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Dive into the research topics where Lars Duelund is active.

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Featured researches published by Lars Duelund.


Journal of Applied Phycology | 2013

On the human consumption of the red seaweed dulse (Palmaria palmata (L.) Weber & Mohr)

Ole G. Mouritsen; Christine Dawczynski; Lars Duelund; Gerhard Jahreis; Walter Vetter; Markus Schröder

The red seaweed dulse (Palmaria palmata) is one of the more popular seaweed species for human consumption in the Western world. With a documented historical use up to present days in Ireland, Brittany (France), Iceland, Maine (USA), and Nova Scotia (Canada), it has remained a snack, a food supplement, and an ingredient in various dishes. The trend towards more healthy and basic foodstuffs, together with an increasing interest among chefs for the seaweed cuisine, has posed the need for more quantitative knowledge about the chemical composition of dulse of relevance for human consumption. Here, we report on data for amino acid composition, fatty acid profile, vitamin K, iodine, kainic acid, inorganic arsenic, as well as for various heavy metals in samples from Denmark, Iceland, and Maine.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Triglyceride Blisters in Lipid Bilayers: Implications for Lipid Droplet Biogenesis and the Mobile Lipid Signal in Cancer Cell Membranes

Himanshu Khandelia; Lars Duelund; Kirsi I. Pakkanen; John Hjort Ipsen

Triglycerides have a limited solubility, around 3%, in phosphatidylcholine lipid bilayers. Using millisecond-scale course grained molecular dynamics simulations, we show that the model lipid bilayer can accommodate a higher concentration of triolein (TO) than earlier anticipated, by sequestering triolein molecules to the bilayer center in the form of a disordered, isotropic, mobile neutral lipid aggregate, at least 17 nm in diameter, which forms spontaneously, and remains stable on at least the microsecond time scale. The results give credence to the hotly debated existence of mobile neutral lipid aggregates of unknown function present in malignant cells, and to the early biogenesis of lipid droplets accommodated between the two leaflets of the endoplasmic reticulum membrane. The TO aggregates give the bilayer a blister-like appearance, and will hinder the formation of multi-lamellar phases in model, and possibly living membranes. The blisters will result in anomalous membrane probe partitioning, which should be accounted for in the interpretation of probe-related measurements.


Biophysical Journal | 2010

Understanding detergent effects on lipid membranes: a model study of lysolipids.

Jonas Rosager Henriksen; Thomas Lars Andresen; Lise Nørkjær Feldborg; Lars Duelund; John Hjort Ipsen

Lysolipids and fatty acids are the natural products formed by the hydrolysis of phospholipids. Lysolipids and fatty acids form micelles in solution and acts as detergents in the presence of lipid membranes. In this study, we investigate the detergent strength of a homologous series of lyso-phosphatidylcholine lipids (LPCs) on 1-palmitoyl-2-oleyl-sn-glycerol-3-phosphatidylcholine (POPC) lipid membranes by use of isothermal titration calorimetry and vesicle fluctuation analysis. The membrane partition coefficient (K) and critical micelle concentration (cmc) are determined by isothermal titration calorimetry and found to obey an inverse proportionality relation (cmc.K approximately 0.05-0.3). The partition coefficient and critical micelle concentration are used for the analysis of the effect of LPCs on the membrane bending rigidity. The dependency of the bending rigidity on LPC membrane coverage has been analyzed in terms of a phenomenological model based on continuum elastic theory, which yields information about the curvature-inducing properties of the LPC molecule. The results reveal: 1), an increase in the partition coefficient with increasing LPC acyl-chain length; and 2), that the degree of acyl-chain mismatch between LPC and POPC determines the magnitude of the membrane mechanical perturbation per LPC molecule in the membrane. Finally, the three-stage model describing detergent membrane interaction has been extended by a parameter D(MCI), which governs the membrane curvature stability in the detergent concentration range below the cmc-value of the LPC molecule.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2010

Inclusion of Terpenoid Plant Extracts in Lipid Bilayers Investigated by Molecular Dynamics Simulations

Sarah Witzke; Lars Duelund; Jacob Kongsted; Michael Petersen; Ole G. Mouritsen; Himanshu Khandelia

The plant Perilla frutescens is widely employed in Asian medicine. The active components of Perilla include cyclic terpenes, which have a diverse range of antimicrobial, anticancer, sedative, and anti-inflammatory properties, hinting at a membrane-mediated mechanism of action. We have used molecular dynamics (MD) simulations and isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) to investigate the interaction of four terpenes with model lipid bilayers. The ITC and MD data are mostly in accordance. The terpenes partition into membranes, pack along the lipid tails, and alter bilayer structure and dynamics. Three of the four molecules could cross the bilayer. The carboxylate-group-containing terpene modifies headgroup repulsion and increases the area per lipid by more than 10%, in a manner reminiscent of membrane-thinning peptides and solvents such as DMSO. Our results support the possibility that at least some medicinal properties of volatile Perilla extracts might arise from interactions with the lipid bilayer component of biological membranes.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Sphingomyelinase D Activity in Model Membranes: Structural Effects of in situ Generation of Ceramide-1-Phosphate

