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Modulation of Membrane Fluidity Performed on Model Phospholipid Membrane and Live Cell Membrane: Revealing through Spatiotemporal Approaches of FLIM, FAIM, and TRFS.

Dipankar MondalRupam DuttaPavel BanerjeeDevdeep MukherjeeTapas Kumar MaitiNilmoni Sarkar
Published in: Analytical chemistry (2019)
We have elucidated the role of unsaturated fatty acid in the in vitro model phospholipid membrane and in vivo live cell membrane. Fluorescence microscopy and time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy have been employed to uncover how modulation of vesicle bilayer fluidity persuades structural transformation. This unsaturation induced structural transformation due to packing disorder in bilayer has been delineated through spatially resolved fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) and fluorescence polarization or anisotropy imaging microscopy (FPIM/FAIM). Structure-function relationship of phospholipid vesicle is also investigated by monitoring intervesicular water dynamics behavior, which has been demonstrated by temporally resolved fluorescence spectroscopy (TRFS) techniques. Nevertheless, it has also been manifested from this study that loss of rigidity in bilayer breaks down the strong hydrogen bond (H-bond) network around the charged lipid head groups. The disruption of this H-bond network increases the bilayer elasticity, which helps to evolve various kinds of vesicular structure. Furthermore, the significant influence of unsaturated fatty acid on membrane bilayer has been ratified through in vivo live cell imaging.
Keyphrases
  • single molecule
  • fatty acid
  • high resolution
  • atomic force microscopy
  • energy transfer
  • high speed
  • high throughput
  • photodynamic therapy
  • high glucose
  • diabetic rats
  • optic nerve