Langmuir, Vol.28, No.20, 7591-7597, 2012
Stereochemical Effect Revealed in Self-Assemblies Based on Archaeal Lipid Analogues Bearing a Central Five-Membered Carbocycle: A SAXS Study
The relative stereochemistry (cis or trans) of a 1,3-disubstituted cyclopentane unit in the middle of tetraether archaeal bipolar lipid analogues was found to have a dramatic influence on their supramolecular self-assembly properties. SAXS studies of two synthetic diastereomeric archaeal lipids bearing two lactosyl polar head groups at opposite ends revealed different lyotropic behaviors. The cis isomer led to L-c-L-a-Q(II), transitions whereas the trans isomer retained an L-a phase from 20 to 100 degrees C. These main differences originate from the conformational equilibrium (pseudorotation) of 1,3-disubstituted cyclopentanes. Indeed, this pseudorotation exhibits quite similar orientations of the two substituents in a trans isomer whereas several orientations of the two alkyl chains are expected in a cis-1,3-dialkyl cyclopentane, thus authorizing more conformational flexibility in the lipid packing.