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1.
Monolayers of binary mixtures of 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC) and asialo-(GA1), disialo-(GD1b) and trisialo-(GT1b) gangliosides were used to determine the effect of ganglioside headgroup charge and geometry on its interactions with the neighboring zwitterionic lipid. Surface pressure versus molecular area isotherm measurements along with concurrent fluorescence microscopy of the monolayers at the air-water interface were complemented with atomic force microscopy imaging of monolayers deposited on solid substrates. Results were used to further develop a proposed geometric packing model that the complementary geometry of DPPC and monosialoganglioside GM1 headgroups affects their close molecular packing, inducing condensation of the layer at small mol % of ganglioside. For GA1, GD1b, and GT1b, a similar condensing effect, followed by a fluidizing effect is seen that varies with glycosphingolipid concentration, but results do not directly follow from geometric arguments because less DPPC is needed to condense ganglioside molecules with larger cross-sectional areas. The variations in critical packing mole ratios can be explained by global effects of headgroup charge and resultant dipole moments within the monolayer. Atomic force microscopy micrographs further support the model of ganglioside-induced DPPC condensation with condensed domains composed of a striped phase of condensed DPPC and DPPC/ganglioside geometrically packed complexes at low concentrations.  相似文献   

2.
Monolayers of binary mixtures of 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC) and asialo-(GA1), disialo-(GD1b) and trisialo-(GT1b) gangliosides were used to determine the effect of ganglioside headgroup charge and geometry on its interactions with the neighboring zwitterionic lipid. Surface pressure versus molecular area isotherm measurements along with concurrent fluorescence microscopy of the monolayers at the air-water interface were complemented with atomic force microscopy imaging of monolayers deposited on solid substrates. Results were used to further develop a proposed geometric packing model that the complementary geometry of DPPC and monosialoganglioside GM1 headgroups affects their close molecular packing, inducing condensation of the layer at small mol % of ganglioside. For GA1, GD1b, and GT1b, a similar condensing effect, followed by a fluidizing effect is seen that varies with glycosphingolipid concentration, but results do not directly follow from geometric arguments because less DPPC is needed to condense ganglioside molecules with larger cross-sectional areas. The variations in critical packing mole ratios can be explained by global effects of headgroup charge and resultant dipole moments within the monolayer. Atomic force microscopy micrographs further support the model of ganglioside-induced DPPC condensation with condensed domains composed of a striped phase of condensed DPPC and DPPC/ganglioside geometrically packed complexes at low concentrations.  相似文献   

3.
Using synchrotron grazing-incidence x-ray diffraction (GIXD) and reflectivity, the in-plane and out-of-plane structures of mixed-ganglioside GT1b-phospholipid monolayers were investigated at the air-liquid interface and compared with monolayers of the pure components. The receptor GT1b is involved in the binding of lectins and toxins, including botulinum neurotoxin, to cell membranes. Monolayers composed of 20 mol % ganglioside GT1b, the phospholipid dipalmitoyl phosphatidylethanolamine (DPPE), and the phospholipid dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) were studied in the gel phase at 23°C and at surface pressures of 20 and 40 mN/m, and at pH 7.4 and 5. Under these conditions, the two components did not phase-separate, and no evidence of domain formation was observed. The x-ray scattering measurements revealed that GT1b was intercalated within the host DPPE/DPPC monolayers, and slightly expanded DPPE but condensed the DPPC matrix. The oligosaccharide headgroups extended normally from the monolayer surfaces into the subphase. This study demonstrated that these monolayers can serve as platforms for investigating toxin membrane binding and penetration.  相似文献   

