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1.
An ion pair amphiphile (IPA), hexadecyltrimethylammonium-dodecylsulfate (HTMA-DS), and a double-chained cationic surfactant, dimethyldimyristylammonium bromide (DTDAB), could form positively charged catanionic vesicles with a potential application in gene delivery. To improve the gene delivery efficiency, the addition of CaCl2 into cationic liposomal systems has been proposed in the literature. In this study, detrimental effect of calcium chloride on the physical stability of the positively charged HTMA-DS/DTDAB catanionic vesicles was demonstrated by the size and zeta potential analyses of the vesicles. It was noted that the reduced electrostatic interaction between the catanionic vesicles could not fully explain the lowered physical stability of the vesicles in the presence of CaCl2. Apparently, the molecular packing/interaction in the vesicular bilayers played an important role in the vesicle physical stability. To modify the molecular packing/interaction in the vesicular bilayers, cholesterol was adopted as an additive to form catanionic vesicles with HTMA-DS/DTDAB. It was found that the physical stability of the catanionic vesicles was significantly improved with the presence of cholesterol in the vesicular bilayers even in the presence of 50 mM CaCl2. An infrared analysis suggested that with the incorporation of cholesterol into HTMA-DS/DTDAB vesicular bilayers, the alkyl chain motion was enhanced, and the molecular packing became less ordered. The cholesterol-induced fluidic bilayer characteristic allowed the vesicular bilayers to be adjusted to a stable status, resulting in improved physical stability of the catanionic vesicles even in the presence of CaCl2 with a high concentration.  相似文献   

2.
The physical stability of catanionic vesicles is important for the development of novel drug or DNA carriers. For investigating the mechanism by which catanionic vesicles are stabilized, molecular dynamics (MD) simulation is an attractive approach that provides microscopic structural information on the vesicular bilayer. In this study, MD simulation was applied to investigate the bilayer properties of catanionic vesicles composed of an ion pair amphiphile (IPA), hexadecyltrimethylammonium-dodecylsulfate (HTMA-DS), and a double-tailed cationic surfactant, ditetradecyldimethylammonium chloride (DTDAC). Structural information regarding membrane elasticity and the organization and conformation of surfactant molecules was obtained based on the resulting trajectory. Simulation results showed that a proper amount of DTDAC could be used to complement the asymmetric structure between HTMA and DS, resulting in an ordered hydrocarbon chain packing within the rigid membrane observed in the mixed HTMA-DS/DTDAC system. The coexistence of gel and fluid phases was also observed in the presence of excess DTDAC. MD simulation results agreed well with results obtained from experimental studies examining mixed HTMA-DS/DTDAB vesicles.  相似文献   

3.
The spread or Langmuir monolayer behavior of an ion pair amphiphile (IPA), hexadecyltrimethylammonium-dodecylsulfate (HTMA-DS), with a double-tailed cationic surfactant, dihexadecyldimethylammonium bromide (DHDAB), at the air/water interface was analyzed with surface pressure-area isotherms, area relaxation curves, and Brewster angle microscope (BAM) images. The surface pressure-area isotherms showed that with increasing the DHDAB molar ratio, X(DHDAB), spread monolayers of HTMA-DS with DHDAB became rigid. In addition, unreasonably small limiting areas per alkyl chain of the molecules in the monolayers were found, especially at X(DHDAB)=0.5, implying the molecular loss from the monolayers at the interface. For spread HTMA-DS/DHDAB monolayers at the interface, a new IPA, DHDA-DS, was proposed to form through the displacement of HTMA(+) from HTMA-DS by DHDA(+), leaving HTMA(+) dissociated. The formation of DHDA-DS and the desorption of dissociated HTMA(+) upon the interface compression were supported by the results obtained from designed monolayer experiments with BAM observations, and were discussed by considering the hydrophilicity, packing efficiency, and headgroup charge characteristic of the species. Moreover, the area relaxation curves of spread HTMA-DS/DHDAB monolayers suggested that the formation of DHDA-DS was strongly related to the improved monolayer stability at the interface, which may have implications for the DHDAB-enhanced physical stability of catanionic vesicles composed of HTMA-DS.  相似文献   

