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1.
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 approximately 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 ( approximately 0 mN m(-1) vs. approximately 7.5 mN m(-1) at 120 A(2), 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 A(2)), 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   

2.
Langmuir-Blodgett (LB) films of two heteroacid phospholipids of biological interest 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (POPE) and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC), as well as a mixed monolayer with χPOPC = 0.4, were transferred onto mica in order to investigate by a combination of atomic force microscopy (AFM) and force spectroscopy (FS) their height, and particularly, their nanomechanical properties. AFM images of such monolayers extracted at 30 mN m− 1 revealed a smooth and defect-free topography except for the POPE monolayer. Since scratching such soft monolayers in contact mode was proved unsuccessful, their molecular height was measured by means of the width of the jump present in the respective force-extension curves. While for pure POPC a small jump occurs near zero force, for the mixed monolayer with χPOPC = 0.4 the jump occurs at ∼ 800 pN. Widths of ∼ 2 nm could be established for POPC and χPOPC = 0.4, but not for POPE monolayer at this extracting pressure. Such different mechanical stability allowed us to directly measure the threshold area/lipid range value needed to induce mechanical stability to the monolayers. AFM imaging and FS were next applied to get further structural and mechanical insight into the POPE phase transition (LC-LC′) occurring at pressures > 36.5 mN m− 1. This phase transition was intimately related to a sudden decrease in the area/molecule value, resulting in a jump in the force curve occurring at high force (∼ 1.72 nN). FS reveals to be the unique experimental technique able to unveil structural and nanomechanical properties for such soft phospholipid monolayers. The biological implications of the nanomechanical properties of the systems under investigation are discussed considering that the annular phospholipids region of some transmembrane proteins is enriched in POPE.  相似文献   

3.
The structures of films of pulmonary surfactant protein B (SP-B) and mixtures of SP-B and dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) at the air/water interface have been studied by neutron reflectometry and Langmuir film balance methods. From the film balance studies, we observe that the isotherms of pure DPPC and SP-B/DPPC mixtures very nearly overlay one another at very high pressures, suggesting that the SP-B is being excluded from the film. The use of multiple contrasts with neutron reflectometry at a range of surface pressures has enabled the mixing and squeeze out of the DPPC and SP-B mixtures to be studied. We can identify the SP-B component of the interfacial structure and its position as a function of surface pressure. The mixtures are initially a homogeneous layer at low surface pressures. At higher surface pressures, the SP-B is squeezed out of the lipid layer into the subphase, with the first signs detected at 30 mN m−1. At 50 mN m−1, the subphase is almost completely excluded from the DPPC layer, with the SP-B content significantly reduced. Only a small amount of DPPC appears to be associated with the squeezed out SP-B.  相似文献   

4.
Surface tensiometry and vibrational sum-frequency spectroscopy were used to examine the structure and organization in phospholipid monolayers at the aqueous/vapor interface in the absence and in the presence of simple, charged surfactants. 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC) was the phospholipid employed in these studies and surfactants included sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and dodecyl trimethyl ammonium bromide (DTAB). DPPC spontaneously spreads on a pure water (pH = 5.5) surface to form monolayers as evidenced by an equilibrium spreading pressure (ESP) of 7.9 ± 2.3 mN/m and a clearly resolved vibrational spectrum. Low concentrations of surfactants inhibit the spreading of DPPC and result in significantly lower ESP values. Anionic and cationic surfactants at higher concentrations have opposite effects on monolayer organization; SDS creates well-organized monolayers while DTAB leads to poor organization of lipid molecules. Surface-specific vibrational spectra showed that high concentrations of charged surfactants (≥ 100 µM) lead to accumulation of net surface charges as evidenced by destructive and constructive interferences. Selectively deuterating surfactants results in changes in vibrational band intensities and phases enabling assignment of relative orientations of equivalent functional groups belonging to the lipid and surfactant.  相似文献   

