Volume 249, 2024

Biological lipid hydration: distinct mechanisms of interfacial water alignment and charge screening for model lipid membranes

Abstract

Studying lipid monolayers as model biological membranes, we demonstrate that water molecules interfacing with different model membranes can display preferential orientation for two distinct reasons: due to charges on the membrane, and due to large dipole fields resulting from zwitterionic headgroups. This preferential water orientation caused by the charge or the dipolar field can be effectively neutralized to net-zero water orientation by introducing monolayer counter-charges (i.e. lipids with oppositely charged headgroups). Following the Gouy–Chapman model, the effect of monolayer surface charge on water orientation is furthermore strongly dependent on the electrolyte concentration and thus on the counterions in solution. In contrast, the effect of ions in the subphase on the dipolar alignment of water is zero. As a result, the capability of monolayer counter-charges to null the effect of dipolar orientation is strongly electrolyte-dependent. Notably, the different effects are additive for mixed charged/zwitterionic lipid systems occurring in nature. Specifically, for an E. coli lipid membrane extract consisting of both zwitterionic and negatively charged lipids, the water orientation can be explained by the sum of the constituents. Our results can be quantitatively reproduced using Gouy–Chapman theory, revealing the relatively straightforward electrostatic effects on the hydration of complex membrane interfaces.

Graphical abstract: Biological lipid hydration: distinct mechanisms of interfacial water alignment and charge screening for model lipid membranes

Associated articles

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
10 มิ.ย. 2566
Accepted
06 ก.ค. 2566
First published
07 ก.ค. 2566
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Faraday Discuss., 2024,249, 317-333

Biological lipid hydration: distinct mechanisms of interfacial water alignment and charge screening for model lipid membranes

C. Saak, L. B. Dreier, K. Machel, M. Bonn and E. H. G. Backus, Faraday Discuss., 2024, 249, 317 DOI: 10.1039/D3FD00117B

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