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Membrane Charging and Swelling upon Calcium Adsorption as Revealed by Phospholipid Nanodiscs.

Direct binding of calcium ions (Ca2+ ) to phospholipid membranes is an unclarified yet critical signaling pathway in diverse Ca2+ -regulated cellular phenomena. Here, high-pressure-liquid-chromatography, small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), UV-vis absorption, and differential refractive index detections are integrated to probe Ca2+ -binding to the zwitterionic lipid membranes in nanodiscs. The responses of the membranes upon Ca2+ -binding, in composition and conformation, are quantified through integrated data analysis. The results indicate that Ca2+ binds specifically into the phospholipid headgroup zone, resulting in membrane charging and membrane swelling, with a saturated Ca2+ -lipid binding ratio of 1:8. A Ca2+ -binding isotherm to the nanodisc is further established and yields an unexpectedly high binding constant K = 4260 M-1 and a leaflet potential of ca. 100 mV based on a modified Gouy-Chapman model. The calcium-lipid binding ratio, however, drops to 40% when the nanodisc undergoes a gel-to-fluid phase transition, leading to an effective charge capacity of a few μF/cm2 .

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