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1.
Pharmacy-grade exogenous lung surfactant preparations of bovine and porcine origin, dispersed in physiological electrolyte solution have been studied. The organization and dynamics at the air/water interface at physiological temperature was analysed by neutron reflection. The results show that a well-defined surface phase is formed, consisting of a multilayer structure of lipid/protein bilayers alternating with aqueous layers, with a repetition period of about 70 A and correlation depths of 3 to >25 bilayers, depending on electrolyte composition and time. The experimental surfactant concentration of 0.15% (w/w) is far below that used in therapeutic application of exogenous surfactants and it is therefore likely that similar multilayer structures are also formed at the alveolar surface in the clinical situation during surfactant substitution therapy. Lung surfactant preparations in dry form swell in aqueous solution towards a limit of about 60% (w/w) of water, forming a lamellar liquid-crystalline phase above about 34 degrees C, which disperses into lamellar bodies at higher water concentrations. The lamellar spacings in the surface multilayers at the air/water interface are smaller than those in the saturated limit even though they are in contact with much greater water concentrations. The surface multilayers are laterally disordered in a way that is consistent with fragments of Lalpha-phase lamellae. The near surface layers of the multilayer structure have a significant protein content (only SP-B and SP-C are present in the preparations). The results demonstrate that a multilayer structure can be formed in exogenous surfactant even at very low concentrations and indicate that multilayers need to be incorporated into present interpretations of in vitro studies of similar lung surfactant preparations, which are largely based on monolayer models.  相似文献   

2.
Lamellar bodies were isolated from dexamethasone and T3-treated explant cultures of human fetal lung, using sucrose density-gradient centrifugation. We examined their content of surfactant apoprotein A (SP-A), and their ability to form surface films and to undergo structural transformation in vitro. SP-A measured by ELISA composed less than 2% of total protein within lamellar bodies; this represented, as a minimum estimate, a 2-12-fold enrichment over homogenate. One- and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis also suggested that SP-A was a minor protein component of lamellar bodies. Adsorption of lamellar bodies to an air/water interface was moderately rapid, but accelerated dramatically upon addition of exogenous SP-A in ratios of 1:2-16 (SP-A:phospholipid, w/w). Similar adsorption patterns were seen for lamellar bodies from fresh adult rat and rabbit lung. Lamellar bodies incubated under conditions that promote formation of tubular myelin underwent structural rearrangement only in the presence of exogenous SP-A, with extensive formation of multilamellate whorls of lipid bilayers (but no classical tubular myelin lattices). We conclude that lamellar bodies are enriched in SP-A, but have insufficient content of SP-A for structural transformation to tubular myelin and rapid surface film formation in vitro.  相似文献   

3.
The exact mechanism by which pulmonary surfactant films reach the very low surface tensions required to stabilize the alveoli at end expiration remains uncertain. We utilized the nanoscale sensitivity of atomic force microscopy (AFM) to examine phospholipid (PL) phase transition and multilayer formation for two Langmuir-Blodgett (LB) systems: a simple 3 PL surfactant-like mixture and the more complex bovine lipid extract surfactant (BLES). AFM height images demonstrated that both systems develop two types of liquid condensed (LC) domains (micro- and nano-sized) within a liquid expanded phase (LE). The 3 PL mixture failed to form significant multilayers at high surface pressure (π while BLES forms an extensive network of multilayer structures containing up to three bilayers. A close examination of the progression of multilayer formation reveals that multilayers start to form at the edge of the solid-like LC domains and also in the fluid-like LE phase. We used the elemental analysis capability of time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (ToF-SIMS) to show that multilayer structures are enriched in unsaturated PLs while the saturated PLs are concentrated in the remaining interfacial monolayer. This supports a modified squeeze-out model where film compression results in the hydrophobic surfactant protein-dependent formation of unsaturated PL-rich multilayers which remain functionally associated with a monolayer enriched in disaturated PL species. This allows the surface film to attain low surface tensions during compression and maintain values near equilibrium during expansion.  相似文献   