4.
Mixed monolayers of the surface-active lipopeptide surfactin-C15 and various lipids differing by their chain length (DMPC, DPPC, DSPC) and polar headgroup (DPPC, DPPE, DPPS) were investigated by atomic force microscopy (AFM) in combination with molecular modeling (Hypermatrix procedure) and surface pressure-area isotherms. In the presence of surfactin, AFM topographic images showed phase separation for each surfactin-phospholipid system except for surfactin-DMPC, which was in good agreement with compression isotherms. On the basis of domain shape and line tension theory, we conclude that the miscibility between surfactin and phospholipids is higher for shorter chain lengths (DMPC > DPPC > DSPC) and that the polar headgroup of phospholipids influences the miscibility of surfactin in the order DPPC > DPPE > DPPS. Molecular modeling data show that mixing surfactin and DPPC has a destabilizing effect on DPPC monolayer while it has a stabilizing effect towards DPPE and DPPS molecular interactions. Our results provide valuable information on the activity mechanism of surfactin and may be useful for the design of surfactin delivery systems.  相似文献   

5.
The thermotropic behavior of mixtures of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) with natural glycosphingolipids (galactosylceramide, phrenosine, kerasine, glucosylceramide, lactosylceramide, asialo-GM1, sulfatide, GM3, GM1, GD1a, GT1b) in dilute aqueous dispersions were studied by high sensitivity differential scanning calorimetry over the entire composition range. The pretransition of DPPC is abolished and the cooperativity of the main transition decreases sharply at mole fractions of glycosphingolipids below 0.2. All systems exhibit non-ideal temperature-composition phase diagrams. The mono- and di-hexosylceramides are easily miscible with DPPC when the proportion of glycosphingolipids in the system is high. A limited quantity (1–6 molecules of DPPC per molecule of glycosphingolipid (GSL) can be incorporated into a homogeneously mixed lipid phase. Domains of DPPC, immiscible with the rest of a mixed GSL-DPPC phase that shows no cooperative phase transition, are established as DPPC exceeds a certain proportion in the system. One negative charge (sulfatide) or four neutral carbohydrate residues (asialo-GM1) in the oligosaccharide chain of the glycosphingolipids results in phase diagrams exhibiting coexistence of gel and liquid phases over a broad temperature-composition range. Systems containing gangliosides show complex phase diagrams, with more than one phase transition. However, no evidence for phase-separated domains of pure ganglioside species is found. The thermotropic behavior of systems containing DPPC and glycosphingolipids correlates well with their interactions in mixed monolayers at the air/water interface.  相似文献   

6.
We have recently reported that fluorocarbon gases exhibit an effective fluidizing effect on Langmuir monolayers of dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC), preventing them from crystallizing up to surface pressures of ∼ 40 mN m− 1, i.e. well above the DPPC's equilibrium surface pressure. We now report that gaseous perfluorooctyl bromide (gPFOB) promotes the re-spreading of DPPC Langmuir monolayers compressed on a bovine serum albumin (BSA)-containing sub-phase. The latter protein is known to maintain a concentration-dependent surface pressure that can exceed the re-spreading pressure of collapsed monolayers. This phenomenon was proposed to be responsible for lung surfactant inactivation. Compression/expansion isotherms and fluorescence microscopy experiments were carried out to assess the monolayers' physical state. We have found that, during expansion under gPFOB-containing air, the surface pressure of a DPPC monolayer on a BSA-containing sub-phase decreased to much lower values than when the DPPC monolayer was expanded in the presence of BSA under air (∼ 0 mN m− 1 vs. ∼ 7.5 mN m− 1 at 120 Å2, respectively). Moreover, fluorescence images showed that, during expansion, the BSA-coupled DPPC monolayers, in contact with gPFOB, remained in the liquid-expanded state for surface pressures lower than 10 mN m− 1, whereas they were in a liquid-condensed semi-crystalline state, even at large molecular areas (120 Å2), when expanded under air. The re-incorporation of the PFOB molecules in the DPPC monolayer during expansion thus competes with the re-incorporation of BSA, thus preventing the latter from penetrating into the DPPC monolayer. We suggest that combinations of DPPC and a fluorocarbon gas may be useful in the treatment of lung conditions resulting from a deterioration of the native lung surfactant function due to plasma proteins, such as in the acute respiratory distress syndrome.  相似文献   

