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Factors determining barrier properties to oxygen transport across model and cell plasma membranes based on EPR spin-label oximetry. Appl Magn Reson 2021 Oct;52(10):1237-1260

Date

10/22/2022

Pubmed ID

36267674

Pubmed Central ID

PMC9581439

DOI

10.1007/s00723-021-01412-4

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-85112822941 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   2 Citations

Abstract

This review is motivated by the exciting new area of radiation therapy using a phenomenon termed FLASH in which oxygen is thought to have a central role. Well-established principles of radiation biology and physics suggest that if oxygen has a strong role, it should be the level at the DNA. The key aspect discussed is the rate of oxygen diffusion. If oxygen freely diffuses into cells and rapidly equilibrates, then measurements in the extracellular compartment would enable FLASH to be investigated using existing methodologies that can readily measure oxygen in the extracellular compartment. EPR spin-label oximetry allows evaluation of the oxygen permeability coefficient across lipid bilayer membranes. It is established that simple fluid phase lipid bilayers are not barriers to oxygen transport. However, further investigations indicate that many physical and chemical (compositional) factor can significantly decrease this permeation. In biological cell plasma membranes, the lipid bilayer forms the matrix in which integral membrane proteins are immersed, changing organization and properties of the lipid matrix. To evaluate oxygen permeability coefficients across these complex membranes, oxygen permeation across all membrane domains and components must be considered. In this review, we consider many of the factors that affect (decrease) oxygen permeation across cell plasma membranes. Finally, we address the question, can the plasma membrane of the cell form a barrier to the free diffusion of oxygen into the cell interior? If there is a barrier then this must be considered in the investigations of the role of oxygen in FLASH.

Author List

Subczynski WK, Widomska J, Stein N, Swartz HM

Author

Witold K. Subczynski PhD Professor in the Biophysics department at Medical College of Wisconsin