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Trifluoperazine Causes a Disturbance in Glycerophospholipid Monolayers Containing Phosphatidylserine (PS): Effects of pH, Acyl Unsaturation, and Proportion of PS

Year: 2007

Journal: Langmuir, 2007, 23 (2), pp 694–699, 20111221

Authors: Agnieszka Broniec, Anja Underhaug Gjerde, Anne Berit Ølmheim, and Holm Holmsen

Organizations: Department for Biomedicine, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway

We have studied the interaction of trifluoperazine (TFP) with monolayers of various glycerophospholipids at 37 °C. TFP (1−10 μM) had little effect on surface pressure/molecular area isotherms in monolayers (on pure water) of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and dipalmitoylphosphatidylethanolamine but greatly increased the mean molecular area (mma) of dipalmitoylphosphatidylserine; the increment was greatest between 0 and 1 μM, and a further increase to 10 μM TFP gave only a slight increase in mma. With phosphatidylserine (PS)-containing stearoyl and varying acyls in the sn-1 and -2 positions, respectively, TFP increased the mma in a manner that depended on the number of double bonds and chain length. In mixtures of DPPC with two of these PS species the TFP-induced mma of the monolayers (on buffer, pH 7.4) increased linearly with the proportion of PS. Both PS and TFP have ionizable groups, and the TFP-induced mma increase had optima at pH 5.0 and 7.0. We conclude that the TFP−PS interaction is mainly, but not entirely, driven by electrostatic interactions between the TFP cation and PS headgroup anion, with an insertion of the phenothiazine moiety among the acyls in the monolayer that depends on the packing of the acyls.