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Contribution to Book
Factors Determining the Oxygen Permeability of Biological Membranes: Oxygen Transport Across Eye Lens Fiber-Cell Plasma Membranes
Oxygen Transport to Tissue XXXIX (2017)
  • Witold Karol Subczynski, Medical College of Wisconsin
  • Justyna Widomska, Medical University of Lublin
  • Laxman Mainali, Medical College of Wisconsin
Abstract
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spin-label oximetry allows the oxygen permeability coefficient to be evaluated across homogeneous lipid bilayer membranes and, in some cases, across coexisting membrane domains without their physical separation. The most pronounced effect on oxygen permeability is observed for cholesterol, which additionally induces the formation of membrane domains. In intact biological membranes, integral proteins induce the formation of boundary and trapped lipid domains with a low oxygen permeability. The effective oxygen permeability coefficient across the intact biological membrane is affected not only by the oxygen permeability coefficients evaluated for each lipid domain but also by the surface area occupied by these domains in the membrane. All these factors observed in fiber cell plasma membranes of clear human eye lenses are reviewed here.
Keywords
  • oxygen,
  • model membranes,
  • biological membranes,
  • permeability,
  • cholesterol
Publication Date
2017
Editor
Howard J. Halpern, Joseph C. LaManna, David K. Harrison, and Boris Epel
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Series
Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology
ISBN
978-3-319-55229-3
DOI
10.1007/978-3-319-55231-6_5
Citation Information
Witold Karol Subczynski, Justyna Widomska and Laxman Mainali. "Factors Determining the Oxygen Permeability of Biological Membranes: Oxygen Transport Across Eye Lens Fiber-Cell Plasma Membranes" Oxygen Transport to Tissue XXXIX (2017) p. 27 - 34
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/laxman-mainali/4/