7.
The interaction of four long-chain nicotinates, compounds that are of interest as potential chemopreventive agents, with dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) was investigated in monolayers at the air-water interface and in fully hydrated bilayers. For the monolayer studies, the compression isotherms of mixtures of the respective nicotinate with DPPC were recorded at various compositions on a hydrochloric acid subphase (pH 1.9-2.1, 37 +/- 2 degrees C). The headgroup of the nicotinates (24-29 A2/molecule) is larger than that of the hydrophobic tail (20 A2/molecule). The pure nicotinates exhibit a temperature- and chain length-dependent transition from an expanded to a condensed phase. Analysis of the concentration dependence of the average molecular area at constant film pressure and the concentration dependence of the breakpoint of the phase transition from the expanded to the condensed state suggests that all four DPPC-nicotinate mixtures are partially miscible at the air-water interface. Although a complex phase behavior with several phase transitions was observed, differential scanning calorimetry studies of the four mixtures are also indicative of the partial miscibility of DPPC and the respective nicotinate. Overall, the complex phase behavior most likely results from the head-tail mismatch of the nicotinates and the geometric packing constraints in the two-component lipid bilayer.  相似文献   

8.
This article addresses the interactions of the synthetic antimicrobial peptide dermaseptin 01 (GLWSTIKQKGKEAAIAAA‐ KAAGQAALGAL‐NH2, DS 01) with phospholipid (PL) monolayers comprising (i) a lipid‐rich extract of Leishmania amazonensis (LRE‐La), (ii) zwitterionic PL (dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine, DPPC), and (iii) negatively charged PL (dipalmitoylphosphatidylglycerol, DPPG). The degree of interaction of DS 01 with the different biomembrane models was quantified from equilibrium and dynamic liquid‐air interface parameters. At low peptide concentrations, interactions between DS 01 and zwitterionic PL, as well as with the LRE‐La monolayers were very weak, whereas with negatively charged PLs the interactions were stronger. For peptide concentrations above 1 µg/ml, a considerable expansion of negatively charged monolayers occurred. In the case of DPPC, it was possible to return to the original lipid area in the condensed phase, suggesting that the peptide was expelled from the monolayer. However, in the case of DPPG, the average area per lipid molecule in the presence of DS 01 was higher than pure PLs even at high surface pressures, suggesting that at least part of DS 01 remained incorporated in the monolayer. For the LRE‐La monolayers, DS 01 also remained in the monolayer. This is the first report on the antiparasitic activity of AMPs using Langmuir monolayers of a natural lipid extract from L. amazonensis. Copyright © 2011 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

9.
Hydrophobic pulmonary surfactant (PS) proteins B (SP-B) and C (SP-C) modulate the surface properties of PS lipids. Epifluorescence microscopy was performed on solvent-spread monolayers of fluorescently labeled porcine SP-B (R-SP-B, labeled with Texas Red) and SP-C (F-SP-C, labeled with fluorescein) in dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) (at protein concentrations of 10 and 20 wt%, and 10 wt% of both) under conditions of cyclic compression and expansion. Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) spectroscopy of R-SP-B and F-SP-C indicated that the proteins were intact and labeled with the appropriate fluorescent probe. The monolayers were compressed and expanded for four cycles at an initial rate of 0.64 A2 x mol(-1) x s(-1) (333 mm2 x s x [-1]) up to a surface pressure pi approximately 65 mN/m, and pi-area per residue (pi-A) isotherms at 22 +/- 1 degrees C were obtained. The monolayers were microscopically observed for the fluorescence emission of the individual proteins present in the film lipid matrix, and their visual features were video recorded for image analysis. The pi-A isotherms of the DPPC/protein monolayers showed characteristic "squeeze out" effects at pi approximately 43 mN/m for R-SP-B and 55 mN/m for F-SP-C, as had previously been observed for monolayers of the native proteins in DPPC. Both proteins associated with the expanded (fluid) phase of DPPC monolayers remained in or associated with the monolayers at high pi (approximately 65 mN/m) and redispersed in the monolayer upon its reexpansion. At comparable pi and area/molecule of the lipid, the proteins reduced the amounts of condensed (gel-like) phase of DPPC monolayers, with F-SP-C having a greater effect on a weight basis than did R-SP-B. In any one of the lipid/protein monolayers the amounts of the DPPC in condensed phase were the same at equivalent pi during compression and expansion and from cycle to cycle. This indicated that only minor loss of components from these systems occurred between compression-expansion cycles. This study indicates that hydrophobic PS proteins associate with the fluid phase of DPPC in films, some proteins remain at high surface pressures in the films, and such lipid-protein films can still attain high pi during compression.  相似文献   