Roberto P. Stock; Jonathan R. Brewer; Kerstin Wagner; Blanca Ramos-Cerrillo; Lars Duelund; Kit Drescher Jernshøj; Lars Folke Olsen; Luis A. Bagatolli

The toxicity of Loxosceles spider venom has been attributed to a rare enzyme, sphingomyelinase D, which transforms sphingomyelin to ceramide-1-phosphate. The bases of its inflammatory and dermonecrotic activity, however, remain unclear. In this work the effects of ceramide-1-phosphate on model membranes were studied both by in situ generation of this lipid using a recombinant sphingomyelinase D from the spider Loxosceles laeta and by pre-mixing it with sphingomyelin and cholesterol. The systems of choice were large unilamellar vesicles for bulk studies (enzyme kinetics, fluorescence spectroscopy and dynamic light scattering) and giant unilamellar vesicles for fluorescence microscopy examination using a variety of fluorescent probes. The influence of membrane lateral structure on the kinetics of enzyme activity and the consequences of enzyme activity on the structure of target membranes containing sphingomyelin were examined. The findings indicate that: 1) ceramide-1-phosphate (particularly lauroyl ceramide-1-phosphate) can be incorporated into sphingomyelin bilayers in a concentration-dependent manner and generates coexistence of liquid disordered/solid ordered domains, 2) the activity of sphingomyelinase D is clearly influenced by the supramolecular organization of its substrate in membranes and, 3) in situ ceramide-1-phosphate generation by enzymatic activity profoundly alters the lateral structure and morphology of the target membranes.


Journal of Natural Products | 2012

Influence of the active compounds of Perilla frutescens leaves on lipid membranes.

Lars Duelund; Arnaud Amiot; Alexandra Fillon; Ole G. Mouritsen

The leaves of the annual plant Perilla frutescens are used widely as a spice and a preservative in Asian food as well as in traditional medicine. The active compounds in the leaves are the cyclic monoterpene limonene (1) and its bio-oxidation products, perillaldehyde (2), perillyl alcohol (3), and perillic acid (4). These compounds are known to be biologically active and exhibit antimicrobial, anticancer, and anti-inflammatory effects that could all be membrane mediated. In order to assess the possible biophysical effects of these compounds on membranes quantitatively, the influence of limonene and its bio-oxidation products has been investigated on a membrane model composed of 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DMPC) using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC), and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy (EPR). It was found that limonene (1), perillyl alcohol (2), and perillaldehyde (3) partitioned into the DMPC membrane, whereas perillic acid (4) did not. The DSC results demonstrated that all the partitioning compounds strongly perturbed the phase transition of DMPC, whereas no perturbation of the local membrane order was detected by EPR spectroscopy. The results of the study showed that limonene (1) and its bio-oxidation products affect membranes in rather subtle ways.


Langmuir | 2014

Buffers Affect the Bending Rigidity of Model Lipid Membranes

Hélène Bouvrais; Lars Duelund; John Hjort Ipsen

In biophysical and biochemical studies of lipid bilayers the influence of the used buffer is often ignored or assumed to be negligible on membrane structure, elasticity, or physical properties. However, we here present experimental evidence, through bending rigidity measurements performed on giant vesicles, of a more complex behavior, where the buffering molecules may considerably affect the bending rigidity of phosphatidylcholine bilayers. Furthermore, a synergistic effect on the bending modulus is observed in the presence of both salt and buffer molecules, which serves as a warning to experimentalists in the data interpretation of their studies, since typical lipid bilayer studies contain buffer and ion molecules.