4.
The aggregation behaviors of the cationic and anionic (catanionic) surfactant vesicles formed by didodecyldimethylammonium bromide (DDAB)/sodium bis(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate (NaDEHP) in the absence and presence of a negatively charged polyelectrolyte are investigated. The amount of the charge on the vesicle can be tuned by controlling the DDAB/NaDEHP surfactant molar ratio. The charged vesicular dispersions made of DDAB/NaDEHP are mixed with a negatively charged polyelectrolyte, poly(4-styrenesulfonic acid-co-maleic acid) sodium (PSSAMA), to form complexes. Depending on the polyelectrolyte/vesicle charge ratio, complex flocculation or precipitation occurs. Characterization of the catanionic vesicles and the complexes are performed by transmission electron microscope (TEM), Cryo-TEM, dynamic light scattering (DLS), conductivity, turbidity, zeta potential, isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) and small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) measurements.  相似文献   

5.
Dilute dispersions of the synthetic bilayer forming double-chained cationic lipid dioctadecyldimethylammonium bromide (DODAB) were investigated. In dispersions sonicated above the chain melting temperature Tm (approximately 45 degrees C) it was found by H NMR that about 50% of the surfactant chains remained fluid when the samples were cooled to room temperature, which is 20 degrees C below Tm. In contrast, there was no sign of a fluid fraction in unsonicated samples at room temperature. The addition of the anionic surfactant sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) to DODAB dispersions at room temperature resulted in the formation of an essentially stoichiometric DODA-DS complex with frozen chains, as seen by titration calorimetry and H NMR experiments. For sonicated samples, turbidity experiments demonstrated that, after a fast complexation reaction, the system remains colloidally stable unless the SDS-to-DODAB mixing ratio is too close to unity. H NMR experiments also showed that in the unreacted DODAB the fraction of fluid chains remained close to 50%, indicating either that SDS reacts equally fast with fluid and frozen DODAB or that there is a relaxation of the fluid fraction after the complexation. The melting enthalpy and the melting temperature of the alkyl chains rise gradually as the mixing ratio increases. We observed with cryo-TEM that the fraction of large unilamellar vesicles was significantly larger after addition of SDS. This indicates vesicle fusion. Based on both wide- and small-angle X-ray scattering patterns, the structure of the equimolar SDS-DODAB complex at 25 degress C was proposed to be lamellar.  相似文献   

6.
Polymerizable cationic surfactant methacryloyloxyoctyl trimethylammonium bromide (MOTB) and anionic surfactant sodium 4-(omega-methacryloyloxyoctyl)oxy benzene sulfonate (MOBS) were synthesized. Stable catanionic vesicles can spontaneously form upon mixing the two oppositely charged surfactants in aqueous solution, which was further permanently fixed by polymerization. Surface tensiometry, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), static and dynamic laser light scattering (LLS), and cryogenic transmission electron microscopy (cryo-TEM) were used in combination to characterize the catanionic vesicles before and after polymerization. The kinetics of formation and breakdown of unpolymerized catanionic vesicles were studied in detail employing stopped-flow light scattering. In contrast to unpolymerized vesicles, the polymerized ones exhibit permanent stability under external perturbations such as dilution or adding excess MOTB. A tentative explanation is proposed about why free radical polymerization can successfully fix the catanionic vesicles, the structure of which is well-known to be in dynamic equilibrium exchange with unimers.  相似文献   

