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1.
Kim P  Lee SE  Jung HS  Lee HY  Kawai T  Suh KY 《Lab on a chip》2006,6(1):54-59
We present simple soft lithographic methods for patterning supported lipid bilayer (SLB) membranes onto a surface and inside microfluidic channels. Micropatterns of polyethylene glycol (PEG)-based polymers were fabricated on glass substrates by microcontact printing or capillary moulding. The patterned PEG surfaces have shown 97 +/- 0.5% reduction in lipid adsorption onto two dimensional surfaces and 95 +/- 1.2% reduction inside microfluidic channels in comparison to glass control. Atomic force microscopy measurements indicated that the deposition of lipid vesicles led to the formation of SLB membranes by vesicle fusion due to hydrophilic interactions with the exposed substrate. Furthermore, the functionality of the patterned SLBs was tested by measuring the binding interactions between biotin (ligand)-labeled lipid bilayer and streptavidin (receptor). SLB arrays were fabricated with spatial resolution down to approximately 500 nm on flat substrate and approximately 1 microm inside microfluidic channels, respectively.  相似文献   

2.
Interaction and aggregation of acidic phospholipid (phosphatidylserine) vesicles were studied with variation of cation species and their concentrations in vesicle suspensions, and of vesicle sizes. Aggregation was determined by measuring turbidity of vesicle suspension. The experimental results of aggregation of vesicles induced by monovalent cations (Na+, K+, Cs+ and TMA+) were explained well in terms of the interaction energy of two interacting vesicles using the ordinary Derjaguin–Landau–Verwey–Overbeek (DLVO) theory for both small and large lipid vesicles. However, the experimental results of aggregation of vesicles induced by divalent cations (Ca2+, Mg2+ and Ba2+) were not explained by the ordinary DLVO theory. In order to explain the experimental results of these vesicle aggregation phenomena, it was necessary to modify the theory by including hydration interaction energies which are due to hydrated water at membrane surfaces, and their magnitude and sign depend upon the nature (hydrophobicity) of the membrane surface.  相似文献   

3.
Lipid vesicles are designed with functional chemical groups to promote vesicle fusion on template-stripped gold (TS Au) surfaces that does not spontaneously occur on unfunctionalized Au surfaces. Three types of vesicles were exposed to TS Au surfaces: (1) vesicles composed of only 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC) lipids; (2) vesicles composed of lipid mixtures of 2.5 mol % of 1,2-distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine-N-poly(ethylene glycol)-2000-N-[3-(2-pyridyldithio)propionate] (DSPE-PEG-PDP) and 97.5 mol % of POPC; and (3) vesicles composed of 2.5 mol % of 1,2-distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine-N-[methoxy(poly(ethylene glycol))-2000] (DSPE-PEG) and 97.5 mol % POPC. Atomic force microscopy (AFM) topography and force spectroscopy measurements acquired in a fluid environment confirmed tethered lipid bilayer membrane (tLBM) formation only for vesicles composed of 2.5 mol % DSPE-PEG-PDP/97.5 mol % POPC, thus indicating that the sulfur-containing PDP group is necessary to achieve tLBM formation on TS Au via Au-thiolate bonds. Analysis of force-distance curves for 2.5 mol % DSPE-PEG-PDP/97.5 mol % POPC tLBMs on TS Au yielded a breakthrough distance of 4.8 ± 0.4 nm, which is about 1.7 nm thicker than that of POPC lipid bilayer membrane formed on mica. Thus, the PEG group serves as a spacer layer between the tLBM and the TS Au surface. Fluorescence microscopy results indicate that these tLBMs also have greater mechanical stability than solid-supported lipid bilayer membranes made from the same vesicles on mica. The described process for assembling stable tLBMs on Au surfaces is compatible with microdispensing used in array fabrication.  相似文献   

4.
Vesicle fusion has long provided an easy and reliable method to form supported lipid bilayers (SLBs) from simple, zwitterionic vesicles on siliceous substrates. However, for complex compositions, such as vesicles with high cholesterol content and multiple lipid types, the energy barrier for the vesicle-to-bilayer transition is increased or the required vesicle–vesicle and vesicle–substrate interactions are insufficient for vesicle fusion. Thus, for vesicle compositions that more accurately mimic native membranes, vesicle fusion often fails to form SLBs. In this paper, we review three approaches to overcome these barriers to form complex, biomimetic SLBs via vesicle fusion: (i) optimization of experimental conditions (e.g., temperature, buffer ionic strength, osmotic stress, cation valency, and buffer pH), (ii) α-helical (AH) peptide-induced vesicle fusion, and (iii) bilayer edge-induced vesicle fusion. AH peptide-induced vesicle fusion can form complex SLBs on multiple substrate types without the use of additional equipment. Bilayer edge-induced vesicle fusion uses microfluidics to form SLBs from vesicles with complex composition, including vesicles derived from native cell membranes. Collectively, this review introduces vesicle fusion techniques that can be generalized for many biomimetic vesicle compositions and many substrate types, and thus will aid efforts to reliably create complex SLB platforms on a range of substrates.  相似文献   

