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Kinetics of the association of potential-sensitive dyes with model and energy-transducing membranes: Implications for fast probe response times

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Summary

The second-order rate constants characterizing the association of potential-sensing dyes of the cyanine, merocyanine, and oxonol classes with glycerylmonooleate suspensions, azolectin vesicles, or submitochondrial particles have been measured and the implications for redistribution type mechanisms proposed to explain the potential-dependent optical signals of these probes considered. The second-order rate constants obtained for the cyanines and oxonols are compatible with microsecond probe response times only on the assumption that a high local dye concentration exists in the aqueous phase immediately adjacent to the membrane surface. Calculations based on a surface charge density induced by a bias potential suggest that the necessary local concentration cannot be attained by a diffusion polarization mechanism. A model based on the rapid recombination of ejected dye with the membrane bilayer seems capable of explaining microsecond probe response times in systems where the potential is rapidly changing polarity; calculations suggest that an ejected dye molecule would not diffuse out of an unstirred layer of 100 microns thickness on a millisecond time scale. Microsecond probe responses are also compatible with a first-order potential-dependent dye ejection from the membrane with no rapid recombination when the potential is not changing polarity. The apparent first-order rate constants describing the interaction of merocanine M-540 with a glycerylmonooleate suspension are independent of dye concentration; the reaction may be diffusion limited. The high local dye concentration need not be met in this case for a mechanism based on the transfer of dye onto the membrane from the aqueous phase to describe the microsecond signals of this dye, but other mechanisms have been proposed to explain such signals. The mechanism leading to potentialdependent signals from optical probes appear to differ substantially between suspensions of energy-transducing biological membranes and those involving excitable membranes such as the squid giant axon or model black lipid membranes.

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Smith, J.C., Frank, S.J., Bashford, C.L. et al. Kinetics of the association of potential-sensitive dyes with model and energy-transducing membranes: Implications for fast probe response times. J. Membrain Biol. 54, 127–139 (1980). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01940566

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01940566

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