Polymer-supported lipid bilayers on benzophenone-modified substrates.

Solid-supported lipid membranes are important for their roles in fundamental biophysical research as well as in applications such as biosensors. In our study, lipopolymers containing alkyl side chains were synthesized and a mixture of the lipopolymer and free lipids was preorganized at the air-water interface and then transferred to a solid substrate using the Langmuir-Blodgett technique. A photochemical reaction between a substrate-functionalized benzophenone and C-H bonds on the lipopolymer was used to attach the lipopolymers to the substrate. The final assembly of the membrane was completed by vesicle fusion. Langmuir film experiments at the air-water interface indicate tighter molecular packing for the lipopolymers with 28 mol % alkyl side chains than for the ones with 22 mol %. Atomic force microscopy images point to phase separation of lipopolymers on the substrates due to their dewetting from hydrophobic surfaces. However, a mixture of lipopolymers and free lipids formed a smooth film on the same substrate. After the addition of the second lipid layer on the lipopolymer/free lipid layer, the fluorescence images of the polymer-supported bilayer suggested that the distal lipid layer is homogeneous on the micrometer scale. The relaxation of the fluorescent probe lipids was analyzed after application of an electric field to determine their diffusion coefficient; the distal lipid layer was mobile with an average diffusion coefficient of approximately 0.1 microm(2)/s. Moreover, the immobile fraction of the lipids in the distal layer was estimated to be around 15%.