4.
Pulmonary surfactant (PS) is a surface active complex of lipids and proteins that prevents the alveolar structures from collapsing and reduces the work of breathing by lowering the surface tension at the alveolar air–liquid interface (ALI). Surfactant is synthesized by the alveolar type II (AT II) cells, and it is stored in specialized organelles, the lamellar bodies (LBs), as tightly packed lipid bilayers. Upon secretion into the alveolar lining fluid, a large fraction of these particles retain most of their packed lamellar structure, giving rise to the term lamellar body like-particles (LBPs). Due to their stability in aqueous media, freshly secreted LBPs can be harvested from AT II cell preparations. However, when LBPs get in contact with an ALI, they quickly and spontaneously adsorb into a highly organized surface film. In the present study we investigated the adsorptive capacity of LBPs at an ALI under relevant physiological parameters that characterize the alveolar environment in homeostatic or in pathological conditions. Adsorption of LBPs at an ALI is highly sensitive to pH, temperature and albumin concentration and to a relatively lesser extent to changes in osmolarity or Ca2 + concentrations in the physiological range. Furthermore, proteolysis of LBPs significantly decreases their adsorptive capacity confirming the important role of surfactant proteins in the formation of surface active films.  相似文献   

5.
Deuterium (2H) NMR has been used to observe perturbation of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) bilayers by the pulmonary surfactant protein B (SP-B) at concentrations up to 17% (w/w). Previous 2H NMR studies of DPPC/dipalmitoylphosphatidylglycerol (DPPG) (7:3) bilayers containing up to 11% (w/w) SP-B and DPPC bilayers containing up to 11% (w/w) synthetic SP-B indicated a slight effect on bilayer chain order and a more substantial effect on motions that contribute to decay of quadrupole echoes obtained from bilayers of deuterated DPPC. This is consistent with the perturbation of headgroup-deuterated DPPC reported here for bilayers containing 6 and 9% (w/w) SP-B. For the higher concentrations of SP-B investigated in the present work, 2H NMR spectra of DPPC deuterated in both the headgroup and chain display a prominent narrow component consistent with fast, large amplitude reorientation of some labeled lipid. Similar spectral perturbations have been reported for bilayers in the presence of the antibiotic polypeptide nisin. The observation of large amplitude lipid reorientation at high SP-B concentration could indicate that SP-B can induce regions of high bilayer curvature and thus provides some insight into local interaction of SP-B with DPPC. Such local interactions may be relevant to the formation, in vitro and in vivo, of tubular myelin, a unique structure found in extracellular pulmonary surfactant, and to the delivery of surfactant material to films at the air–water interface.Abbreviations DPPC 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine - DPPG 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoglycerol - DPPC-d62 1,2-perdeuterodipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine - DPPC-d4 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phospho-(, perdeutero)-choline  相似文献   

6.
We investigated the X-ray scattering signal of highly aligned multilayers of the zwitterionic lipid 1,2-dilauroyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine containing pores formed by the antimicrobial peptide gramicidin as a function of the peptide/lipid ratio. We are able to obtain information on the structure factor of the pore fluid, which then yields the interaction potential between pores in the plane of the bilayers. Aside from a hard core with a radius close to the geometric radius of the pore, we find a repulsive exponential lipid-mediated interaction with a decay length of 2.5 Å and an amplitude that decreases with the pore concentration, in agreement with the hydrophobic matching hypothesis. In dilute systems, the contact value of this interaction is about 30 kBT. Similar results are obtained for gramicidin pores inserted within bilayers formed by the nonionic surfactant pentaethylene glycol monododecyl ether.  相似文献   