10.
Monolayers of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC), dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC), and some mixtures of these lipids were investigated using an epifluorescence microscopic surface balance. Monolayers were visualized at 23 +/- 1 degree C through the fluorescence of 1 mol% of two different fluorescent probes, 1-palmitoyl-2-(12-[(7-nitro-2-1,3-benzoxadizole-4- yl)amino]dodecanoyl)phosphatidylcholine (NBD-PC), which partitions into the liquid expanded (LE) or disordered lipid phase and 3,3'-dioctadecyloxacarbocyanine perchlorate (DiO-C18), which preferentially associates with the liquid condensed (LC) phase or lipid with ordered chains. LC domains were observed in pure DPPC monolayers at relatively low surface pressures (pi), and these domains grew with increasing surface pressure. Only liquid expanded phase was observed in pure DOPC monolayers up to the point of monolayer collapse. In monolayers containing 29:70:1, 49:50:1, and 69:30:1 (mol/mol/mol) of DPPC:DOPC:probe the domains of LC phase were smaller than those seen in DPPC monolayers at equivalent surface pressures. Quantitative analysis of the visual fields shown by the mixed monolayers showed a distribution of sizes of condensed domains at any given pi. At pi = 30 mN m-1, liquid-expanded, or fluid, regions occupied more than 70% of the total monolayer area in all three mixtures studied, whereas DPPC monolayers were more than 75% condensed or solid at that pressure. For monolayers of DPPC:DOPC:NBD-PC 49:50:1 and 69:30:1 the average domain size and the percentage of the total area covered with LC, or rigid, areas increased to a maximum at pi around 35 mN m-1 followed by a decrease at higher pi.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Structures of the monolayer films of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) mixed with different amounts of cholesterol were studied at air-water interface using surface pressure-area measurements, epifluorescence microscopy and atomic force microscopy (AFM). Pure DPPC, cholesterol or DPPC-cholesterol mixtures were dissolved in organic solvents with a small amount of fluorescently labeled phospholipid probe (NBD-PC) and spread onto the air-water interface. Surface pressure-area isotherms and epifluorescence microscopy of such films at the air-water interface suggested that DPPC undergoes a gas to fluid to condensed phase transition, while cholesterol undergoes a gas to solid-like transition. A shift of the surface pressure-area curve to lower area per molecule was observed when cholesterol was mixed with DPPC. Epifluorescence microscopy showed the formation of spiral shaped domains for mixed monolayers. Increase in cholesterol content abolished domain characteristics possibly due to fluidizing property of cholesterol. AFM measurements of monolayers, transferred onto freshly cleaved mica by Langmuir-Blodgett technique, revealed the alterations caused by cholesterol on the gel and fluid domains of such films. AFM measurements re-established similar trend in domain characteristics as evidenced in epifluorescence microscopy.  相似文献   

