Effect of fatty acids on the permeability barrier of model and biological membranes

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Effect of fatty acids on the permeability barrier of model and biological membranes. / Arouri, Ahmad; Lauritsen, Kira E.; Nielsen, Henriette L.; Mouritsen, Ole G.

In: Chemistry and Physics of Lipids, Vol. 200, 2016, p. 139-146.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Arouri, A, Lauritsen, KE, Nielsen, HL & Mouritsen, OG 2016, 'Effect of fatty acids on the permeability barrier of model and biological membranes', Chemistry and Physics of Lipids, vol. 200, pp. 139-146. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemphyslip.2016.10.001

APA

Arouri, A., Lauritsen, K. E., Nielsen, H. L., & Mouritsen, O. G. (2016). Effect of fatty acids on the permeability barrier of model and biological membranes. Chemistry and Physics of Lipids, 200, 139-146. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemphyslip.2016.10.001

Vancouver

Arouri A, Lauritsen KE, Nielsen HL, Mouritsen OG. Effect of fatty acids on the permeability barrier of model and biological membranes. Chemistry and Physics of Lipids. 2016;200:139-146. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemphyslip.2016.10.001

Author

Arouri, Ahmad ; Lauritsen, Kira E. ; Nielsen, Henriette L. ; Mouritsen, Ole G. / Effect of fatty acids on the permeability barrier of model and biological membranes. In: Chemistry and Physics of Lipids. 2016 ; Vol. 200. pp. 139-146.

Bibtex

@article{4b609c81985842838110116612090fb3,
title = "Effect of fatty acids on the permeability barrier of model and biological membranes",
abstract = "Because of the amphipathicity and conical molecular shape of fatty acids, they can efficiently incorporate into lipid membranes and disturb membrane integrity, chain packing, and lateral pressure profile. These phenomena affect both model membranes as well as biological membranes. We investigated the feasibility of exploiting fatty acids as permeability enhancers in drug delivery systems for enhancing drug release from liposomal carriers and drug uptake by target cells. Saturated fatty acids, with acyl chain length from C8 to C20, were tested using model drug delivery liposomes of 1,2- dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC) and the breast cancer MCF-7 cell line as a model cell. A calcein release assay demonstrated reduction in the membrane permeability barrier of the DPPC liposomes, proportionally to the length of the fatty acid. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and dynamic light scattering (DLS) experiments revealed that C12 to C20 fatty acids can stabilize DPPC liposomal bilayers and induce the formation of large structures, probably due to liposome aggregation and bilayer morphological changes. On the other hand, the short fatty acids C8 and C10 tend to destabilize the bilayers and only moderately cause the formation of large structures. The effect of fatty acids on DPPC liposomes was not completely transferrable to the MCF-7 cell line. Using cytotoxicity assays, the cells were found to be relatively insensitive to the fatty acids at apoptotic sub-millimolar concentrations. Increasing the fatty acid concentration to few millimolar substantially reduced the viability of the cells, most likely via the induction of necrosis and cell lysis. A bioluminescence living-cell-based luciferase assay showed that saturated fatty acids in sub-cytotoxic concentrations cannot reduce the permeability barrier of cell membranes. Our results confirm that the membrane perturbing effect of fatty acids on model membranes cannot simply be carried over to biological membranes of live cells.",
keywords = "Cytotoxicity, Drug delivery, Dye release, Fatty acid, Liposome, Membrane perturbation, Permeability enhancing effect",
author = "Ahmad Arouri and Lauritsen, {Kira E.} and Nielsen, {Henriette L.} and Mouritsen, {Ole G.}",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.1016/j.chemphyslip.2016.10.001",
language = "English",
volume = "200",
pages = "139--146",
journal = "Chemistry and Physics of Lipids",
issn = "0009-3084",
publisher = "Elsevier Ireland Ltd",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Effect of fatty acids on the permeability barrier of model and biological membranes

AU - Arouri, Ahmad

AU - Lauritsen, Kira E.

