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Determination of the Rate-Limiting Step in Fatty Acid Transport.

Victoria ChengDylan R KimballDr John C Conboy
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry. B (2019)
The generally accepted model of free fatty acid (FA) transport through cellular membranes occurs in three steps, adsorption of the FA onto the membrane, translocation across the membrane ("flip-flop"), and subsequent desorption of the FA into the cytosol. There still exists some dispute as to the identity of the rate-limiting step of FA transport. In the present study, sum-frequency vibrational spectroscopy (SFVS) was used to directly measure the rate of stearic acid (SA) flip-flop in planar supported lipid bilayers (PSLBs) comprised of 1,2-distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DSPC). The impact of SA on the physical properties of binary mixtures of SA and DSPC was investigated via Π-A isotherms from which the excess free energies of mixing and compression moduli were calculated. The manner in which these physical changes influenced the rates of SA and DSPC flip-flop was subsequently examined using SFVS. The rates of SA and DSPC flip-flop revealed that SA flip-flops independently of DSPC and on much faster time scales than its phospholipid counterpart. SFVS was also used to probe the rate of protein-unassisted SA desorption from hybrid supported lipid bilayers (HSLBs), allowing for the first decoupled measurement of the rates of desorption and flip-flop. These results provide strong evidence for desorption being the rate-limiting step in FA transport through the membrane in the absence of proteins.
Keyphrases
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