5.
The interactions between a model phospholipid 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC) and a biosurfactant Quillaja Bark Saponin (QBS) obtained from the bark of Quillaja saponaria Molina were studied using simple models of biological membranes. QBS is known to interact strongly with the latter, exerting a number of haemolytic, cytotoxic and anti-microbial actions. The interaction of QBS dissolved in the subphase with DPPC monolayers and silicon-supported bilayers was studied above the cmc (10− 3 M). Surface pressure relaxation and surface dilatational rheology combined with quartz crystal microbalance (QCM) and neutron reflectivity (NR) were employed for this purpose. The DPPC-penetrating abilities of QBS are compared with those of typical synthetic surfactants (SDS, CTAB and Triton X-100). We show that the penetration studies using high surface activity (bio)surfactants should be performed by a subphase exchange, not by spreading onto the surfactant solution. In contrast to the synthetic surfactants of similar surface activity, QBS does not collapse DPPC mono- and bilayers, but penetrates them, improving their surface dilatational elastic properties even in the highly compressed solid state. The dilatational viscoelasticity modulus increases from 204 mN/m for pure DPPC up to 310 mN/m for the QBS-penetrated layers, while it drops to near zero values in the case of the synthetic surfactants. The estimated maximum insertion pressure of QBS into DPPC monolayers exceeds the maximum surface pressure achievable in our setup, in agreement with the surface rheological response of the penetrated layers.  相似文献   

6.
The dependence of 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC) flip-flop kinetics on the lateral membrane pressure in a phospholipid bilayer was investigated by sum-frequency vibrational spectroscopy. Planar-supported lipid bilayers were prepared on fused silica supports using the Langmuir-Blodgett/Langmuir-Schaeffer technique, which allows precise control over the lateral surface pressure and packing density of the membrane. The lipid bilayer deposition pressure was varied from 28 to 42 mN/m. The kinetics of lipid flip-flop in these membranes was measured by sum-frequency vibrational spectroscopy at 37°C. An order-of-magnitude difference in the rate constant for lipid translocation (10.9 × 10−4 s−1 to 1.03 × 10−4 s−1) was measured for membranes prepared at 28 mN/m and 42 mN/m, respectively. This change in rate results from only a 7.4% change in the packing density of the lipids in the bilayer. From the observed kinetics, the area of activation for native phospholipid flip-flop in a protein-free DPPC planar-supported lipid bilayer was determined to be 73 ± 12 Å2/molecule at 37°C. Significance of the observed activation area and potential future applications of the technique to the study of phospholipid flip-flop are discussed.  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.
Lhert F  Yan W  Biswas SC  Hall SB 《Biophysical journal》2007,93(12):4237-4243
To determine if hydrophobic surfactant proteins affect the stability of pulmonary surfactant monolayers at an air/water interface, the studies reported here compared the kinetics of collapse for the complete set of lipids in calf surfactant with and without the proteins. Monomolecular films spread at the surface of captive bubbles were compressed at 37°C to surface pressures above 46 mN/m, at which collapse first occurred. The rate of area-compression required to maintain a constant surface pressure was measured to directly determine the rate of collapse. For films with and without the proteins, higher surface pressures initially produced faster collapse, but the rates then reached a maximum and decreased to values <0.04 min−1 above 53 mN/m. The maximum rate for the lipids with the proteins (1.22 ± 0.28 min−1) was almost twice the value for the lipids alone (0.71 ± 0.15 min−1). Because small increments in surface pressure produced large shifts in the rate close to the fastest collapse, compressions at a series of constant speeds also established the threshold rate required to achieve high surface pressure as an indirect indication of the fastest collapse. Both samples produced a sharply defined threshold that occurred at slightly faster compression with the proteins present, supporting the conclusion of the direct measurements that the proteins produce a faster maximum rate of collapse. Our results indicate that at 47-53 mN/m, the hydrophobic surfactant proteins destabilize the compressed monolayers and tend to limit access to the higher surface pressures at which the lipid films become metastable.  相似文献   