7.
The pulmonary surfactant lines as a complex monolayer of lipids and proteins the alveolar epithelial surface. The monolayer dynamically adapts the surface tension of this interface to the varying surface areas during inhalation and exhalation. Its presence in the alveoli is thus a prerequisite for a proper lung function. The lipid moiety represents about 90% of the surfactant and contains mainly dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and phosphatidylglycerol (PG). The surfactant proteins involved in the surface tension adaption are called SP-A, SP-B and SP-C. The aim of the present investigation is to analyse the properties of monolayer films made from pure SP-C and from mixtures of DPPC, DPPG and SP-C in order to mimic the surfactant monolayer with minimal compositional requirement. Pressure-area diagrams were taken. Ellipsometric measurements at the air-water interface of a Langmuir film balance allowed measurement of the changes in monolayer thickness upon compression. Isotherms of pure SP-C monolayers exhibit a plateau between 22 and 25 mN/m. A further plateau is reached at higher compression. Structures of the monolayer formed during compression are reversible during expansion. Together with ellipsometric data which show a stepwise increase in film thickness (coverage) during compression, we conclude that pure SP-C films rearrange reversibly into multilayers of homogenous thickness.

Lipid monolayers collapse locally and irreversibly if films are compressed to approximately 0–4 nm2/molecule. In contrast, mixed DPPG/SP-C monolayers with less than 5 mol% protein collapse in a controlled and reversible way. The pressure-area diagrams exhibit a plateau at 20 mN/m, indicating partial demixing of SP-C and DPPG. The thickness isotherm obtained by ellipsometry indicates a transformation into multilayer structures. In DPPC/DPPG/SP-C mixtures again a reversible collapse was observed but without a drastic increase in surface layer thickness which may be due to the formation of protrusion under the surface. Thus lipid monolayers containing small amounts of SP-C may mimic the lung surfactant.  相似文献   

8.
A hydrophobic pulmonary surfactant protein, SP-C, has been implicated in surface-associated activities thought to facilitate the work of breathing. Model surfactant films composed of lipids and SP-C display a reversible transition from a monolayer to surface-associated multilayers upon compression and expansion at the air/water (A/W) interface. The molecular-level mechanics of this process are not yet fully understood. The current work uses atomic force microscopy on Langmuir–Blodgett films to verify the formation of multilayers in a dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine, dipalmitoylphosphatidylglycerol, cholesterol, and SP-C model system. Isotherms of SP-C-containing films are consistent with exclusion and essentially complete respreading during compression and expansion, respectively. Multilayer formation was not detected in the absence of SP-C. Most notable are the results from IR reflection–absorption spectroscopy (IRRAS) conducted at the A/W interface, where the position and intensity of the Amide I band of SP-C reveal that the predominantly helical structure changes its orientation in monolayers versus multilayers. IRRAS measurements indicate that the helix tilt angle changed from approximately 80° in monolayers to a transmembrane orientation in multilayers. The results constitute the first quantitative measure of helix orientation in mixed monolayer/multilamellar domains at the A/W interface and provide insight into the molecular mechanism for SP-C-facilitated respreading of surfactant.  相似文献   

9.
Surfactant protein C (SP-C) is known to be essential for lung function and the formation of a surface confined reservoir at the alveolar interface. The structural features relevant for the peptide’s extraordinary ability to form extended three-dimensional structures were systematically investigated and are summarized in the present paper. The influence of palmitoylation was studied for full length SP-Cs as well as truncated variants with the N-terminal residues 1–17 and 1–13, respectively. The combined results from film balance measurements, fluorescence microscopy (FLM) and scanning force microscopy (SFM) reveal a fine-tuned balance between the influence of the palmitoyl chains and α-helical length. Native SP-C added to DPPC/DPPG monolayers (molar ratio 80:20) induced the formation of the surface confined reservoir independent of its palmitoylation degree. However, topographic images revealed that only bilayers and not multilayers where formed when the acyl chains were missing. The influence of palmitoylation increased when α-helical length was considerably reduced to 17 or even 13 amino acid residues. In these strongly truncated SP-C peptides palmitoyl chains increased monolayer stability and anchored the peptides in the lipid film. However, no multilayer formation was observed at all for all shortened peptides. The α-helix of SP-C seems to be a prerequisite for the formation of extended three-dimensional structures and obviously has to be able to span a lipid bilayer. Palmitoylation obviously mediates interactions between lipids and/or peptides not only within a protein/lipid film but also between neighbouring layers and induces a stacking of bilayers. Dedicated to Prof. K. Arnold on the occasion of his 65th birthday.  相似文献   

