Small-Angle Scattering and Electron Microscopy Investigation of Nanotubules Made from a Perfluoroalkylated Glucophospholipid

1999 
Abstract Anionic glucophospholipids were recently reported as a new family of tubule-forming lipids. We report here investigations on the structure of nanotubules made from a glucophospholipid with a mixed fluorocarbon–hydrocarbon hydrophobe, using freeze fracture and cryo-transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and X-ray and neutron small angle scattering (SAXS, SANS). The hollow and regularly shaped tubules are very thin: they have an external radius of 140 A and an internal radius of 35 A on the average. Their 105 A-thick wall appears to consist in three bilayers in which the glucophospholipid molecules are probably in a tilted and/or interdigitated configuration. Upon heating these nanotubes convert reversibly into vesicles; transformation is complete at 60°C.
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