12.
The binding of cholera toxin, tetanus toxin and pertussis toxin to ganglioside containing solid supported membranes has been investigated by quartz crystal microbalance measurements. The bilayers were prepared by fusion of phospholipid-vesicles on a hydrophobic monolayer of octanethiol chemisorbed on one gold electrode placed on the 5 MHz AT-cut quartz crystal. The ability of the gangliosides GM1, GM3, GD1a, GD1b, GT1b and asialo-GM1 to act as suitable receptors for the different toxins was tested by measuring the changes of quartz resonance frequencies. To obtain the binding constants of each ligand-receptor-couple Langmuir-isotherms were successfully fitted to the experimental adsorption isotherms. Cholera toxin shows a high affinity for GM1 (Ka = 1.8 ⋅ 108M–1), a lower one for asialo-GM1 (Ka = 1.0 ⋅ 107 M–1) and no affinity for GM3. The C-fragment of tetanus toxin binds to ganglioside GD1a, GD1b and GT1b containing membranes with similar affinity (Ka∼106 M–1), while no binding was observed with GM3. Pertussis toxin binds to membranes containing the ganglioside GD1a with a binding constant of Ka = 1.6 ⋅ 106 M–1, but only if large amounts (40 mol%) of GD1a are present. The maximum frequency shift caused by the protein adsorption depends strongly on the molecular structure of the receptor. This is clearly demonstrated by an observed maximum frequency decrease of 99 Hz for the adsorption of the C-fragment of tetanus toxin to GD1b. In contrast to this large frequency decrease, which was unexpectedly high with respect to Sauerbrey's equation, implying pure mass loading, a maximum shift of only 28 Hz was detected after adsorption of the C-fragment of tetanus toxin to GD1a. Received: 14 January 1997 / Accepted: 15 April 1997  相似文献   

13.
The characteristics of the fluorescent dye, merocyanine 540 (MC-540), incorporated in monolayers of 1,2-dipalmitoyl-phosphatidylcholine (DPPC), and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine (POPC) were studied in different states of molecular packing. Conditions for phase separation in these monolayers were defined by their pressure/area (pi-A) isotherms. Within the liquid expanded (LE) and the liquid condensed (LC) coexisting phases of DPPC monolayers, low light level epifluorescence microscopy revealed 'dark' discoid domains embedded in a 'bright' matrix. Under the same conditions, and at temperatures as low as 12 degrees C, the pi-A isotherms of POPC demonstrate the existence of a single phase, and no fluorescent domains were observed. Fluorescence spectra of MC-540 labelled monolayers, recorded in different structural states, reveal three distinct emission peaks: a 572 nm peak, present for monolayer packing conditions at low surface pressures; a 585 nm peak, similar to that obtained from dye molecules in fluid phase lipid bilayers, and observed here within the respective area/molecule ranges of 54-62 A2 and 62-69 A2 for monolayers of DPPC and POPC with diminishing intensity at increasing surface pressure; and finally, a peak at 560 nm, which predominates in densely packed POPC monolayers. Our results are interpreted on the basis of dye partitioning between monolayer and subphase, and different orientations of the dye with respect to the monolayer in various structural states. The usefulness of MC-540 to differentiate lipid packing in cell membranes is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Increasing methylation of the headgroup in DPPE results in an increase of minimum area per molecule in highly compressed monolayers at the air-water interface. The shape of solid domains, as observed by epifluorescence microscopy, also exhibits marked changes upon increasing headgroup methylation. Branching domains are observed in DPPE and DP(Me)PE, whereas U-shaped or round domains are observed in DP(Me)2PE and DPPC under our experimental conditions. The domain shape is determined more by the headgroup methylatin than by the corresponding shift in critical temperatures, as shown by the study of PCs of different acyl chain moieties. In mixed lipid monolayers, PC (phosphatidylcholine) and PE (phosphatidylethanolamine) do not mix ideally, as indicated by the non-linear variation of the average area per molecule with composition, and by distinct domain shapes in LE/LC (liquid expanded/liquid condensed) coexisting phases representing PE-enriched or PC-enriched domains in those mixed monolayers.  相似文献   

