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1.
Dysfunction of pulmonary surfactant in the lungs is associated with respiratory pathologies such as acute respiratory distress syndrome or meconium aspiration syndrome. Serum, cholesterol, and meconium have been described as inhibitory agents of surfactant’s interfacial activity once these substances appear in alveolar spaces during lung injury and inflammation. The deleterious action of these agents has been only partly evaluated under physiologically relevant conditions. We have optimized a protocol to assess surfactant inhibition by serum, cholesterol, or meconium in the captive bubble surfactometer. Specific measures of surface activity before and after native surfactant was exposed to inhibitors included i), film formation, ii), readsorption of material from surface-associated reservoirs, and iii), interfacial film dynamics during compression-expansion cycling. Results show that serum creates a steric barrier that impedes surfactant reaching the interface. A mechanical perturbation of this barrier allows native surfactant to compete efficiently with serum to form a highly surface-active film. Exposure of native surfactant to cholesterol or meconium, on the other hand, modifies the compressibility of surfactant films though optimal compressibility properties recover on repetitive compression-expansion cycling. Addition of polymers like dextran or hyaluronic acid to surfactant fully reverses inhibition by serum. These polymers also prevent surfactant inhibition by cholesterol or meconium, suggesting that the protective action of polymers goes beyond the mere enhancement of interfacial adsorption as described by depletion force theories.  相似文献   

2.
Lung surfactant (LS) is a mixture of lipids and proteins that line the alveolar air-liquid interface, lowering the interfacial tension to levels that make breathing possible. In acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), inactivation of LS is believed to play an important role in the development and severity of the disease. This review examines the competitive adsorption of LS and surface-active contaminants, such as serum proteins, present in the alveolar fluids of ARDS patients, and how this competitive adsorption can cause normal amounts of otherwise normal LS to be ineffective in lowering the interfacial tension. LS and serum proteins compete for the air-water interface when both are present in solution either in the alveolar fluids or in a Langmuir trough. Equilibrium favors LS as it has the lower equilibrium surface pressure, but the smaller proteins are kinetically favored over multi-micron LS bilayer aggregates by faster diffusion. If albumin reaches the interface, it creates an energy barrier to subsequent LS adsorption that slows or prevents the adsorption of the necessary amounts of LS required to lower surface tension. This process can be understood in terms of classic colloid stability theory in which an energy barrier to diffusion stabilizes colloidal suspensions against aggregation. This analogy provides qualitative and quantitative predictions regarding the origin of surfactant inactivation. An important corollary is that any additive that promotes colloid coagulation, such as increased electrolyte concentration, multivalent ions, hydrophilic non-adsorbing polymers such as PEG, dextran, etc. added to LS, or polyelectrolytes such as chitosan, also promotes LS adsorption in the presence of serum proteins and helps reverse surfactant inactivation. The theory provides quantitative tools to determine the optimal concentration of these additives and suggests that multiple additives may have a synergistic effect. A variety of physical and chemical techniques including isotherms, fluorescence microscopy, electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction show that LS adsorption is enhanced by this mechanism without substantially altering the structure or properties of the LS monolayer.  相似文献   

3.
Pulmonary surfactant (PS) dysfunction because of the leakage of serum proteins into the alveolar space could be an operative pathogenesis in acute respiratory distress syndrome. Albumin-inhibited PS is a commonly used in vitro model for studying surfactant abnormality in acute respiratory distress syndrome. However, the mechanism by which PS is inhibited by albumin remains controversial. This study investigated the film organization of albumin-inhibited bovine lipid extract surfactant (BLES) with and without surfactant protein A (SP-A), using atomic force microscopy. The BLES and albumin (1:4 w/w) were cospread at an air-water interface from aqueous media. Cospreading minimized the adsorption barrier for phospholipid vesicles imposed by preadsorbed albumin molecules, i.e., inhibition because of competitive adsorption. Atomic force microscopy revealed distinct variations in film organization, persisting up to 40 mN/m, compared with pure BLES monolayers. Fluorescence confocal microscopy confirmed that albumin remained within the liquid-expanded phase of the monolayer at surface pressures higher than the equilibrium surface pressure of albumin. The remaining albumin mixed with the BLES monolayer so as to increase film compressibility. Such an inhibitory effect could not be relieved by repeated compression-expansion cycles or by adding surfactant protein A. These experimental data indicate a new mechanism of surfactant inhibition by serum proteins, complementing the traditional competitive adsorption mechanism.  相似文献   