9.
Fluxes of oxygen, inorganic nitrogen (DIN) and denitrification (isotope pairing) were measured from January 1997 to February 1998 via intact cores incubation in a shallow brackish area within the eutrophic Valli di Comacchio (northern Adriatic coast, Italy). Rates were measured in the light and in the dark in sediments colonized by the rooted macrophyte Ruppia cirrhosa and in adjacent sediments with benthic microalgae. Ruppia biomass (25-414 g DW m− 2) exhibited a seasonal evolution whilst that of microphytobenthos (12-66 mg chl a m− 2) was more erratic. Net (NP) and gross (GP) primary productivity was 1.15 and 6.89 mol C m− 2y− 1 for bare and 25.4 and 51.7 mol C m− 2y− 1 for Ruppia vegetated sediments. Nitrogen pools in Ruppia standing stock varied from 43.6 to 631.4 (annual average 201.2) mmol N m− 2; the macrophyte N content was correlated with DIN concentration in the water column. Estimated N pool in microphytobenthos was one order of magnitude lower (from 2.4 to 14.5 mmol N m− 2, annual average 7.2). Theoretical DIN assimilation calculated from NP was 127.8 and 1112.6 mmol N m− 2y− 1 whilst that calculated from GP was 765 and 2282 mmol N m− 2y− 1 for microphytobenthos and Ruppia respectively. Measured annual fluxes of DIN were 974.6 and − 577 mmol N m− 2y− 1 in bare and Ruppia vegetated sediments meaning that the two sites were a source and sink for DIN and that from 25 to 50% of Ruppia annual DIN requirements came from the water column. During the period of this study total denitrification was lower in the macrophyte colonized (92.3 mmol N m− 2y− 1) compared to bare sediments (163.3 mmol N m− 2y− 1) as a probable consequence of higher competition between denitrifiers and phanerogams. At both sites the ratio between denitrification of water column nitrate (DW) and denitrification coupled to nitrification (DN) was >1.6 due to little oxygen penetration in reducing sediments (< 1.2 mm) and scarce nitrification activity. DW (0-35 µmol N m− 2h− 1) was significantly correlated with water column NO3−  (2-16 µM). Theoretical DIN assimilation to denitrification ratio varied from 12.0 to 24.8 for Ruppia vegetated and from 0.8 to 4.7 for unvegetated sediments.At Valle Smarlacca, Ruppia may influence nitrogen cycling by incorporating large DIN pools in biomass which is scattered in surrounding areas and fuels intense bacterial activity. With increasing anthropogenic nutrient input and insignificant organic matter export in the open sea the already severe eutrophic conditions are enhanced and may accelerate the decline of the macrophyte meadow.  相似文献   

10.
The feasibility of applying multiphoton excitation fluorescence microscopy-related techniques in planar membrane systems, such as lipid monolayers at the air-water interface (named Langmuir films), is presented and discussed in this paper. The non-linear fluorescence microscopy approach, allows obtaining spatially and temporally resolved information by exploiting the fluorescent properties of particular fluorescence probes. For instance, the use of environmental sensitive probes, such as LAURDAN, allows performing measurements using the LAURDAN generalized polarization function that in turn is sensitive to the local lipid packing in the membrane. The fact that LAURDAN exhibit homogeneous distribution in monolayers, particularly in systems displaying domain coexistence, overcomes a general problem observed when “classical” fluorescence probes are used to label Langmuir films, i.e. the inability to obtain simultaneous information from the two coexisting membrane regions. Also, the well described photoselection effect caused by excitation light on LAURDAN allows: (i) to qualitative infer tilting information of the monolayer when liquid condensed phases are present and (ii) to provide high contrast to visualize 3D membranous structures at the film's collapse pressure. In the last case, computation of the LAURDAN GP function provides information about lipid packing in these 3D structures. Additionally, LAURDAN GP values upon compression in monolayers were compared with those obtained in compositionally similar planar bilayer systems. At similar GP values we found, for both DOPC and DPPC, a correspondence between the molecular areas reported in monolayers and bilayers. This correspondence occurs when the lateral pressure of the monolayer is 26 ± 2 mN/m and 28 ± 3 mN/m for DOPC and DPPC, respectively.  相似文献   