7.
The vesicle-micelle transition in aqueous mixtures of dioctadecyldimethylammonium and octadecyltrimethylammonium bromide (DODAB and C(18)TAB) cationic surfactants, having respectively double and single chain, was investigated by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), steady-state fluorescence, dynamic light scattering (DLS) and surface tension. The experiments performed at constant total surfactant concentration, up to 1.0 mM, reveal that these homologous surfactants mix together to form mixed vesicles and/or micelles, depending on the relative amount of the surfactants. The melting temperature T(m) of the mixed DODAB-C(18)TAB vesicles is larger than that for the neat DODAB in water owing to the incorporation of C(18)TAB in the vesicle bilayer. The surface tension decreases sigmoidally with C(18)TAB concentration and the inflection point lies around x(DODAB) approximately 0.4, indicating the onset of micelle formation owing to saturation of DODAB vesicles by C(18)TAB molecules. When x(DODAB)>0.5 C(18)TAB molecules are mainly solubilised by the vesicles, but when x(DODAB)<0.25 micelles are dominant. Fluorescence data of the Nile Red probe incorporated in the system at different surfactant molar fractions indicate the formation of micelle and vesicle structures. These structures have apparent hydrodynamic radius R(H) of about 180 and 500-800 nm, respectively, as obtained by DLS measurements.  相似文献   

8.
Combined dynamic and static light scattering (DLS, SLS) and cryogenic transmission electron microscopy (cryo-TEM) were used to investigate extruded cationic vesicles of dioctadecyldimethylammonium chloride and bromide (DODAX, X being Cl(-) or Br(-)). In salt-free dispersions the mean hydrodynamic diameter, D(h), and the weight average molecular weight, M(w), are larger for DODAB than for DODAC vesicles, and both D(h) and M(w) increase with the diameter (varphi) of the extrusion filter. NaCl (NaBr) decreases (increases) the DODAB (DODAC) vesicle size, reflecting the general trend of DODAB to assemble as larger vesicles than DODAC. The polydispersity index is lower than 0.25, indicating the dispersions are rather polydisperse. Cryo-TEM micrographs show that the smaller vesicles are spherical while the larger ones are oblong or faceted, and the vesicle samples are fairly polydisperse in size and morphology. They also indicate that the vesicle size increases with phi and DODAB assembles as larger vesicles than DODAC. Lens-shaped vesicles were observed in the extruded preparations. Both light scattering and cryo-TEM indicate that the vesicle size is larger or smaller than phi when phi is smaller or larger than the optimal phi approximately 200 nm.  相似文献   

9.
Surfactants such as dioctadecyldimethylammonium bromide (DODAB) form semi-permanent coatings that effectively prevent adsorption of cationic proteins onto the fused silica capillary in capillary electrophoresis (CE). The bilayer coating is generated by flushing the capillary with a 0.1 mM surfactant solution. However, formation of the bilayer is strongly dependent on the coating electrolyte. The effect of counter-ions, electrolyte concentrations and buffer co-ions were monitored based on: the separation of basic model proteins; the adsorption kinetics of DODA+ onto fused silica; and dynamic light scattering (DLS) to determine vesicle size. Low concentrations (≤10.0 mM) and/or weakly associating buffers such as phosphate (pH 3.0), acetate (pH 4.0) and chloride should be used for DODAB coating solutions. Dissolving the surfactant in strongly associating electrolyte, such as phosphate at pH 7.0, results in poor coating of the capillary surface. Effective cationic bilayer coatings are formed if the buffer conditions favor formation of vesicles with diameters < 300 nm. Monitoring turbidity at 400 nm provides a convenient means of verifying vesicle diameter variation of <5 nm; that is, that the coating solution is effective.  相似文献   

10.
Using molecular dynamics simulation, we performed theoretical calculations on the curvature constant and edge energy of bilayers of salt-free, zero-charged, cationic and anionic (catanionic) surfactant vesicles composed of alkylammonium cations (C(m)(+)) and fatty acid anions (C(n)(-)). Both the minimum size and edge energy of vesicles were calculated to examine the relation between the length of the surfactant molecules and the mechanical properties of the catanionic bilayers. Our simulation results clearly demonstrate that, when the chain lengths of the cationic and anionic surfactants are equal, both the edge energy and the rigidity of the catanionic bilayers increase dramatically, changing from around 0.36 to 2.77 kBT·nm(-1) and around 0.86 to 6.51 kBT·nm(-1), respectively. For the smallest catanionic vesicles, the curvature is not uniform and the surfactant molecules adopt a multicurvature arrangement in the vesicle bilayers. We suspect that the multicurvature bending of bilayers of catanionic vesicles is a common phenomenon in rigid bilayer systems, which could aid understanding of ion transport through bilayer membranes.  相似文献   

