Enlargement of taurocholate micelles by added cholesterol and monoolein: self-diffusion measurements

The effect of solubilized cholesterol and 1-monoolein on the size of micellar aggregates of sodium taurocholate (3α,7α,12α-trihydroxy-5β-cholanoyl taurine) has been determined in vitro.Measurements of the self-diffusion coefficient of sodium taurocholate (0.15 m in Na+) at 37°C and pH 7.4 led to the...

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Main Author: F. Peter Woodford
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 1969-09-01
Series:Journal of Lipid Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520430470
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spelling doaj-ef151645758f4fbf9b88398f97c6c2b32021-04-24T05:55:12ZengElsevierJournal of Lipid Research0022-22751969-09-01105539545Enlargement of taurocholate micelles by added cholesterol and monoolein: self-diffusion measurementsF. Peter Woodford0The Rockefeller University, New York 10021The effect of solubilized cholesterol and 1-monoolein on the size of micellar aggregates of sodium taurocholate (3α,7α,12α-trihydroxy-5β-cholanoyl taurine) has been determined in vitro.Measurements of the self-diffusion coefficient of sodium taurocholate (0.15 m in Na+) at 37°C and pH 7.4 led to the conclusion that at concentrations above the critical micelle concentration (6.7 mm) the solutions contain, besides monomeric ions, a single micellar species containing five taurocholate ions. In the presence of cholesterol, much larger micelles are formed, apparently containing one molecule of cholesterol and 25 of taurocholate. These mixed micelles coexist with small micelles of pure taurocholate as well as the taurocholate monomers. The addition of 1-monoolein increases the solubility of cholesterol in the taurocholate solution, but not by reducing the size of the micelle into which the cholesterol will fit: three-component micelles (monoolein-taurocholate-cholesterol) are, if their diffusion coefficients are any guide, still larger than taurocholate-cholesterol micelles. The molar ratio of cholesterol to taurocholate is higher in these solutions than in the absence of monoolein.Comparison with work by other authors on taurodeoxycholate-cholesterol micelles suggests that more than 25 molecules of either dihydroxy or trihydroxy bile salts are needed to transport each molecule of cholesterol through an aqueous solution in the absence of other amphipathic molecules.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520430470particle weightopen-ended capillary methodmixed micellessolubilizationmicellar sizecritical micelle concentration
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author F. Peter Woodford
spellingShingle F. Peter Woodford
Enlargement of taurocholate micelles by added cholesterol and monoolein: self-diffusion measurements
Journal of Lipid Research
particle weight
open-ended capillary method
mixed micelles
solubilization
micellar size
critical micelle concentration
author_facet F. Peter Woodford
author_sort F. Peter Woodford
title Enlargement of taurocholate micelles by added cholesterol and monoolein: self-diffusion measurements
title_short Enlargement of taurocholate micelles by added cholesterol and monoolein: self-diffusion measurements
title_full Enlargement of taurocholate micelles by added cholesterol and monoolein: self-diffusion measurements
title_fullStr Enlargement of taurocholate micelles by added cholesterol and monoolein: self-diffusion measurements
title_full_unstemmed Enlargement of taurocholate micelles by added cholesterol and monoolein: self-diffusion measurements
title_sort enlargement of taurocholate micelles by added cholesterol and monoolein: self-diffusion measurements
publisher Elsevier
series Journal of Lipid Research
issn 0022-2275
publishDate 1969-09-01
description The effect of solubilized cholesterol and 1-monoolein on the size of micellar aggregates of sodium taurocholate (3α,7α,12α-trihydroxy-5β-cholanoyl taurine) has been determined in vitro.Measurements of the self-diffusion coefficient of sodium taurocholate (0.15 m in Na+) at 37°C and pH 7.4 led to the conclusion that at concentrations above the critical micelle concentration (6.7 mm) the solutions contain, besides monomeric ions, a single micellar species containing five taurocholate ions. In the presence of cholesterol, much larger micelles are formed, apparently containing one molecule of cholesterol and 25 of taurocholate. These mixed micelles coexist with small micelles of pure taurocholate as well as the taurocholate monomers. The addition of 1-monoolein increases the solubility of cholesterol in the taurocholate solution, but not by reducing the size of the micelle into which the cholesterol will fit: three-component micelles (monoolein-taurocholate-cholesterol) are, if their diffusion coefficients are any guide, still larger than taurocholate-cholesterol micelles. The molar ratio of cholesterol to taurocholate is higher in these solutions than in the absence of monoolein.Comparison with work by other authors on taurodeoxycholate-cholesterol micelles suggests that more than 25 molecules of either dihydroxy or trihydroxy bile salts are needed to transport each molecule of cholesterol through an aqueous solution in the absence of other amphipathic molecules.
topic particle weight
open-ended capillary method
mixed micelles
solubilization
micellar size
critical micelle concentration
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520430470
work_keys_str_mv AT fpeterwoodford enlargementoftaurocholatemicellesbyaddedcholesterolandmonooleinselfdiffusionmeasurements
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