15.
The distribution of low concentrations of ganglioside GM1 in L-alpha-dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and DPPC/cholesterol monolayers supported on mica has been studied using atomic force microscopy (AFM). The monolayers studied correspond to a pure gel phase and a mixture of liquid-expanded (LE) and liquid-condensed (LC) phases for DPPC and to a single homogeneous liquid-ordered phase for 2:1 DPPC/cholesterol. The addition of 2.5-5% GM1 to phase-separated DPPC monolayers resulted in small round ganglioside-rich microdomains in the center and at the edges of the LC domains. Higher amounts of GM1 (10%) give numerous filaments in the center of the LC domains and larger patches at the edges. A gel phase DPPC monolayer containing GM1 showed large domains containing a network of GM1-rich filaments. The addition of GM1 to a liquid-ordered 2:1 DPPC/cholesterol monolayer gives small, round domains that vary in size from 50 to 150 nm for a range of surface pressures. Larger amounts of GM1 lead to coalescence of the small, round domains to give longer filaments that cover 30-40% of the monolayer surface for 10 mol % GM1. The results indicate that biologically relevant GM1 concentrations lead to submicron-sized domains in a cholesterol-rich liquid-ordered phase that is analogous to that found in detergent-insoluble membrane fractions, and are thought to be important in membrane microdomains or rafts. This demonstrates that AFM studies of model monolayers and bilayers provide a powerful method for the direct detection of microdomains that are too small for study with most other techniques.  相似文献   

16.
Rapid adsorption of surfactant material to the air/liquid interface of the lung is essential for maintaining normal lung function. The detailed mechanism of this process, however, remains unclear. In this study, we elucidate the influence of lipid saturation grade and headgroup charge of surface layer lipids on surfactant protein (SP)-induced vesicle insertion into monolayers spread at the air/water interface of a film balance. We used dipalmitoylphosphatidlycholine (DPPC),1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoglycerol (DPPG), 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC), and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoglycerol (POPG) as monolayer lipids doped with either hydrophobic surfactant-specific protein SP-B or SP-C (0.2 and 0.4 mol %, respectively). Vesicles consisting of DPPC/DPPG (4:1, mol ratio) were injected into a stirred subphase to quantify adsorption kinetics. Based on kinetic film balance and fluorescence measurements, a refined model describing distinct steps of vesicle adsorption to surfactant monolayers is presented. First, in a protein-independent step, lipids from vesicles bridged to the interfacial film by Ca2+ ions are inserted into defects of a disordered monolayer at low surface pressures. Second, in a SP-facilitated step, active material insertion involving an SP-B- or SP-C-induced flip-flop of lipids occurs at higher surface pressures. Negatively charged lipids obviously influence the threshold pressures at which this second protein-mediated adsorption mechanism takes place.  相似文献   

17.
 Suspensions of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) bilayers containing 5, 10 or 20% (w/w) surfactant protein SP-B have been reconstituted and spread at air-liquid interfaces. Compression isotherms of DPPC/SP-B monolayers spread from these preparations were qualitatively comparable to the isotherms of the corresponding DPPC/SP-B monolayers spread from solvents. SP-B was squeezed-out at higher pressures from vesicle-spread films than from solvent-spread monolayers. SP-B caused a marked decrease on the rate of relaxation of DPPC collapse phases to equilibrium pressures in all the lipid/protein films assayed. This stabilizing effect was higher in vesicle-spread than in solvent-spread monolayers. Inclusion in the films of traces of the fluorescent probe NBD-PC (1 mol%) and use of a fluorescent derivative of SP-B labeled with a rhodamine derivative, Texas Red, allowed for direct observation of protein and lipid domains at the interface by epifluorescence microscopy. Upon compression, SP-B altered the packing of phospholipids in the bilayer-spread films, observed as a SP-B-induced reduction of the area of liquid-condensed domains, in a way similar to its effect in solvent-spread monolayers. SP-B was not associated with condensed regions of the films. Fluorescence images from vesicle-spread films showed discrete fluorescent aggregates that could be consistent with the existence of lipid-protein vesicles in close association with the monolayer. Both the retention of SP-B at higher surface pressures and the greater stability of collapse phases of DPPC/SP-B films prepared by spreading from liposomes in comparison to those spread from solvents can be interpreted as a consequence of formation of complex bilayer-monolayer interacting systems. Received: 1 December 1999 / Revised version: 2 March 2000 / Accepted: 2 March 2000  相似文献   