10.
Pulmonary surfactant facilitates breathing by forming a surface tension reducing film at the air-liquid interface of the alveoli. The objective was to characterize the structure of surfactant films using endogenous rat surfactant. Solid-support surfactant films, at different surface pressures, were obtained using a Langmuir balance and were analyzed using atomic force microscopy. The results showed a lipid film structure with three distinct phases: liquid expanded, liquid ordered and liquid condensed. The area covered by the liquid condensed domains increased as surface pressure increased. The presence of liquid ordered phase within these structures correlated with the cholesterol content. At a surface pressure of 50 mN/m, stacks of bilayers appeared. Several structural details of these films differ from previous observations made with goat and exogenous surfactants. Overall, the data indicate that surfactant films demonstrate phase separation at low surface pressures and multilayer formation at higher pressure, features likely important for normal surfactant function.  相似文献   

11.
Interaction of antimicrobial peptides with lipopolysaccharides   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Ding L  Yang L  Weiss TM  Waring AJ  Lehrer RI  Huang HW 《Biochemistry》2003,42(42):12251-12259
We study the interaction of antimicrobial peptides with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) bilayers to understand how antimicrobial peptides interact with the LPS monolayer on the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria. LPS in water spontaneously forms a multilamellar structure composed of symmetric bilayers. We performed X-ray lamellar diffraction and wide-angle in-plane scattering to study the physical characteristics of LPS multilayers. The multilayer alignment of LPS is comparable to phospholipids. Thus, it is suitable for the application of oriented circular dichroism (OCD) to study the state of peptides in LPS bilayers. At high hydration levels, the chain melting temperature in multilamella detected by X-ray diffraction is the same as that of LPS aqueous dispersions, as measured by calorimetry. LPS has a strong CD, but with a careful subtraction of the lipid background, the OCD of peptides in LPS is measurable. The method was tested successfully with melittin. It was then applied to two representative antimicrobial peptides, magainin and protegrin. At peptide concentrations comparable to the physiological conditions, both peptides penetrate transmembrane in LPS bilayers. The results imply that antimicrobial peptides readily penetrate the LPS monolayer of the outer membrane.  相似文献   

12.
The interaction between a cationic polyelectrolyte, chitosan, and an exogenous bovine lung extract surfactant (BLES) was studied using dynamic compression/expansion cycles of dilute BLES preparations in a Constrained Sessile Drop (CSD) device equipped with an environmental chamber conditioned at 37 °C and 100% R.H. air. Under these conditions, dilute BLES preparations tend to produce variable and relatively high minimum surface tensions. Upon addition of “low” chitosan to BLES ratios, the minimum surface tension of BLES-chitosan preparations were consistently low (i.e. < 5 mJ/m2), and the resulting surfactant monolayers (adsorbed at the air-water interface) were highly elastic and stable. However, the use of “high” chitosan to BLES ratios induced the collapse of the surfactant monolayer at high minimum surface tensions (i.e. > 15 mJ/m2). The zeta potential of the lung surfactant aggregates in the subphase suggests that chitosan binds to the anionic lipids (phosphatidyl glycerols) in BLES, and that this binding is ultimately responsible for the changes in the surface activity (elasticity and stability) of these surfactant-polyelectrolyte mixtures. Furthermore the transition from “low” to “high” chitosan to BLES ratios correlates with the flocculation and de-flocculation of surfactant aggregates in the subphase. It is proposed that the aggregation/segregation of “patches” of anionic lipids in the surfactant monolayer produced at different chitosan to BLES ratios explains the enhancing/inhibitory effects of chitosan. These observations highlight the importance of electrostatic interactions in lung surfactant systems.  相似文献   