4.
Lung surfactant adsorption to an air-water interface is strongly inhibited by an energy barrier imposed by the competitive adsorption of albumin and other surface-active serum proteins that are present in the lung during acute respiratory distress syndrome. This reduction in surfactant adsorption results in an increased surface tension in the lung and an increase in the work of breathing. The reduction in surfactant adsorption is quantitatively described using a variation of the classical Smolukowski analysis of colloid stability. Albumin adsorbed to the interface induces an energy barrier to surfactant diffusion of order 5 k(B)T, leading to a reduction in adsorption equivalent to reducing the surfactant concentration by a factor of 100. Adding hydrophilic, nonadsorbing polymers such as polyethylene glycol to the subphase provides a depletion attraction between the surfactant aggregates and the interface that eliminates the energy barrier. Surfactant adsorption increases exponentially with polymer concentration as predicted by the simple Asakura and Oosawa model of depletion attraction. Depletion forces can likely be used to overcome barriers to adsorption at a variety of liquid-vapor and solid-liquid interfaces.  相似文献   

5.
Freeze-fracture transmission electron microscopy shows significant differences in the bilayer organization and fraction of water within the bilayer aggregates of clinical lung surfactants, which increases from Survanta to Curosurf to Infasurf. Albumin and serum inactivate all three clinical surfactants in vitro; addition of the nonionic polymers polyethylene glycol, dextran, or hyaluronic acid also reduces inactivation in all three. Freeze-fracture transmission electron microscopy shows that polyethylene glycol, hyaluronic acid, and albumin do not adsorb to the surfactant aggregates, nor do these macromolecules penetrate the interior water compartments of the surfactant aggregates. This results in an osmotic pressure difference that dehydrates the bilayer aggregates, causing a decrease in the bilayer spacing as shown by small angle x-ray scattering and an increase in the ordering of the bilayers as shown by freeze-fracture electron microscopy. Small angle x-ray diffraction shows that the relationship between the bilayer spacing and the imposed osmotic pressure for Curosurf is a screened electrostatic interaction with a Debye length consistent with the ionic strength of the solution. The variation in surface tension due to surfactant adsorption measured by the pulsating bubble method shows that the extent of surfactant aggregate reorganization does not correlate with the maximum or minimum surface tension achieved with or without serum in the subphase. Albumin, polymers, and their mixtures alter the surfactant aggregate microstructure in the same manner; hence, neither inhibition reversal due to added polymer nor inactivation due to albumin is caused by alterations in surfactant microstructure.  相似文献   

6.
Adsorption of procaine at the air/water interface and its penetration into stearic acid monolayers from aqueous subphase of pH 8 are studied by measuring surface tension of aqueous procaine solutions and by recording surface pressure vs. mean molecular area curves for stearic acid monolayers spread onto procaine solutions of different concentrations. The amount of procaine in the interface is derived by means of Gibbs' equation. Results are compared to those obtained earlier at pH 2 and on unbuffered subphases. With increasing pH an increasing procaine adsorption and procaine penetration is observed. This phenomenon is interpreted in terms of protolytic equilibria in which participate both surfactants procaine and stearic acid.  相似文献   

7.
Surfactant protein C (SP-C) is an essential component for the surface tension-lowering activity of the pulmonary surfactant system. It contains a valine-rich alpha helix that spans the lipid bilayer, and is one of the most hydrophobic proteins known so far. SP-C is also an essential component of various surfactant preparations of animal origin currently used to treat neonatal respiratory distress syndrome (NRDS) in preterm infants. The limited supply of this material and the risk of transmission of infectious agents and immunological reactions have prompted the development of synthetic SP-C-derived peptides or recombinant humanized SP-C for inclusion in new preparations for therapeutic use. We describe herein the recombinant production in bacterial cultures of SP-C variants containing phenylalanines instead of the palmitoylated cysteines of the native protein, as fusions to the hydrophilic nuclease A (SN) from Staphylococcus aureus. The resulting chimerae were partially purified by affinity chromatography and subsequently subjected to protease digestion. The SP-C forms were recovered from the digestion mixtures by organic extraction and further purified by size exclusion chromatography. The two recombinant SP-C variants so obtained retained more than 50% alpha-helical content and showed surface activity comparable to the native protein, as measured by surface spreading of lipid/protein suspensions and from compression pi-A isotherms of lipid/protein films. Compared to the protein purified from porcine lungs, the recombinant SP-C forms improved movement of phospholipid molecules into the interface (during adsorption), or out from the interfacial film (during compression), suggesting new possibilities to develop improved therapeutic preparations.  相似文献   

