Publication: Replacing the cholesterol hydroxyl group by the ketone group facilitates sterol flip-flop and promotes membrane fluidity
All || By Area || By YearTitle | Replacing the cholesterol hydroxyl group by the ketone group facilitates sterol flip-flop and promotes membrane fluidity | Authors/Editors* | Tomasz Róg, Lorna M. Stimson, Marta Pasekiewicz-Gierula, Ilpo Vattulainen, Mikko Karttunen |
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Where published* | J. Phys. Chem. B |
How published* | Journal |
Year* | 2008 |
Volume | 112 |
Number | |
Pages | 1946-1952 |
Publisher | |
Keywords | membranes, flip-flop, molecular dynamics, cholesterol, ketosterone, modeling |
Link | http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp075078h |
Abstract |
The 3α-hydroxyl group is a characteristic structural element of all membrane sterol molecules, while the 3-ketone group is more typically found in steroid hormones. In this work, we investigate the effect of substituting the hydroxyl group in cholesterol by the ketone group to produce ketosterone. Extensive atomistic molecular dynamics simulations of saturated lipid membranes with either cholesterol or ketosterone show that, like cholesterol, ketosterone increases membrane order and induces condensation. However, the effect of ketosterone on membrane properties is considerably weaker than that of cholesterol. This is largely due to the unstable positioning of ketosterone at the membrane-water interface, which gives rise to a small but significant number of flip-flop transitions, where ketosterone is exchanged between membrane leaflets. This is remarkable, as flip-flop motions of sterol molecules have not been previously reported in analogous lipid bilayer simulations. In the same context, ketosterone is found to be more tilted with respect to the membrane normal than cholesterol. The atomic level mechanism responsible for the increase of the steroid tilt and the promotion of flip-flops is the decrease in polar interactions at the membrane-water interface. Interactions between lipids or water and the ketone group are found to be weaker than in the case of the hydroxyl group, which allows ketosterone to penetrate through the hydrocarbon region of a membrane. |
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