Membrane-perturbing effect of fatty acids and lysolipids

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Membrane-perturbing effect of fatty acids and lysolipids. / Arouri, Ahmad; Mouritsen, Ole G.

In: Progress in Lipid Research, Vol. 52, No. 1, 2013, p. 130-140.

Research output: Contribution to journalReviewResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Arouri, A & Mouritsen, OG 2013, 'Membrane-perturbing effect of fatty acids and lysolipids', Progress in Lipid Research, vol. 52, no. 1, pp. 130-140. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.plipres.2012.09.002

APA

Arouri, A., & Mouritsen, O. G. (2013). Membrane-perturbing effect of fatty acids and lysolipids. Progress in Lipid Research, 52(1), 130-140. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.plipres.2012.09.002

Vancouver

Arouri A, Mouritsen OG. Membrane-perturbing effect of fatty acids and lysolipids. Progress in Lipid Research. 2013;52(1):130-140. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.plipres.2012.09.002

Author

Arouri, Ahmad ; Mouritsen, Ole G. / Membrane-perturbing effect of fatty acids and lysolipids. In: Progress in Lipid Research. 2013 ; Vol. 52, No. 1. pp. 130-140.

Bibtex

@article{6951b2fec1e046dda948ed9e129f0402,
title = "Membrane-perturbing effect of fatty acids and lysolipids",
abstract = "Due to their amphipathicity fatty acids and lysolipids incorporate into lipid membranes and may hence exert an effect on membrane permeability, morphology, and stability. Several studies have shown that fatty acids and lysolipids can reduce the permeability barrier of model membranes. The origin of this phenomenon may be related to changes in the curvature stress of the membrane caused by the effective non-cylindrical geometry of fatty acids and lysolipids. Therefore, it has been proposed that the same effects may carry over to apply to the permeability barrier of cell membranes, in which case the effect could possibly be exploited to enhance intracellular drug uptake. However, fatty acids and lysolipids are in themselves cytotoxic in micromolar concentrations. Experiments with living cells have shown that fatty acids and lysolipids at concentrations below their cytotoxicity limit cannot render cell membranes more permeable by perturbing the lipid bilayer component of the membrane. We summarize the limited, though, conclusive, available literature on this topic. The picture that emerges from this discussion illustrates the importance of a lipidology-based view for the rational development of liposomal drug-delivery systems. It is also an example of possible limitations in translating knowledge from simple lipid bilayers to real biological membranes.",
keywords = "Fatty acid, Lipid membranes, Lysolipid, Membrane perturbation, Permeability-enhancing effect, Secretory phospholipase A (sPLA )",
author = "Ahmad Arouri and Mouritsen, {Ole G.}",
year = "2013",
doi = "10.1016/j.plipres.2012.09.002",
language = "English",
volume = "52",
pages = "130--140",
journal = "Progress in Lipid Research",
issn = "0163-7827",
publisher = "Pergamon Press",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Membrane-perturbing effect of fatty acids and lysolipids

AU - Arouri, Ahmad

AU - Mouritsen, Ole G.

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - Due to their amphipathicity fatty acids and lysolipids incorporate into lipid membranes and may hence exert an effect on membrane permeability, morphology, and stability. Several studies have shown that fatty acids and lysolipids can reduce the permeability barrier of model membranes. The origin of this phenomenon may be related to changes in the curvature stress of the membrane caused by the effective non-cylindrical geometry of fatty acids and lysolipids. Therefore, it has been proposed that the same effects may carry over to apply to the permeability barrier of cell membranes, in which case the effect could possibly be exploited to enhance intracellular drug uptake. However, fatty acids and lysolipids are in themselves cytotoxic in micromolar concentrations. Experiments with living cells have shown that fatty acids and lysolipids at concentrations below their cytotoxicity limit cannot render cell membranes more permeable by perturbing the lipid bilayer component of the membrane. We summarize the limited, though, conclusive, available literature on this topic. The picture that emerges from this discussion illustrates the importance of a lipidology-based view for the rational development of liposomal drug-delivery systems. It is also an example of possible limitations in translating knowledge from simple lipid bilayers to real biological membranes.

AB - Due to their amphipathicity fatty acids and lysolipids incorporate into lipid membranes and may hence exert an effect on membrane permeability, morphology, and stability. Several studies have shown that fatty acids and lysolipids can reduce the permeability barrier of model membranes. The origin of this phenomenon may be related to changes in the curvature stress of the membrane caused by the effective non-cylindrical geometry of fatty acids and lysolipids. Therefore, it has been proposed that the same effects may carry over to apply to the permeability barrier of cell membranes, in which case the effect could possibly be exploited to enhance intracellular drug uptake. However, fatty acids and lysolipids are in themselves cytotoxic in micromolar concentrations. Experiments with living cells have shown that fatty acids and lysolipids at concentrations below their cytotoxicity limit cannot render cell membranes more permeable by perturbing the lipid bilayer component of the membrane. We summarize the limited, though, conclusive, available literature on this topic. The picture that emerges from this discussion illustrates the importance of a lipidology-based view for the rational development of liposomal drug-delivery systems. It is also an example of possible limitations in translating knowledge from simple lipid bilayers to real biological membranes.

KW - Fatty acid

KW - Lipid membranes

KW - Lysolipid

KW - Membrane perturbation

KW - Permeability-enhancing effect

KW - Secretory phospholipase A (sPLA )

U2 - 10.1016/j.plipres.2012.09.002

DO - 10.1016/j.plipres.2012.09.002

M3 - Review

C2 - 23117036

AN - SCOPUS:84870213151

VL - 52

SP - 130

EP - 140

JO - Progress in Lipid Research

JF - Progress in Lipid Research

SN - 0163-7827

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 230974964