Supramolecular structure of lipopolysaccharide and free lipid A under physiological conditions as determined by synchrotron small‐angle X‐ray diffraction
- 1 December 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in European Journal of Biochemistry
- Vol. 186 (1-2) , 325-332
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1432-1033.1989.tb15212.x
Abstract
Lipopolysaccharides, the major amphiphilic components of the outer leaflet of the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria, may assume various three-dimensional supramolecular structures depending on molecular properties (e.g. chemical structure) and on ambient conditions (e.g. temperature, concentration of divalent cations). We applied synchrotron small-angle X-ray diffraction to investigate the supramolecular structures of natural and synthetic Escherichia-coli-type lipid A, of lipid A from Salmonella minnesota, and of rough mutant lipopolysaccharides of E. coli and S. minnesota under physiological water content (> 90%) at different temperatures (20, 37, and 55.degree.C) and at different lipid/divalent cation molar ratios (20:1 to 1:1). We found that in the absence of divalent cations rough mutant lipopolysaccharide and free lipid A form unilamellar structures with the main reflections centered around 4.50 nm for free lipid A, 4.80 nm for Re lipopolysaccharide, and 5.90 nm for Rd1 lipopolysaccharide at 20.degree.C, i.e. below the .beta. .tautm. .alpha. acyl-chain-melting transition temperature. Above this temperature, the reflections are shifted to 4.30 nm for free lipid A (at 55.degree.C), 4.60 nm for Re lipopolysaccharide (at 37.degree.C), and to 5.50 nm for Rd1 lipopolysaccharide (at 37.degree.C). The addition of divalent cations leads (at lower concentrations, i.e. lipid/cation molar ratios 20:1 to 5:1) to sharper reflections expressing a higher state of order and to a shift of the center of the main reflections lying now at 5.10 nm for free lipid A, 6.40 nm for Re and 7.20 nm for Rd1 lipopolysaccharide at 20.degree.C. At higher concentrations of divalent cations (e.g. lipid/cation molar ratio 1:1), an increasing tendency to form nonlamellar, inverted cubic structures is observed which is indicated by the occurrence of another main periodicity and/or of reflections with spacing ratios 1:.sqroot.2, 1: .sqroot.3 of the main periodicity. The tendency to assume inverted cubic structures is only weakly pronounced for rough mutant lipopolysaccharides but dominant for free lipid A even at physiological temperature and divalent cation concentration.This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
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