Journal of The Chemical Society-dalton Transactions | 2001

Solid and solution state structures of mono- and di-nuclear iron(III) complexes of related hexadentate and pentadentate aminopyridyl ligands

Lars Duelund; Rita G. Hazell; Christine J. McKenzie; Lars Preuss Nielsen; Hans Toftlund

Two mononuclear iron(III) complexes formed with the related ligands N,N,N′,N′-tetrakis(2-pyridylmethyl)ethylenediamine (tpen) and N-benzyl-N,N′,N′-tris(2-pyridylmethyl)ethylenediamine (bztpen) have been studied. X-Ray crystallography reveals for the complex [Fe(tpen)][ClO4]3 that tpen acts as a hexadentate ligand in the solid state. In methanol or water containing solutions it was shown by EPR and UV-Vis spectroscopy that one pyridyl arm is exchanged by a solvent molecule. In dmf solution only partial exchange of a pyridyl arm was observed. The complex with the related pentadentate ligand bztpen [Fe(bztpen)Cl][ClO4]2 showed exchange of the coordinated chloride with methanol and water, but not with dmf. In water containing solutions both complexes are slowly converted into the dimeric μ-oxo complexes [(tpen)FeIII(Cl)OFeIII(Cl)(tpen)]2+ or [(bztpen)FeIII(Cl)OFeIII(Cl)(bztpen)]2+. This reaction is accelerated by addition of an excess of chloride.


Chemistry and Physics of Lipids | 2013

Propofol modulates the lipid phase transition and localizes near the headgroup of membranes.

Anders Højgaard Hansen; Kristian T. Sørensen; Richard Mathieu; Alois Serer; Lars Duelund; Himanshu Khandelia; Per Lyngs Hansen; Adam Cohen Simonsen

The compound 2,6-diisopropylphenol (Propofol, PRF) is widely used for inducing general anesthesia, but the mechanism of PRF action remains relatively poorly understood at the molecular level. This work examines the possibility that a potential mode of action of PRF is to modulate the lipid order in target membranes. The effect on monolayers and bilayers of dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphorylcholine (DPPC) was probed using Langmuir monolayer isotherms, differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. Increasing amounts of PRF in a DPPC monolayer causes a decrease in isothermal compressibility modulus at the phase transition. A partition constant for PRF in DPPC liposomes on the order of K≈1500 M(-1) was found, and the partitioning was found to be enthalpy-driven above the melting temperature (Tm). A decrease in Tm with PRF content was found whereas the bilayer melting enthalpy ΔHm remains almost constant. The last finding indicates that PRF incorporates into the membrane at a depth near the phosphatidylcholine headgroup, in agreement with our MD-simulations. The simulations also reveal that PRF partitions into the membrane on a timescale of 0.5 μs and has a cholesterol-like ordering effect on DPPC in the fluid phase. The vertical location of the PRF binding site in a bacterial ligand-gated ion channel coincides with the location found in our MD-simulations. Our results suggest that multiple physicochemical mechanisms may determine anesthetic potency of PRF, including effects on proteins that are mediated through the bilayer.


Chemistry and Physics of Lipids | 2014

Polyaromatic hydrocarbons do not disturb liquid–liquid phase coexistence, but increase the fluidity of model membranes

Nina S. Liland; Adam Cohen Simonsen; Lars Duelund; Bente E. Torstensen; Marc H.G. Berntssen; Ole G. Mouritsen

Polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) is a group of compounds, many of which are toxic, formed by incomplete combustion or thermal processing of organic material. They are highly lipophilic and thus present in some seed oils used for human consumption as well as being increasingly common in aquaculture diets due to inclusion of vegetable oils. Cytotoxic effects of PAHs have been thought to be partly due to a membrane perturbing effect of these compounds. A series of studies were here performed to examine the effects of three different PAHs (naphthalene, phenanthrene and benzo[a]pyrene) with different molecular sizes (two, three and five rings, respectively) and fat solubility (Kow 3.29, 4.53 and 6.04, respectively) on membrane models. The effects of PAHs on liquid-liquid phase coexistence in solid-supported lipid bilayers (dioleoylphosphocholine:dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine:cholesterol) were assessed using fluorescence microscopy. Benzo[a]pyrene had a slight affinity for the liquid-ordered phase, but there were no effects of adding any of the other PAHs on the number or size of the liquid domains (liquid-ordered and liquid-disordered). Benzo[a]pyrene and phenanthrene, but not naphthalene, lowered the transition temperature (Tm) and the enthalpy (ΔH) characterising the transition from the solid to the liquid-crystalline phase in DPPC vesicles. The membrane effects of the PAH molecules are likely related to size, with bigger and more fat-soluble molecules having a fluidising effect when embedded in the membrane, possibly causing some of the observed toxic effects in fish exposed to these contaminants.

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Ole G. Mouritsen

University of Southern Denmark

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John Hjort Ipsen

University of Southern Denmark

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Luis A. Bagatolli

National University of Cordoba

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Adam Cohen Simonsen

University of Southern Denmark

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Jonathan R. Brewer

University of Southern Denmark

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Kirsi I. Pakkanen

Technical University of Denmark

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Hans Toftlund

University of Southern Denmark

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Himanshu Khandelia

University of Southern Denmark

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Ann Zahle Andersen

University of Southern Denmark

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