Abstract: | Studies by a number of workers using the Langmuir film balance have shown that when carbohydrates, such as sucrose or glycerol, are dissolved in a subphase on which a phospholipid is spread, film expansion occurs (Cadenhead & Demchak, 1969; Cadenhead & Bean, 1972; Maggio et al., 1976; Maggio & Lucy, 1978). Recently such effects have been observed again, particularly with the carbohydrates galactose and trehalose (Johnston et al., 1984). The origin of these film expansions was uncertain, and various suggestions have been made to explain them. One idea was that they might be due to interactions which these carbohydrates have with the water molecules close to the polar head groups of the lipids. Recent studies in our two laboratories, described here, show that the magnitude of the expansion effects is variable and that in general they arise from surfactant impurities in the sugars. These impurities are observed in carbohydrates which are reputedly of high grade; the amount of impurity present can vary from batch to batch, and sometimes they can be difficult to remove. Film balance techniques or subphase preparation can mask the detection of minor impurities. The presence of surfactant impurities in reputedly pure carbohydrates needs to be considered in other biochemical and biophysical studies of lipids and cell membranes. |