13.
Collapse of homogeneous lipid monolayers is known to proceed via wrinkling/buckling, followed by folding into bilayers in water. For heterogeneous monolayers with phase coexistence, the mechanism of collapse remains unclear. Here, we investigated collapse of lipid monolayers with coexisting liquid-liquid and liquid-solid domains using molecular dynamics simulations. The MARTINI coarse-grained model was employed to simulate monolayers of ∼80 nm in lateral dimension for 10–25 μs. The monolayer minimum surface tension decreased in the presence of solid domains, especially if they percolated. Liquid-ordered domains facilitated monolayer collapse due to the spontaneous curvature induced at a high cholesterol concentration. Upon collapse, bilayer folds formed in the liquid (disordered) phase; curved domains shifted the nucleation sites toward the phase boundary. The liquid (disordered) phase was preferentially transferred into bilayers, in agreement with the squeeze-out hypothesis. As a result, the composition and phase distribution were altered in the monolayer in equilibrium with bilayers compared to a flat monolayer at the same surface tension. The composition and phase behavior of the bilayers depended on the degree of monolayer compression. The monolayer-bilayer connection region was enriched in unsaturated lipids. Percolation of solid domains slowed down monolayer collapse by several orders of magnitude. These results are important for understanding the mechanism of two-to-three-dimensional transformations in heterogeneous thin films and the role of lateral organization in biological membranes. The study is directly relevant for the function of lung surfactant, and can explain the role of nanodomains in its surface activity and inhibition by an increased cholesterol concentration.  相似文献   

14.
The influence of cholesterol and POPE on lung surfactant model systems consisting of DPPC/DPPG (80:20) and DPPC/DPPG/surfactant protein C (80:20:0.4) has been investigated. Cholesterol leads to a condensation of the monolayers, whereas the isotherms of model lung surfactant films containing POPE exhibit a slight expansion combined with an increased compressibility at medium surface pressure (10-30 mN/m). An increasing amount of liquid-expanded domains can be visualized by means of fluorescence light microscopy in lung surfactant monolayers after addition of either cholesterol or POPE. At surface pressures of 50 mN/m, protrusions are formed which differ in size and shape as a function of the content of cholesterol or POPE, but only if SP-C is present. Low amounts of cholesterol (10 mol %) lead to an increasing number of protrusions, which also grow in size. This is interpreted as a stabilizing effect of cholesterol on bilayers formed underneath the monolayer. Extreme amounts of cholesterol (30 mol %), however, cause an increased monolayer rigidity, thus preventing reversible multilayer formation. In contrast, POPE, as a nonbilayer lipid thought to stabilize the edges of protrusions, leads to more narrow protrusions. The lateral extension of the protrusions is thereby more influenced than their height.  相似文献   

15.
Lung surfactant (LS) is an extra-cellular lipid-protein system responsible for maintaining low surface tension in the lung and alveolar stability. Serum proteins cause dysfunction of this material, e.g. in adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). BLES is a clinically used LS consisting of most of the lipids and associated proteins from bovine lung lavage. Aqueous phases of BLES at 30% and 70% hydration, with and without 5% by weight of bovine serum albumin (BSA), calculated on the amount of lipids, were studied using X-ray diffraction during cooling from 42 to 5 degrees C. The diffraction curves are consistent with a transition from a lamellar liquid crystalline phase to a gel phase transition at cooling in the interval 30-20 degrees C. The long-spacings correspond to a reduction of the bilayer thickness during this transition. The wide-angle region shows a peak at 4.1 A below 25 degrees C, which is characteristic of the hexagonal chain packing of the gel phase. The perturbation of the bilayers by the presence of BSA seems to induce a significant decrease of the bilayer thickness. Calculations on the observed limits of swelling (taking place in the range 50-60%) indicate that BSA is closely associated with the BLES bilayers, probably due to electrostatic interaction with the cationic surfactant proteins SP-B and SP-C. This study show that the LS lipid structural organizations are extremely susceptible to small amounts of serum albumin, which may have implications in surfactant related lung disease and clinical applications of surfactant therapy.  相似文献   

