Surface charge and the conductance of phospholipid membranes.

Bilayer membranes, formed from various phospholipids, were studied to assess the influence of the charge of the polar head groups on the membrane conductance mediated by neutral "carriers" of cations and anions. The surface charge of an amphoteric lipid, phosphatidyl ethanolamine, was altered by varying the pH, and the surface charge of several lipids was screened by increasing the ionic strength of the solution with impermeant monovalent and divalent electrolytes. The surface charge should be a key parameter in defining the membrane conductance for a variety of permeation mechanisms; conductance measurements in the presence of carriers may be used to estimate the potential difference, due to surface charge, between the interior of the bilayer and the bulk aqueous phase. The large changes in conductance observed upon varying the surface charge density and the ionic strength agree with those predicted by the Gouy-Chapman theory for an aqueous diffuse double layer. Explicit expressions for the dependence of the membrane conductance on the concentrations of the carrier, the permeant ion, the surface charge density, and the ionic strength are presented.