11.
Synthetic vesicles are formed by cationic and anionic surfactants, didodecyldimethylammonium bromide (DDAB), and sodium dodecylsulfate (SDS). The morphology, size, and aqueous properties of cationic/anionic mixtures are investigated at various molar ratios between cationic and anionic surfactants. The charged vesicular dispersions made of DDAB/SDS are contacted or mixed with negatively charged polyelectrolyte, poly(4-styrenesulfonic acid-co-maleic acid) sodium (PSSAMA), to form complexes. Depending on DDAB/SDS molar ratio or PSSAMA/vesicle charge ratio, complexes flocculation or precipitation occur. Characterization of the cationic/anionic vesicles or complexes formed by the catanionic vesicles and polyelectrolytes is performed by transmission electron microscope (TEM), dynamic light scattering (DLS), conductivity, turbidity, and zeta potential measurements. The size, stability, and the surface charge on the mixed cationic/anionic vesicles or complexes are determined.  相似文献   

12.
The gelation of two spontaneously formed charged catanionic vesicles by four water soluble polymers was systematically studied by tube inversion method and rheology. Eight phase maps were successfully documented for the catanionic vesicle–polymer mixtures. The experimental results, as represented by the relaxation time and the storage modulus at 1 Hz, revealed that the catanionic vesicle–polymer interactions at play were of electrostatic and hydrophobic origin. Firstly, no association between charged catanionic vesicles and the polymer without charge/hydrophobic modification was observed due to lack of both electrostatic and hydrophobic effects. Secondly, hydrophobic interactions accounted for the association between the hydrophobically modified polymer without charge and charged catanionic vesicles with hydrophobic grafts of the polymer inserting in the catanionic vesicle bilayer. Thirdly, the positively charged polymer without hydrophobic modification could interact with negatively charged catanionic vesicles through electrostatic force on one hand but could not interact with positively charged catanionic vesicles on the other hand. Finally, the positively charged polymer with hydrophobic modification could interact both electrostatically and hydrophobically with negatively charged catanionic vesicles, resulting in the formation of strong gels. The hydrophobic interaction might even overcome the unfavorable electrostatic interaction between the positively charged vesicles and the polymer with positive charge/hydrophobic modification.  相似文献   

13.
The peculiar nature of temperature-induced vesicle aggregation (TIVA) in some catanionic surfactant systems is systematically investigated. On the basis of a general analysis of the intervesicular interactions, the main driving force for this phenomenon is considered to be the intervesicular hydrophobic interaction among the exposed hydrophobic part of the surfactant headgroups. The addition of an oppositely charged hydrophobic salt to the catanionic vesicle systems is also found to promote the occurrence of TIVA. In fact, TIVA can be induced in ordinary catanionic vesicle systems by the addition of an oppositely charged hydrophobic counterion.  相似文献   

14.

The electrochemical behavior of cationic tetradecyltrimethylammonium bromide (TTABr), anionic sodium dodecylsulfate (SDS), cationic‐anionic (catanionic) mixed surfactant and self‐assembled solutions at Pt wire electrode has been studied by cyclic voltammetry (CV). On the basis of the cyclic voltammograms and determining the self‐assembled structures by using freeze‐fracture transmission electron microscopy (FF‐TEM), the mechanisms of the electrochemical reactions near the electrode for the two surfactant self‐assembled solutions, i.e., micelles and vesicles, are presented. When mixing TTABr and SDS, at the right mixing ratio of TTABr:SDS, vesicles are established spontaneously. The redox behavior of two vesicle‐phase solutions at a constant total concentration of 25 mmol·L?1 with the ratios of TTABr:SDS 9.35:0.65 of positive charges of bilayer membranes and 1.25:8.75 of negative charges of bilayer membranes are investigated by cyclic voltammetry. These cyclic voltammograms of vesicles with different charges are compared with those of 100 mmol · L?1 TTABr and 100 mmol · L?1 SDS micelle solutions. This CV study on surfactant self‐assembled solutions should open up a new method of study in surfactant science.  相似文献   

