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Physical Sciences and Mathematics Commons

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Life Sciences

University of Windsor

Series

Lipid rafts

Publication Year

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Identifying Membrane Lateral Organization By Contrast-Matched Small Angle Neutron Scattering, Mitchell Dipasquale, Michael H.L. Nguyen, Stuart R. Castillo, Frederick A. Heberle, Drew Marquardt Jan 2022

Identifying Membrane Lateral Organization By Contrast-Matched Small Angle Neutron Scattering, Mitchell Dipasquale, Michael H.L. Nguyen, Stuart R. Castillo, Frederick A. Heberle, Drew Marquardt

Chemistry and Biochemistry Publications

Lipid domains in model membranes are routinely studied to provide insight into the physical interactions that drive raft formation in cellular membranes. Using small angle neutron scattering, contrast-matching techniques enable the detection of lipid domains ranging from tens to hundreds of nanometers which are not accessible to other techniques without the use of extrinsic probes. Here, we describe a probe-free experimental approach and model-free analysis to identify lipid domains in freely floating vesicles of ternary phase separating lipid mixtures.


The Antioxidant Vitamin E As A Membrane Raft Modulator: Tocopherols Do Not Abolish Lipid Domains, Mitchell Dipasquale, Michael H.L. Nguyen, Brett W. Rickeard, Nicole Cesca, Christopher Tannous, Stuart R. Castillo, John Katsaras, Elizabeth G. Kelley, Frederick A. Heberle, Drew Marquardt Jan 2020

The Antioxidant Vitamin E As A Membrane Raft Modulator: Tocopherols Do Not Abolish Lipid Domains, Mitchell Dipasquale, Michael H.L. Nguyen, Brett W. Rickeard, Nicole Cesca, Christopher Tannous, Stuart R. Castillo, John Katsaras, Elizabeth G. Kelley, Frederick A. Heberle, Drew Marquardt

Chemistry and Biochemistry Publications

© 2020 Elsevier B.V. The antioxidant vitamin E is a commonly used vitamin supplement. Although the multi-billion dollar vitamin and nutritional supplement industry encourages the use of vitamin E, there is very little evidence supporting its actual health benefits. Moreover, vitamin E is now marketed as a lipid raft destabilizing anti-cancer agent, in addition to its antioxidant behaviour. Here, we studied the influence of vitamin E and some of its vitamers on membrane raft stability using phase separating unilamellar lipid vesicles in conjunction with small-angle scattering techniques and fluorescence microscopy. We find that lipid phase behaviour remains unperturbed well beyond …