16.
Pulmonary surfactant is essential for lung function. It is assembled, stored and secreted as particulate entities (lamellar body-like particles; LBPs). LBPs disintegrate when they contact an air-liquid interface, leading to an instantaneous spreading of material and a decline in surface tension. Here, we demonstrate that the film formed by the adsorbed material spontaneously segregate into distinct ordered and disordered lipid phase regions under unprecedented near-physiological conditions and, unlike natural surfactant purified from bronchoalveolar lavages, dynamically reorganized into highly viscous multilayer domains with complex three-dimensional topographies. Multilayer domains, in coexistence with liquid phases, showed a progressive stiffening and finally solidification, probably driven by a self-driven disassembly of LBPs from a sub-surface compartment. We conclude that surface film formation from LBPs is a highly dynamic and complex process, leading to a more elaborated scenario than that observed and predicted by models using reconstituted, lavaged, or fractionated preparations.  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.
We compared the recoveries of foursurfactant preparations: two natural [term fetal rabbit surfactant(FRS) and adult rabbit surfactant (ARS)] and two commerciallyavailable preparations [apoprotein-based Survanta (S) and syntheticExosurf (E)] from 27-day gestation rabbit pups treated at birth andventilated up to 120 min. At 5, 60, and 120 min, we measured therecovery of the heavy-aggregate, metabolically active form (H) and thelight-aggregate, nonsurface active metabolic breakdown form (L) ofalveolar surfactant and determined the phospholipid content andcomposition of the intracellularly stored lamellar body (LB) pool. Pupstreated with FRS had <15% loss of H by 2 h. ARS-treated pups hada >50% loss of H by 1 h, and E- and S-treated pups had ~50%loss by 5 min, with a slower rate of continuing loss of up to 80% by2 h. The major losses of H phospholipid were not explained by theL-form recovery. LB phospholipid significantly increased only in the E-treated pups and only at 2 h. FRS provides a biologically active form (H) of surfactant that appeared to remain in the airway for asignificantly longer time than the other surfactant preparations. Theunique properties of FRS merit further study.

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19.
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   

20.
Five non-ionic dialkylglycerol poly(oxyethylene) ether surfactants, designated 2CmEn (where m, the number of carbons in each alkyl chain = 16 or 18, and n, the number of oxyethylene units = 12, 16 or 17) have been examined for their ability to form vesicles when dispersed in water or in an aqueous solution of 154 mM NaCl, alone or in the presence of 50 mol% cholesterol. Freeze fracture electron microscopy and light scattering showed that regardless of the hydrating fluid, all the non-ionic surfactants, with the exception of 2C16E17 and 2C18E17, formed vesicles in the absence of cholesterol – 2C16E17 and 2C18E17 instead formed micellar aggregates. All surfactants, however, formed vesicles in the presence of 50 mol% cholesterol. Small angle neutron scattering studies of the surfactant vesicles enabled the bilayer thickness and repeat distance (d-spacing) to be determined. The bilayers formed by all the non-ionic surfactants in the absence of cholesterol were surprisingly thin (∼50 Å for the E12 containing surfactants and ∼64 Å for 2C18E16) most likely due to the intrusion of oxyethylene groups into the hydrophobic core of the bilayers. In contrast, however, the non-ionic surfactants exhibited a relatively large d-spacing of around ∼130–150 Å. The addition of 50 mol% cholesterol had a dramatic effect on the thickness of the vesicle bilayer, increasing its size by 10–20 Å, most probably because of an extrusion of oxyethylene from the hydrophobic region of the bilayer and/or a reduction in the tilt on the surfactant alkyl chains. Additionally the presence of cholesterol in a vesicle tended to reduce slightly both the d-spacing and the thickness of the water layer separating the bilayers. The presence of NaCl, even at the low concentrations used in the study, did affect the properties of the bilayer such that it reduced the d-spacing and, in the case of cholesterol-containing systems, also reduced bilayer thickness.  相似文献   

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