AU - Nielsen, Henriette L.

AU - Mouritsen, Ole G.

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - Because of the amphipathicity and conical molecular shape of fatty acids, they can efficiently incorporate into lipid membranes and disturb membrane integrity, chain packing, and lateral pressure profile. These phenomena affect both model membranes as well as biological membranes. We investigated the feasibility of exploiting fatty acids as permeability enhancers in drug delivery systems for enhancing drug release from liposomal carriers and drug uptake by target cells. Saturated fatty acids, with acyl chain length from C8 to C20, were tested using model drug delivery liposomes of 1,2- dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC) and the breast cancer MCF-7 cell line as a model cell. A calcein release assay demonstrated reduction in the membrane permeability barrier of the DPPC liposomes, proportionally to the length of the fatty acid. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and dynamic light scattering (DLS) experiments revealed that C12 to C20 fatty acids can stabilize DPPC liposomal bilayers and induce the formation of large structures, probably due to liposome aggregation and bilayer morphological changes. On the other hand, the short fatty acids C8 and C10 tend to destabilize the bilayers and only moderately cause the formation of large structures. The effect of fatty acids on DPPC liposomes was not completely transferrable to the MCF-7 cell line. Using cytotoxicity assays, the cells were found to be relatively insensitive to the fatty acids at apoptotic sub-millimolar concentrations. Increasing the fatty acid concentration to few millimolar substantially reduced the viability of the cells, most likely via the induction of necrosis and cell lysis. A bioluminescence living-cell-based luciferase assay showed that saturated fatty acids in sub-cytotoxic concentrations cannot reduce the permeability barrier of cell membranes. Our results confirm that the membrane perturbing effect of fatty acids on model membranes cannot simply be carried over to biological membranes of live cells.

AB - Because of the amphipathicity and conical molecular shape of fatty acids, they can efficiently incorporate into lipid membranes and disturb membrane integrity, chain packing, and lateral pressure profile. These phenomena affect both model membranes as well as biological membranes. We investigated the feasibility of exploiting fatty acids as permeability enhancers in drug delivery systems for enhancing drug release from liposomal carriers and drug uptake by target cells. Saturated fatty acids, with acyl chain length from C8 to C20, were tested using model drug delivery liposomes of 1,2- dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC) and the breast cancer MCF-7 cell line as a model cell. A calcein release assay demonstrated reduction in the membrane permeability barrier of the DPPC liposomes, proportionally to the length of the fatty acid. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and dynamic light scattering (DLS) experiments revealed that C12 to C20 fatty acids can stabilize DPPC liposomal bilayers and induce the formation of large structures, probably due to liposome aggregation and bilayer morphological changes. On the other hand, the short fatty acids C8 and C10 tend to destabilize the bilayers and only moderately cause the formation of large structures. The effect of fatty acids on DPPC liposomes was not completely transferrable to the MCF-7 cell line. Using cytotoxicity assays, the cells were found to be relatively insensitive to the fatty acids at apoptotic sub-millimolar concentrations. Increasing the fatty acid concentration to few millimolar substantially reduced the viability of the cells, most likely via the induction of necrosis and cell lysis. A bioluminescence living-cell-based luciferase assay showed that saturated fatty acids in sub-cytotoxic concentrations cannot reduce the permeability barrier of cell membranes. Our results confirm that the membrane perturbing effect of fatty acids on model membranes cannot simply be carried over to biological membranes of live cells.

KW - Cytotoxicity

KW - Drug delivery

KW - Dye release

KW - Fatty acid

KW - Liposome

KW - Membrane perturbation

KW - Permeability enhancing effect

U2 - 10.1016/j.chemphyslip.2016.10.001

DO - 10.1016/j.chemphyslip.2016.10.001

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 27725161

AN - SCOPUS:84992187603

VL - 200

SP - 139

EP - 146

JO - Chemistry and Physics of Lipids

JF - Chemistry and Physics of Lipids

SN - 0009-3084

ER -

ID: 230973901