» Articles » PMID: 6743649

The Use of Fluorescein-dipalmitoylphosphatidylethanolamine for Measuring PH-changes in the Internal Compartment of Phospholipid Vesicles

Overview
Specialties Biochemistry
Biophysics
Date 1984 Jul 27
PMID 6743649
Citations 6
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The synthesis and characterisation of fluorescein-phosphatidylethanolamine (FPE) is described. The effects of dielectric constant, ionic strength and ambient pH upon the optical absorbance properties of FPE are presented. It is shown that under appropriate conditions, FPE rapidly and quantitatively reports the pH of the aqueous bulk phases when incorporated into phospholipid vesicles. It is also shown that, when the external medium is highly buffered, FPE is capable of specificity reporting only the pH of the intravesicular compartment. The application of FPE for studies of intravesicular pH changes of reconstituted membranous protein systems is discussed.

Citing Articles

Spin-labeled pH-sensitive phospholipids for interfacial pKa determination: synthesis and characterization in aqueous and micellar solutions.

Voinov M, Kirilyuk I, Smirnov A J Phys Chem B. 2009; 113(11):3453-60.

PMID: 19235992 PMC: 3740190. DOI: 10.1021/jp810993s.


Tuning the pK(a) of fluorescein to optimize binding assays.

Lavis L, Rutkoski T, Raines R Anal Chem. 2007; 79(17):6775-82.

PMID: 17672523 PMC: 2868592. DOI: 10.1021/ac070907g.


Physical fields and cellular organisation: field-dependent mechanisms of morphogenesis.

OShea P Experientia. 1988; 44(8):684-94.

PMID: 3044816 DOI: 10.1007/BF01941030.


Morphology of proteoliposomes containing fluorescein-phosphatidylethanolamine reconstituted with native and subunit III-depleted cytochrome c oxidase.

Muller M, Azzi A J Bioenerg Biomembr. 1985; 17(6):385-93.

PMID: 3007450 DOI: 10.1007/BF00743111.


Effects of detergents and cytochrome c binding on scalar and vectorial proton ejection by proteoliposomes containing cytochrome oxidase.

Nicholls P, Shaughnessy S Biochem J. 1985; 228(1):201-10.

PMID: 2988514 PMC: 1144970. DOI: 10.1042/bj2280201.