11.
An early step in the morphogenesis of the double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) bacteriophage HK97 is the assembly of a precursor shell (prohead I) from 420 copies of a 384-residue subunit (gp5). Although formation of prohead I requires direct participation of gp5 residues 2-103 (Δ-domain), this domain is eliminated by viral protease prior to subsequent shell maturation and DNA packaging. The prohead I Δ-domain is thought to resemble a phage scaffolding protein, by virtue of its highly α-helical secondary structure and a tertiary fold that projects inward from the interior surface of the shell. Here, we employ factor analysis of temperature-dependent Raman spectra to characterize the thermostability of the Δ-domain secondary structure and to quantify the thermodynamic parameters of Δ-domain unfolding. The results are compared for the Δ-domain within the prohead I architecture (in situ) and for a recombinantly expressed 111-residue peptide (in vitro). We find that the α-helicity (∼ 70%), median melting temperature (Tm = 58 °C), enthalpy (ΔHm = 50 ± 5 kcal mol− 1), entropy (ΔSm = 150 ± 10 cal mol− 1 K− 1), and average cooperative melting unit (〈nc〉 ∼ 3.5) of the in situ Δ-domain are altered in vitro, indicating specific interdomain interactions within prohead I. Thus, the in vitro Δ-domain, despite an enhanced helical secondary structure (∼ 90% α-helix), exhibits diminished thermostability (Tm = 40 °C; ΔHm = 27 ± 2 kcal mol− 1; ΔSm = 86 ± 6 cal mol− 1 K− 1) and noncooperative unfolding (〈nc〉 ∼ 1) vis-à-vis the in situ Δ-domain. Temperature-dependent Raman markers of subunit side chains, particularly those of Phe and Trp residues, also confirm different local interactions for the in situ and in vitro Δ-domains. The present results clarify the key role of the gp5 Δ-domain in prohead I architecture by providing direct evidence of domain structure stabilization and interdomain interactions within the assembled shell.  相似文献   

12.
The interactions between a drug and lipids may be critical for the pharmacological activity. We previously showed that the ability of a fluoroquinolone antibiotic, ciprofloxacin, to induce disorder and modify the orientation of the acyl chains is related to its propensity to be expelled from a monolayer upon compression [1]. Here, we compared the binding of ciprofloxacin on DPPC and DPPG liposomes (or mixtures of phospholipids [DOPC:DPPC], and [DOPC:DPPG]) using quasi-elastic light scattering and steady-state fluorescence anisotropy. We also investigated ciprofloxacin effects on the transition temperature (Tm) of lipids and on the mobility of phosphate head groups using Attenuated Total Reflection Fourier Transform Infrared-Red Spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR) and 31P Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) respectively. In the presence of ciprofloxacin we observed a dose-dependent increase of the size of the DPPG liposomes whereas no effect was evidenced for DPPC liposomes. The binding constants Kapp were in the order of 105 M− 1 and the affinity appeared dependent on the negative charge of liposomes: DPPG > DOPC:DPPG (1:1; M:M) > DPPC > DOPC:DPPC (1:1; M:M). As compared to the control samples, the chemical shift anisotropy (Δσ) values determined by 31P NMR showed an increase of 5 and 9 ppm for DPPC:CIP (1:1; M:M) and DPPG:CIP (1:1; M:M) respectively. ATR-FTIR experiments showed that ciprofloxacin had no effect on the Tm of DPPC but increased the order of the acyl chains both below and above this temperature. In contrast, with DPPG, ciprofloxacin induced a marked broadening effect on the transition with a decrease of the acyl chain order below its Tm and an increase above this temperature. Altogether with the results from the conformational analysis, these data demonstrated that the interactions of ciprofloxacin with lipids depend markedly on the nature of their phosphate head groups and that ciprofloxacin interacts preferentially with anionic lipid compounds, like phosphatidylglycerol, present at a high content in these membranes.  相似文献   