8.
Inhibition of lipases by proteins. A kinetic study with dicaprin monolayers   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
We report further investigations on protein inhibition of pancreatic and microbial lipases carried out with the monolayer technique. When beta-lactoglobulin A, melittin, serum albumin, myoglobin, and a protein inhibiting lipase from soybean were preincubated with a dicaprin film at a surface pressure of 35 dynes/cm, no activity was detected with horse pancreatic or Rhizopus delemar lipases. By contrast, Rhizopus arrhizus and Geotrichum candidum lipase activities were not impaired under the same conditions. Experiments using mixed lipid-protein film transfer clearly show that the inhibition of pancreatic lipase is due to the protein associated with lipid and not caused by direct protein-enzyme interaction in the aqueous phase. Three parameters were used to determine the surface properties of the various proteins at the dicaprin/water interface; namely, the initial rate of surface pressure increase, (delta pi/delta t)t = 0, the maximal surface pressure increase, delta pi max, and the critical surface pressure, pi c. A positive correlation was observed between values of (delta pi/delta t)t = 0 of proteins and their respective capacity to inhibit pancreatic and R. delemar lipases. By contrast, there was no apparent correlation with the two other parameters, delta pi max or pi c.  相似文献   

9.
Surface activity and sensitivity to inhibition from phospholipase A2 (PLA2), lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC), and serum albumin were studied for a synthetic C16:0 diether phosphonolipid (DEPN-8) combined with 1.5% by weight of mixed hydrophobic surfactant proteins (SP)-B/C purified from calf lung surfactant extract (CLSE). Pure DEPN-8 had better adsorption and film respreading than the major lung surfactant phospholipid dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine and reached minimum surface tensions <1 mN/m under dynamic compression on the Wilhelmy balance and on a pulsating bubble surfactometer (37 degrees C, 20 cycles/min, 50% area compression). DEPN-8 + 1.5% SP-B/C exhibited even greater adsorption and had overall dynamic surface tension lowering equal to CLSE on the bubble. In addition, films of DEPN-8 + 1.5% SP-B/C on the Wilhelmy balance had better respreading than CLSE after seven (but not two) cycles of compression-expansion at 23 degrees C. DEPN-8 is structurally resistant to degradation by PLA2, and DEPN-8 + 1.5% SP-B/C maintained high adsorption and dynamic surface activity in the presence of this enzyme. Incubation of CLSE with PLA2 led to chemical degradation, generation of LPC, and reduced surface activity. DEPN-8 + 1.5% SP-B/C was also more resistant than CLSE to direct biophysical inhibition by LPC, and the two were similar in their sensitivity to biophysical inhibition by serum albumin. These findings indicate that synthetic surfactants containing DEPN-8 combined with surfactant proteins or related synthetic peptides have potential utility for treating surfactant dysfunction in inflammatory lung injury.  相似文献   

10.
Surfactant protein C (SP-C) is an essential component for the surface tension-lowering activity of the pulmonary surfactant system. It contains a valine-rich α helix that spans the lipid bilayer, and is one of the most hydrophobic proteins known so far. SP-C is also an essential component of various surfactant preparations of animal origin currently used to treat neonatal respiratory distress syndrome (NRDS) in preterm infants. The limited supply of this material and the risk of transmission of infectious agents and immunological reactions have prompted the development of synthetic SP-C-derived peptides or recombinant humanized SP-C for inclusion in new preparations for therapeutic use.We describe herein the recombinant production in bacterial cultures of SP-C variants containing phenylalanines instead of the palmitoylated cysteines of the native protein, as fusions to the hydrophilic nuclease A (SN) from Staphylococcus aureus. The resulting chimerae were partially purified by affinity chromatography and subsequently subjected to protease digestion. The SP-C forms were recovered from the digestion mixtures by organic extraction and further purified by size exclusion chromatography. The two recombinant SP-C variants so obtained retained more than 50% α-helical content and showed surface activity comparable to the native protein, as measured by surface spreading of lipid/protein suspensions and from compression π-A isotherms of lipid/protein films. Compared to the protein purified from porcine lungs, the recombinant SP-C forms improved movement of phospholipid molecules into the interface (during adsorption), or out from the interfacial film (during compression), suggesting new possibilities to develop improved therapeutic preparations.  相似文献   

