Langmuir, Vol.32, No.48, 12579-12592, 2016
Imidazolium-Based Lipid Analogues and Their Interaction with Phosphatidylcholine Membranes
4,5-Dialkylated imidazolium lipid salts are a new class of lipid analogues showing distinct biological activities. The potential effects of the imidazolium lipids on artificial lipid membranes and the corresponding membrane interactions was analyzed. Therefore, 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC) was employed to create an established lipid monolayer model and a bilayer membrane. Mixed monolayers of DPPC and 4,5-dialkylimidazolium lipids differing by their alkyl chain length (C-7, C-11, and C-15) were characterized by surface pressure area (pi-A) isotherms using a Wilhelmy film balance in combination with epifluorescence microscopy. Monolayer hysteresis for binary mixtures was examined by recording triplicate consecutive compression expansion cycles. The lipid miscibility and membrane stability of DPPC/imidazolium lipids were subsequently evaluated by the excess mean molecular area (Delta A(ex)) and the excess Gibbs free energy (Delta G(ex)) of mixing. Furthermore, the thermotropic behavior of mixed liposomes of DPPC/imidazolium lipids was investigated by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). The C-15-imidazolium lipid (C-15-IMe.HI) forms a thermodynamically favored and kinetically reversible Langmuir monolayer with DPPC and exhibits a rigidification effect on both DPPC monolayer and bilayer structures at low molar fractions (X <= 0.3). However, the incorporation of the C-11-imidazolium lipid (C-11-IMe.HI) causes the formation of an unstable and irreversible Langmuir-Gibbs monolayer with DPPC and disordered DPPC liposomes. The C-7-imidazolium lipid (C-7-IMe.HI) displays negligible membrane activity. To better understand these results on a molecular level, all-atom molecular dynamics (MD) simulations were performed. The simulations yield two opposing molecular mechanisms governing the different behavior of the three imidazolium lipids: a lateral ordering effect and a free volume/stretching effect. Overall, our study provides the first evidence that the membrane interaction of the C-15 and C-11 derivatives modulates the structural organization of lipid membranes. On the contrary, for the C-7 derivative its membrane activity is too low to contribute to its earlier reported potent cytotoxicity.