13.
Mixed monolayers of the ganglioside GM1 and the lipid dipalmitoylphosphatidlycholine (DPPC) at air-water and solid-air interfaces were investigated using various biophysical techniques to ascertain the location and phase behavior of the ganglioside molecules in a mixed membrane. The effects induced by GM1 on the mean molecular area of the binary mixtures and the phase behavior of DPPC were followed for GM1 concentrations ranging from 5 to 70 mol %. Surface pressure isotherms and fluorescence microscopy imaging of domain formation indicate that at low concentrations of GM1 (<25 mol %), the monolayer becomes continually more condensed than DPPC upon further addition of ganglioside. At higher GM1 concentrations (>25 mol %), the mixed monolayer becomes more expanded or fluid-like. After deposition onto a solid substrate, atomic force microscopy imaging of these lipid monolayers showed that GM1 and DPPC pack cooperatively in the condensed phase domain to form geometrically packed complexes that are more ordered than either individual component as evidenced by a more extended total height of the complex arising from a well-packed hydrocarbon tail region. Grazing incidence x-ray diffraction on the DPPC/GM1 binary mixture provides evidence that ordering can emerge when two otherwise fluid components are mixed together. The addition of GM1 to DPPC gives rise to a unit cell that differs from that of a pure DPPC monolayer. To determine the region of the GM1 molecule that interacts with the DPPC molecule and causes condensation and subsequent expansion of the monolayer, surface pressure isotherms were obtained with molecules modeling the backbone or headgroup portions of the GM1 molecule. The observed concentration-dependent condensing and fluidizing effects are specific to the rigid, sugar headgroup portion of the GM1 molecule.  相似文献   

14.
The aim of this study was to compare modulation of paclitaxel penetration in cancerous and normal cervical monolayers by four fluidizing agents: PCPG (9:1 DPPC:PG), PCPE (9:1 DPPC:DOPE), ALEC (7:3 DPPC:PG) and Exosurf (13.5:1.5:1.0 DPPC:hexadecanol:tyloxapol). Presence of the fluidizing agents improved drug penetration significantly. PCPG and PCPE were promising penetration enhancers. PCPG 0.1% caused 3.8– and 1.7-fold higher maximum increments in surface pressure due to drug penetration, (Δπ)max, than the control in cancerous and normal monolayers, respectively, at 20 mN/m. In cancerous monolayer at 20 mN/m, presence of 0.1%, 0.5%, 1%, 5% and 10% PCPE produced 3.4-, 5.7-, 7.4-, 9.6- and 9.8-fold higher drug penetration compared to the control monolayer without PCPE, respectively. In cancerous monolayer at 20 mN/m, PCPG and PCPE liposomes having 1 mg lipid gave 2.1 and 3.6 times higher (Δπ)max compared to the control, respectively. Further, the liposomal drug penetration was found to be directly proportional to the liposomal lipid content. The effect of the fluidizing agents was confirmed by increased calcein release from model cervical cancer liposomes. These results may have implications in using the above biocompatible lipids and surfactants as penetration enhancers along with anticancer drugs or as carriers for liposomal formulations of anticancer drugs for improved membrane penetration.  相似文献   