11.
This paper reports the chemical synthesis and purification of a novel phospholipase-resistant C16:0, C16:1 diether phosphonoglycerol with structural analogy to ester-linked anionic phosphatidylglycerol (PG) in endogenous pulmonary surfactant. This diether phosphonoglycerol (PG 1) is studied for phospholipase A(2) (PLA(2)) resistance and for surface activity in synthetic exogenous surfactants combined with Super Mini-B (S-MB) peptide and DEPN-8, a previously-reported diether phosphonolipid analog of dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC, the major zwitterionic phospholipid in native lung surfactant). Activity experiments measured both adsorption and dynamic surface tension lowering due to the known importance of these surface behaviors in lung surfactant function in vivo. Synthetic surfactants containing 9 : 1 DEPN-8:PG 1 + 3% S-MB were resistant to degradation by PLA(2) in chromatographic studies, while calf lung surfactant extract (CLSE, the substance of the bovine clinical surfactant Infasurf?) was significantly degraded by PLA(2). The 9 : 1 DEPN-8:PG 1 + 3% S-MB mixture also had small but consistent increases in both adsorption and dynamic surface tension lowering ability compared to DEPN-8 + 3% S-MB. Consistent with these surface activity increases, molecular dynamics simulations using Protein Modeller, GROMACS force-field, and PyMOL showed that bilayers containing DPPC and palmitoyl-oleoyl-PC (POPC) as surrogates of DEPN-8 and PG 1 were penetrated to a greater extent by S-MB peptide than bilayers of DPPC alone. These results suggest that PG 1 or related anionic phosphono-PG analogs may have functional utility in phospholipase-resistant synthetic surfactants targeting forms of acute pulmonary injury where endogenous surfactant becomes dysfunctional due to phospholipase activity in the innate inflammatory response.  相似文献   

12.
Lung surfactant (LS) and albumin compete for the air-water interface when both are present in solution. Equilibrium favors LS because it has a lower equilibrium surface pressure, but the smaller albumin is kinetically favored by faster diffusion. Albumin at the interface creates an energy barrier to subsequent LS adsorption that can be overcome by the depletion attraction induced by polyethylene glycol (PEG) in solution. A combination of grazing incidence x-ray diffraction (GIXD), x-ray reflectivity (XR), and pressure-area isotherms provides molecular-resolution information on the location and configuration of LS, albumin, and polymer. XR shows an average electron density similar to that of albumin at low surface pressures, whereas GIXD shows a heterogeneous interface with coexisting LS and albumin domains at higher surface pressures. Albumin induces a slightly larger lattice spacing and greater molecular tilt, similar in effect to a small decrease in the surface pressure. XR shows that adding PEG to the LS-albumin subphase restores the characteristic LS electron density profile at the interface, and confirms that PEG is depleted near the interface. GIXD shows the same LS Bragg peaks and Bragg rods as on a pristine interface, but with a more compact lattice corresponding to a small increase in the surface pressure. These results confirm that albumin adsorption creates a physical barrier that inhibits LS adsorption, and that PEG in the subphase generates a depletion attraction between the LS aggregates and the interface that enhances LS adsorption without substantially altering the structure or properties of the LS monolayer.  相似文献   

13.
The interaction of bovine prothrombin with phospholipids was measured, using as the lipid source monolayers spread at the air-buffer interface. Fluorescence spectroscopy was implemented to determine the equilibrium concentration of free prothrombin in the aqueous subphase of the protein-monolayer suspensions, in a continuous assay system. The increase in surface pressure (pi) from the protein-monolayer adsorption was also measured and, with values of the adsorbed protein concentration (c[s]), was used to calculate dc(s)/d(pi). At a particular phosphatidylserine (PS) content of liquid-expanded (LE) phosphatidylcholine (PC)/PS monolayers, dc(s)/d(pi) was independent of the initial surface pressure (pi[i]), when this latter value exceeded 30 mN/m. However, dc(s)/d(pi) varied significantly with the relative PS content of the monolayer. Values of the equilibrium dissociation constants calculated from the concentration dependence of delta(pi) indicated that the affinity of prothrombin for LE monolayers was higher at higher PS contents and lower packing densities. The affinity of prothrombin for liquid-condensed (LC) PC/PS monolayers was found to be much weaker relative to LE monolayers of similar phospholipid composition. This approach, employing spread monolayers to study prothrombin-phospholipid binding, coupled with a simple and accurate method to determine the free protein concentration in protein-monolayer suspensions, offers significant advantages for the investigation of protein-membrane interaction. The equilibrium characteristics that describe the interaction of prothrombin with the different phospholipid monolayers under various conditions also provide support for previous results which indicated that hydrophobic interactions are involved in the adsorption of vitamin K-dependent coagulation and anticoagulation proteins to model membrane systems.  相似文献   

