Abstract
Bile salt micelles, and
mixed bile salt-phospholipid micelles, solubilize cholesterol and dietary lipids. As a first step
in a study of the mechanism of solubilization by bile
salt micelles, we have studied the solubilization of
two fluorescence probe molecules and an electron spin resonance probe molecule.
One fluorescence probe, 1-methylanthracene, is free to rotate in the molecular
plane when solubilized. The other probe molecules, N-phenylnaphthalen-1-amine and 4-(11-carboxy-1-hexylundec-1-yl)-
2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidin-1-yloxy, are greatly restricted in mobility when
solubilized. The 1-methylanthracene molecule is planar, and is small enough to
fit into the hydrophobic region of a bile salt micelle without protruding. The
other probe molecules used do not fit these criteria. We suggest that small
planar molecules in general may be free to rotate (about an axis perpendicular
to the plane) in bile salt micelles. Thus solubilization
of planar molecules would be entropically favoured. In particular, cholesterol is a planar molecule
known to be highly solubilized by bile salt micelles. The cholesterol molecule
meets the above criteria, and thus we suggest that its solubilization
is entropically favoured
over non-planar molecules.
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