Phloretin and its analogs adsorb to the surfaces of lipid monolayers and bilayers and decrease the dipole potential. This reduces the conductance for anions and increases that for cations on artificial and biological membranes. The relationship between the change in the dipole potential and the aqueous concentration of phloretin has been explained previously by a Langmuir adsorption isotherm and a weak and therefore negligible contribution of the dipole-dipole interactions in the lipid surface. We demonstrate here that the Langmuir adsorption isotherm alone is not able to properly describe the effects of dipole molecule binding to lipid surfaces--we found significant deviations between experimental data and the fit with the Langmuir adsorption isotherm. We present here an alternative theoretical treatment that takes into account the strong interaction between membrane (monolayer) dipole field and the dipole moment of the adsorbed molecule. This treatment provides a much better fit of the experimental results derived from the measurements of surface potentials of lipid monolayers in the presence of phloretin. Similarly, the theory provides a much better fit of the phloretin-induced changes in the dipole potential of lipid bilayers, as assessed by the transport kinetics of the lipophilic ion dipicrylamine.
Pubmed ID: 9512036 RIS Download
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