14.
Taneva SG  Keough KM 《Biochemistry》2000,39(20):6083-6093
Surface balance techniques were used to study the interactions of surfactant protein SP-A with monolayers of surfactant components preformed at the air-water interface. SP-A adsorption into the monolayers was followed by monitoring the increase in the surface pressure Deltapi after injection of SP-A beneath the films. Monolayers of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC):egg phosphatidylglycerol (PG) (8:2, mol/mol) spread at initial surface pressure pi(i) = 5 mN/m did not promote the adsorption of SP-A at a subphase concentration of 0.68 microg/mL as compared to its adsorption to the monolayer-free surface. Surfactant proteins, SP-B or SP-C, when present in the films of DPPC:PG spread at pi(i) = 5 mN/m, enhanced the incorporation of SP-A in the monolayers to a similar extent; the Deltapi values being dependent on the levels of SP-B or SP-C, 3-17 wt %, in the lipid films. Calcium in the subphase did not affect the intrinsic surface activity of SP-A but reduced the Deltapi values produced by the adsorption of the protein to all the preformed films independently of their compositions and charges. The divalent ions likely modified the interaction of SP-A with the monolayers through their effects on the conformation, self-association, and charge state of SP-A. Values of Deltapi produced by adsorption of SP-A to the films of DPPC:PG with or without SP-B or SP-C were a function of the initial surface pressure of the films, pi(i). In the range of pressures 5 相似文献   

15.
The influence of human albumin, alpha-globulin, and fibrinogen on the actions of porcine pulmonary surfactant in a pulsating bubble surfactometer has been investigated. All three proteins detracted from the ability of the surfactant to adsorb to the air-water interface. The proteins also reduced the ability of surfactant to lower the opening pressures of bubbles cycling between different sizes in suspensions of surfactant. This was equivalent to restricting the ability of the surfactant to achieve low surface tension during compression of the surface. Of the three proteins, globulin competed most effectively with surfactant during the adsorption process, and albumin competed the least effectively. The proteins also may have interfered with the processes of surface refinement, which usually yields a monolayer enriched enough in dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine to achieve very low surface tension (very low opening pressures in the bubbles). Of the three proteins tested, albumin was least deleterious to surface refining whereas globulin and fibrinogen appeared to be about equally detrimental to the process.  相似文献   

16.
Albumin competes with lung surfactant for the air-water interface, resulting in decreased surfactant adsorption and increased surface tension. Polyethylene glycol (PEG) and other hydrophilic polymers restore the normal rate of surfactant adsorption to the interface, which re-establishes low surface tensions on compression. PEG does so by generating an entropic depletion attraction between the surfactant aggregates and interface, reducing the energy barrier to adsorption imposed by the albumin. For a fixed composition of 10 g/L (1% wt.), surfactant adsorption increases with the 0.1 power of PEG molecular weight from 6 kDa-35 kDa as predicted by simple excluded volume models of the depletion attraction. The range of the depletion attraction for PEG with a molecular weight below 6 kDa is less than the dimensions of albumin and there is no effect on surfactant adsorption. PEG greater than 35 kDa reaches the overlap concentration at 1% wt. resulting in both decreased depletion attraction and decreased surfactant adsorption. Fluorescence images reveal that the depletion attraction causes the surfactant to break through the albumin film at the air-water interface to spread as a monolayer. During this transition, there is a coexistence of immiscible albumin and surfactant domains. Surface pressures well above the normal equilibrium surface pressure of albumin are necessary to force the albumin from the interface during film compression.  相似文献   

17.
A theory based on the Smolukowski analysis of colloid stability shows that the presence of charged, surface-active serum proteins at the alveolar air-liquid interface can severely reduce or eliminate the adsorption of lung surfactant from the subphase to the interface, consistent with the observations reported in the companion article (pages 1769-1779). Adding nonadsorbing, hydrophilic polymers to the subphase provides a depletion attraction between the surfactant aggregates and the interface, which can overcome the steric and electrostatic resistance to adsorption induced by serum. The depletion force increases with polymer concentration as well as with polymer molecular weight. Increasing the surfactant concentration has a much smaller effect than adding polymer, as is observed. Natural hydrophilic polymers, like the SP-A present in native surfactant, or hyaluronan, normally present in the alveolar fluids, can enhance adsorption in the presence of serum to eliminate inactivation.  相似文献   