15.
This work comprises a structural and dynamical study of monolayers and bilayers composed of native pulmonary surfactant from mice. Spatially resolved information was obtained using fluorescence (confocal, wide field and two photon excitation) and atomic force microscopy methods. Lipid mass spectrometry experiments were also performed in order to obtain relevant information on the lipid composition of this material. Bilayers composed of mice pulmonary surfactant showed coexistence of distinct domains at room temperature, with morphologies and lateral packing resembling the coexistence of liquid ordered (lo)/liquid disordered (ld)-like phases reported previously in porcine lung surfactant. Interestingly, the molar ratio of saturated (mostly DPPC)/non-saturated phospholipid species and cholesterol measured in the innate material corresponds with that of a DOPC/DPPC/cholesterol mixture showing lo/ld phase coexistence at a similar temperature. This suggests that at quasi-equilibrium conditions, key lipid classes in this complex biological material are still able to produce the same scaffold observed in relevant but simpler model lipid mixtures. Also, robust structural and dynamical similarities between mono- and bi-layers composed of mice pulmonary surfactant were observed when the monolayers reach a surface pressure of 30 mN/m. This value is in line with theoretically predicted and recently measured surface pressures, where the monolayer–bilayer equivalence occurs in samples composed of single phospholipids. Finally, squeezed out material attached to pulmonary surfactant monolayers was observed at surface pressures near the beginning of the monolayer reversible exclusion plateau (~ 40 mN/m). Under these conditions this material adopts elongated tubular shapes and displays ordered lateral packing as indicated by spatially resolved LAURDAN GP measurements.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
Water dispersions of TEMPO-oxidized α-chitin nanowhisker (TOChN), partially deacetylated α-chitin nanowhisker/nanofiber mixture (DEChN), HCl-hydrolyzed chitin nanowhisker (HHChN) and squid-pen β-chitin nanofiber (SQChN) were prepared, and the properties of nano-dispersions and their cast films were characterized between the four chitin nano-samples. Because SQChN has the highest aspect ratio, its 0.1% dispersion had the highest shear stress and viscosity at the same shear rate in the four chitin nano-samples, and showed gel-like behavior in the whole shear rate range from 10−3 to 103 s−1. AFM images of the self-standing films showed that film surfaces consisted of characteristic chitin nano-elements with different morphologies and degrees of orientation between the four chitin samples, whereas all chitin nanowhisker/nanofiber films had similar thermal degradation points at ∼200 °C. The DEChN film had the highest tensile strength of ∼140 MPa, elongation at break of ∼10% and light-transmittance of 87% at 400 nm. In contrast, the SQChN film had the lowest tensile strength, Young's modulus and light-transmittance. All chitin nanowhisker/nanofiber films had similar oxygen permeabilities of ∼1 mL μm m−2 day−1 kPa−1, which was clearly lower than that (184 mL μm m−2 day−1 kPa−1) of a poly(lactic acid) film.  相似文献   

18.
The interaction between a peptide sequence from GB virus C E1 protein (E1P8) and its structural analogs (E1P8-12), (E1P8-13), and (E1P8-21) with anionic lipid membranes (POPG vesicles and POPG, DPPG or DPPC/DPPG (2:1) monolayers) and their association with HIV-1 fusion peptide (HIV-1 FP) inhibition at the membrane level were studied using biophysical methods. All peptides showed surface activity but leakage experiments in vesicles as well as insertion kinetics in monolayers and lipid/peptide miscibility indicated a low level of interaction: neither E1P8 nor its analogs induced the release of vesicular content and the exclusion pressure values (πe) were clearly lower than the biological membrane pressure (24–30 mN m 1) and the HIV-1 FP (35 mN m 1). Miscibility was elucidated in terms of the additivity rule and excess free energy of mixing (GE). E1P8, E1P8-12 and E1P8-21 (but not E1P8-13) induced expansion of the POPG monolayer. The mixing process is not thermodynamically favored as the positive GE values indicate. To determine how E1 peptides interfere in the action of HIV-1 FP at the membrane level, mixed monolayers of HIV-1 FP/E1 peptides (2:1) and POPG were obtained. E1P8 and its derivative E1P8-21 showed the greatest HIV-1 FP inhibition. The LC-LE phase lipid behavior was morphologically examined via fluorescence microscopy (FM) and atomic force microscopy (AFM). Images revealed that the E1 peptides modify HIV-1 FP–lipid interaction. This fact may be attributed to a peptide/peptide interaction as indicated by AFM results. Finally, hemolysis assay demonstrated that E1 peptides inhibit HIV-1 FP activity.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Our study highlights the tight relationship between protein binding to monolayers and the phase-state of the phospholipids. Interaction of mitochondrial creatine kinase with phospholipidic membranes was analysed using a two-phase monolayer system containing anionic phospholipids under chain mismatch conditions. Monolayers were made up of mixtures of DMPC/DPPG or DPPC/DMPG containing 40% negatively charged phospholipids which is approximately the negative charge content of the mitochondrial inner membrane. Langmuir isotherms of these monolayers showed that they underwent a phase transition from a liquid expanded state to a liquid-condensed phase at about 2 mN/m and 5 mN/m respectively. Interface morphology modifications caused by injection of mtCK under these monolayers at low or high surface pressure were monitored by Brewster angle microscopy. This work provides evidence that the presence at the air/water interface of discrete domains with increased charge density, may lead to difference in partition of soluble proteins such as mtCK, interacting with the lipid monolayer. Conversely these proteins may help to organize charged phospholipid domains in a membrane.  相似文献   

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