18.
Mixed monolayers of the surface-active lipopeptide surfactin-C(15) and various lipids differing by their chain length (DMPC, DPPC, DSPC) and polar headgroup (DPPC, DPPE, DPPS) were investigated by atomic force microscopy (AFM) in combination with molecular modeling (Hypermatrix procedure) and surface pressure-area isotherms. In the presence of surfactin, AFM topographic images showed phase separation for each surfactin-phospholipid system except for surfactin-DMPC, which was in good agreement with compression isotherms. On the basis of domain shape and line tension theory, we conclude that the miscibility between surfactin and phospholipids is higher for shorter chain lengths (DMPC>DPPC>DSPC) and that the polar headgroup of phospholipids influences the miscibility of surfactin in the order DPPC>DPPE>DPPS. Molecular modeling data show that mixing surfactin and DPPC has a destabilizing effect on DPPC monolayer while it has a stabilizing effect towards DPPE and DPPS molecular interactions. Our results provide valuable information on the activity mechanism of surfactin and may be useful for the design of surfactin delivery systems.  相似文献   

19.
Binary mixtures of cholesterol, ergosterol, and lanosterol with phosphatidylcholines differing in the length of the saturated acyl chains, viz 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC) and 1-palmitoyl-2-myristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DMPC), were analyzed using a Langmuir balance for recording force-area (pi-A) and surface potential-area (psi-A) isotherms. A progressive disappearance of the liquid expanded-liquid condensed transition was observed in mixed monolayers with DPPC after the increase in the content of all three sterols. For fluid DMPC matrix, no modulation of the monolayer phase behavior due to the sterols was evident with the exception of lanosterol, for which a pronounced discontinuity between mole fractions of X = 0.3 and X = 0.75 was discernible in the compression isotherms. Condensing and expanding effects in force-area (pi-A) isotherms due to varying X(sterols) and differences in the monolayer physical state were assessed from the values for the interfacial compression moduli. Surface potential measurements support the notion that cholesterol and ergosterol, but not lanosterol, reduce the penetration of water into the lipid monolayers. Examination of the excess free energy of mixing revealed an enhanced stability of binary monolayers containing cholesterol compared to those with ergosterol or lanosterol; the differences are emphasized in the range of surface pressure values found in natural membranes.  相似文献   

20.
Interactions of phospholipid monolayers with carbohydrates   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Surface pressure studies of phospholipid monomolecular films of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) formed at an air/water interface have been made and the effects on the films studied when various carbohydrates are present in the subphase. The results obtained show that at a given temperature, the area per molecule of DPPC increases with increasing concentration of the carbohydrate in the subphase. The carbohydrate which has the greatest expanding effect on the phospholipid monolayer is glycerol, followed in turn by trehalose, sucrose, glucose, raffinose, and inositol. The mechanism of monolayer expansion by glycerol is different from that observed in other carbohydrates, as the following experiments demonstrate. Below the phase transition temperature of DPPC, the area per molecule of DPPC at a pressure of 12.5 dyn/cm is the same with and without glycerol in the subphase. However, when the monolayer is heated to a temperature above the phase transition temperature for DPPC, the area/molecule on glycerol is considerably greater than the area/molecule on water at the same surface pressure. Cooling the monolayer back to the lower temperature produces an area/molecule of DPPC which is identical on both water and glycerol subphases. Glycerol therefore has no effect on the low-temperature (condensed) monolayers but causes expansion of the high-temperature (expanded) monolayers. By contrast with glycerol, both trehalose and sucrose interact with the DPPC monolayer producing an increased area/molecule over that observed on water, both with low-temperature (condensed) monolayers and with the high-temperature (expanded) monolayers. The efficiency of these carbohydrates at expanding the monolayer films (with the exception of glycerol) shows a strong correlation with their ability to stabilize membrane structure and function at low water contents.  相似文献   

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