18.
Surfacen? is a clinical surfactant preparation of porcine origin, partly depleted of cholesterol, which is widely used in Cuba to treat pre-term babies at risk or already suffering neonatal respiratory distress. In the present study we have characterized the interfacial behavior of Surfacen in several in vitro functional models, including spreading and compression-expansion cycling isotherms in surface balances and in a captive bubble surfactometer, in comparison with the functional properties of whole native surfactant purified from porcine lungs and its reconstituted organic extract, the material from which Surfacen is derived. Surfacen exhibited similar properties to native porcine surfactant or its organic extract to efficiently form stable surface active films at the air-liquid interface, able to consistently reach surface tensions below 5mN/m upon repetitive compression-expansion cycling. Surfacen films, however, showed a substantially larger and stable compression-driven segregation of condensed lipid phases than exhibited by films formed by native surfactant or its organic extract. In spite of structural differences observed at microscopic level, Surfacen membranes showed a similar thermotropic behavior to membranes from native surfactant or its organic extract, characterized by calorimetry or fluorescence spectroscopy of samples doped with the Laurdan probe. On the other hand, analysis by atomic force microscopy of films formed by Surfacen or by the organic extract of native porcine surfactant revealed a similar network of interconnected condensed nanostructures, suggesting that the organization of the films at the submicroscopic level is the essential feature to support the proper stability and mechanical properties permitting the interfacial surfactant films to facilitate the work of breathing.  相似文献   

19.
The surface activity of two surfactant preparations, Lipid Extract Surfactant (LES) and Survanta, was examined during adsorption and dynamic compression using a pulsating bubble surfactometer. At low surfactant phospholipid concentrations (1-2.5 mg/ml), Survanta reduces surface tension at minimum bubble radius faster than LES: however, with continued pulsation LES obtains a lower surface tension. Addition of surfactant-associated protein A (SP-A) to LES significantly reduces the time required to reduce surface tension. Survanta is completely unresponsive to the addition of SP-A in that no further reduction of surface tension is observed. Addition of various blood components has been previously shown to inactivate surfactants in vitro. Addition of fibrinogen to Survanta causes an increase in surface tension when measured in the absence of calcium. When assayed in the presence of calcium, inhibition by fibrinogen is not observed possibly due to aggregation of this protein. Albumin and alpha-globulin strongly inhibit Survanta at physiological serum concentrations both in the presence and absence of calcium. The surface activity of Survanta is also inhibited by lysophosphatidylcholine (lyso-PC). The role of palmitic acid in the surface activity of pulmonary surfactant was examined by adding palmitic acid to LES. At low phospholipid concentrations addition of palmitic acid (10% w/w of the surfactant phospholipid) greatly enhances the surface activity of LES. Maximal enhancement of surface activity and adsorption was observed at or above 7.5% added palmitic acid (w/w of surfactant lipid). LES supplemented with palmitic acid is more resistant to inhibition by fibrinogen, albumin, alpha-globulin and lyso-PC than LES alone, however, the counteraction of blood protein inhibition is not as pronounced as that observed with SP-A.  相似文献   

20.
The insolubility of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) in aqueous media has been a limitation for the practical application of this unique material. Recent studies have demonstrated that the suspend ability of CNT can be substantially improved by employing appropriate surfactants. Although various surfactants have been tested, the exact mechanism by which carbon nanotubes and the different surfactants interact is not fully understood. To deepen the understanding of molecular interaction between CNT and surfactants, as well as to investigate the influence of the surfactant tail length on the adsorption process, we report here the first detailed large-scale all-atomistic molecular dynamics simulation study of the adsorption and morphology of aggregates of the cationic surfactants containing trimethylammonium headgroups (C12TAB and C16TAB) on single-walled carbon nanotube (SWNT) surfaces. We find that the aggregation morphology of both C12TAB and C16TAB on the SWNT is dependent upon the number of the surfactants in the simulation box. As the number of the surfactants increases the random monolayer structure gradually changes to the cylinder-like monolayer structure. Moreover, we make a comparison between the C12TAB and C16TAB adsorption onto SWNTs to clarify the role of the surfactant tail length on the adsorption process. This comparison indicates that by increasing the number of surfactant molecules, the larger number of the C16TAB molecules tend to adsorb onto SWNTs. Further, our results show that a longer chain yields the higher packed aggregates in which the surfactant heads are extended far into the aqueous phase, which in turn may increase the SWNTs stabilization in aqueous suspensions.  相似文献   

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