15.
The phase equilibria of surfactant aqueous mixtures, hexadecyltrimethylammonium bromide and sodium dodecyl sulfate, have been studied by polarizing microscopy, quasielastic light scattering, conductivity, potentiometric, electrophoretic, and surface tension measurements. Adsorption at the air/solution interface, association and precipitation in bulk solution strongly depended on the molar ratio and the concentration of surfactants. Catanionic vesicles coexisted with crystalline catanionic salts in a broad concentration range. The relative proportions of crystallites and vesicles varied according to the concentration and the molar ratio of the surfactants. The solid crystalline phase was progressively converted to catanionic vesicles with increasing surfactant molar ratio. At the highest excess of one of the surfactants transition from catanionic vesicles to mixed micelles occurred. The formation and stability of different phases are discussed in terms of surfactant molecular packing constraints and electrostatic interactions in the headgroup region. Surfactant tail-length asymmetry and the change of electrostatic interactions in the headgroup region from attractive to repulsive are governing factors for the transition from planar to curved bilayers. Received: 9 June 1998 Accepted: 18 August 1998  相似文献   

16.
We demonstrate the unique ability of catanionic vesicles, formed by mixing single-tailed cationic and anionic surfactants, to capture ionic solutes with remarkable efficiency. In an initial study (Wang, X.; Danoff, E. J.; Sinkov, N. A.; Lee, J.-H.; Raghavan, S. R.; English, D. S. Langmuir 2006, 22, 6461) with vesicles formed from cetyl trimethylammonium tosylate (CTAT) and sodium dodecylbenzenesulfonate (SDBS), we showed that CTAT-rich (cationic) vesicles could capture the anionic solute carboxyfluorescein with high efficiency (22%) and that the solute was retained by the vesicles for very long times (t1/2 = 84 days). Here we expand on these findings by investigating the interactions of both anionic and cationic solutes, including the chemotherapeutic agent doxorubicin, with both CTAT-rich and SDBS-rich vesicles. The ability of these vesicles to capture and hold dyes is extremely efficient (>20%) when the excess charge of the vesicle bilayer is opposite that of the solute (i.e., for anionic solutes in CTAT-rich vesicles and for cationic solutes in SDBS-rich vesicles). This charge-dependent effect is strong enough to enable the use of vesicles to selectively capture and separate an oppositely charged solute from a mixture of solutes. Our results suggest that catanionic surfactant vesicles could be useful for a variety of separation and drug delivery applications because of their unique properties and long-term stability.  相似文献   

17.
A new sugar-derived tricatenar catanionic surfactant (TriCat) was developed to obtain stable vesicles that could be exploited for drug encapsulation. The presence of the sugar moiety led to the formation of highly hydrophilic stoichiometric catanionic surfactant systems. The three hydrophobic chains permitted vesicles to form spontaneously. The self-assembly properties (morphology, size, and stability) of TriCat were examined in water and in buffer solution. Encapsulation studies of a hydrophilic probe, arbutin, commonly used in cosmetics for its whitening properties, were performed to check the impermeability of the vesicle bilayer. The enhancement of hydrophobic forces by the three chains of TriCat prevented surfactant equilibrium between the bilayer and the solution and enabled the probe to be retained in the aqueous cavity of the vesicles for at least 30 h. Thus, the present study suggests that this tricatenar catanionic surfactant could be a promising delivery system for hydrophilic drugs.  相似文献   

