (DOPC), and palmitoyloleoylcholine (POPC) represented non-tumorigenic cell membranes, and dipalmitoylphosphoserine (DPPS), dioleoylphosphoserine (DOPS), and palmitoyloleoylserine (POPS), tumorigenic ones. The monolayers were characterized by tensiometry, infrared spectroscopy, and Brewster Angle Microscopy (BAM). No significant shifts of the isotherms were observed for the saturated lipids (DPPC and DPPS), while for the others (DOPC, POPS, DOPS, and POPS), more significant changes were observed not only in the compression isotherms but also in the surface pressure-time curve for pre-compressed monolayers. The molecular organization, as well as the morphology of the drug-lipid monolayers, could be inferred with infrared spectroscopy and BAM. While the first revealed that the alkyl chain ordering changed upon lysicamine incorporation, the second showed how the drug could distinctly change the state of aggregation of molecular domains at the air-water interface. In conclusion, lysicamine could interact distinctly with each lipid at the air-water interface, showing the dependence not only on the lipid polar groups but also on the level of unsaturation of the alkyl chains.

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