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Photopolymerized phospholipid vesicles Stability and retention of hydrophilic and hydrophobic marker substances

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Abstract

Multilamellar vesicles were formed from photopolymerizable analogs of phosphatidylcholine. The polymerized vesicles differed markedly from conventional vesicles in terms of their stability to mechanical and chemical perturbations. Thus, polymerized vesicles, but not conventional ones, retained their overall physical integrity subsequent to ultrasonication or to exposure to organic solvents or detergents. Treatment of photopolymerized vesicles with detergents such as sodium dodecyl sulfate caused the release of entrapped hydrophilic solutes; however, lipophilic solutes were retained by the polymerized vesicles under circumstances in which conventional vesicles were completely solubilized. Thus, photopolymerized phospholipid membranes represent hybrid entities which seem to blend some of the characteristics of conventional lipid bilayers with properties more typical of polymer membranes.

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