18.
Two routes to vesicle formation were designed to prepare uni- and multilamellar vesicles in salt-free aqueous solutions of surfactants. The formation of a surfactant complex between a double-chain anionic surfactant with a divalent-metal ion as the counterion and a single-chain zwitterionic surfactant with the polar group of amine-oxide group is described for the first time as a powerful driving force for vesicle-phases constructed from salt-free mixtures of aqueous surfactant solutions. As a typical example, a Zn(2+)-induced charged complex fluid, vesicle-phase has been studied in aqueous mixtures of tetradecyldimethylamine oxide (C(14)DMAO) and zinc 2,2-dihydroperfluorooctanoate [Zn(OOCCH(2)C(6)F(13))(2)]. This ionically charged vesicle-phase formed due to surfactant complexation has interesting rheological properties and is not shielded by excess salts because there are no counterions in the solution. Such a vesicle-phase of surfactant complex is important for many applications; for example, the vesicle-phase was further used to produce in situ the vesicle-phase of the salt-free cationic/anionic (catanionic) surfactants, C(14)DMAOH(+)-(-)OOCCH(2)C(6)F(13). The salt-free catanionic vesicle-phase could be produced through injecting H(2)S gas into the C(14)DMAO/Zn(OOCCH(2)C(6)F(13))(2) vesicle-phase, because the zwitterionic surfactant C(14)DMAO can be charged by the H(+) released from H(2)S to become a cationic surfactant and Zn(2+) was precipitated as ZnS. After the ZnS precipitates were removed from C(14)DMAO/Zn(OOCCH(2)C(6)F(13))(2) solutions, the final mixed solution does not contain excess salts as do other cationic/anionic surfactant systems. Both the C(14)DMAO-Zn(OOCCH(2)C(6)F(13))(2) complex and the resulting catanionic C(14)DMAOH(+)-(-)OOCCH(2)C(6)F(13) solution are birefringent Lalpha-phase solutions that consist of uni- and multilamellar vesicles. Ring-shaped semiconductor ZnS materials with encapsulated ZnS precipitates and regular spherical ZnS particles were prepared, which resulted in a transition from vesicles composed of metal-ligand complexes to vesicles held together by ionic interactions in the salt-free aqueous systems. This strategy should provide a new method to prepare inorganic materials. The present routes to form vesicles solve a problem: how to prepare nanomaterials using surfactant self-assembly, with structure controlled not by the growing material, but by the phase behavior of the surfactants.  相似文献   

19.
The gelation of mixed cationic/anionic surfactant vesicles of sodium dodecyl sulfate/didodecyldimethylammonium bromide and sodium dodecylbenzenesulfonate/cetyltrimethylammonium tosylate by hydrophobically modified sodium polyacrylate is studied rheologically. When the vesicles are cationically charged, mixtures with this anionic polyelectrolyte form precipitates. When the vesicles are anionically charged, however, these mixtures display a progression from a Maxwell fluid to a critical gel to a solidlike gel with increasing vesicle and/or polyelectrolyte concentration. Consideration of the viscous behavior with increasing vesicle and polymer volume fraction indicates that the gel network is formed by the bridging of the hydrophobically modified polymer between vesicles. The similarity between the gelation results for the two anionic systems suggests the results can be generalized to other similarly charged mixtures.  相似文献   

20.
The self-assembly of cationic and anionic amphiphile mixtures into vesicles in aqueous media was studied using two different systems: (i) decanoic acid and trimethyldecylammonium bromide and (ii) hexadecanedioic acid (a simple bola-amphiphile) and trimethyldecylammonium bromide. The resulting vesicles with varying amphiphile ratios were characterized using parameters such as the critical vesicle concentration, pH sensitivity, and encapsulation efficiency. We also produced and observed giant vesicles from these mixtures using the electroformation method and confocal microscopy. The mixed catanionic vesicles were shown to be more stable than those formed by pure fatty acids. Those containing bola-amphiphile even showed the encapsulation of a small hydrophilic solute (8-hydroxypyrene-1,3,6-trisulfonic-acid), suggesting a denser packing of the amphiphiles. Compression and kinetics analysis of monolayers composed of these amphiphiles mixtures at the air/water interface suggests that the stabilization of the structures can be attributed to two main interactions between headgroups, predominantly the formation of hydrogen bonds between protonated and deprotonated acids and the additional electrostatic interactions between ammonium and acid headgroups.  相似文献   

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