5.
Atomic force microscopy (AFM) studies under aqueous buffer probed the role of chemical affinity between liposomes, consisting of large unilamellar vesicles, and substrate surfaces in driving vesicle rupture and tethered lipid bilayer membrane (tLBM) formation on Au surfaces. 1,2-Distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine-N-poly(ethylene glycol)-2000-N-[3-(2-pyridyldithio) propionate] (DSPE-PEG-PDP) was added to 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC) vesicles to promote interactions via Au-thiolate bond formation. Forces induced by an AFM tip leading to vesicle rupture on Au were quantified as a function of DSPE-PEG-PDP composition with and without osmotic pressure. The critical forces needed to initiate rupture of vesicles with 2.5, 5, and 10 mol % DSPE-PEG-PDP are approximately 1.1, 0.8, and 0.5 nN, respectively. The critical force needed for tLBM formation decreases from 1.1 nN (without osmotic pressure) to 0.6 nN (with an osmotic pressure due to 5 mM of CaCl(2)) for vesicles having 2.5 mol % DSPE-PEG-PDP. Forces as high as 5 nN did not lead to LBM formation from pure POPC vesicles on Au. DSPE-PEG-PDP appears to be important to anchor and deform vesicles on Au surfaces. This study demonstrates how functional lipids can be used to tune vesicle-surface interactions and elucidates the role of vesicle-substrate interactions in vesicle rupture.  相似文献   

6.
We have prepared a chemically anchored monolayer of PEG (poly(ethylene glycol)) and phospholipid mixture (PEG/phospholipid) on a methacryloyl-terminated substrate by in situ photopolymerization. Both monoacryloyl phospholipid (acryloyl-PC, 1-palmitoyl-2-[12-(acryloyloxy)dodecanoyl]-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine) and monoacryloyl PEG (acryloyl-PEG, 12-(acryloyloxy)dodecanoyl-PEG) were synthesized by modifyingphospholipid and PEGwith 12-(acryloyloxy)-1-dodecanoic acid and 12-(acryloyloxy)-1-dodecanol, respectively. The surface pressure-area (pi-A) isotherm showed that acryloyl-PEG molecules were stable in the phospholipid monolayer and that they could be evenly inserted into a phospholipid monolayer at the air/water interface. By adding 10 mol % acryloyl-PEG into phosholipid vesicles, we could produce a PEG/phosholipid monolayer on methacryloyl-terminated substrates using vesicle fusion for 3 h. Then, this polymerizable PEG/phospholipid monolayer was in situ photopolymerized onto a methacryloyl-terminated substrate with eosin Y/triethanolamine as co-initiators. Optimal vesicle fusion and irradiation condition were determined with respect to the vesicle fusion time and duration of irradiation. As confirmed by atomic force microscopy and X-ray reflectivity studies, the polymerized PEG/phosholipid surface formed a PEG-covered phospholipid monolayer with thicknesses of 3 and 6 nm for the base phospholipid monolayer and the covering PEG layer, respectively. The chemical anchoring efficiency ofpolymerized PEG and phospholipid molecules, which was calculated by the relative carbon ratio of each surface before and after methanol washing using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, was 98%. This polymerized PEG/phosholipid monolayer showed good stability in organic solution due to firm chemical anchoring to a solid surface.  相似文献   

7.
High-resolution reflection interference contrast microscopy (HR-RICM) was developed for probing the deformation and adhesion of phospholipid vesicles induced by colloidal forces on solid surfaces. The new technique raised the upper limit of the measured membrane–substrate separation from 1 to 4.5 μm and improved the spatial resolution of the heterogeneous contact zones. It was applied to elucidate the effects of wall thickness, pH and osmotic stress on the non-specific adhesion of giant unilamellar vesicles (ULV) and multilamellar vesicles (MLV) on fused silica substrates. By simultaneous cross-polarization light microscopy and HR-RICM measurements, it was observed that ULV with the wall thickness of a single bilayer would be significantly deformed in its equilibrium state on the substrate as the dimension of its adhesive–cohesive zone was 29% higher than the theoretical value of a rigid sphere with the same diameter. Besides, electrostatic interaction was shown as a significant driving force for vesicle adhesions since the reduction in pH significantly increased the degree of deformation of adhering ULV and heterogeneity of the adhesion discs. The degree of MLV deformation on the solid surfaces was significantly less than that of ULV. When the wall thickness of vesicle increased, the dimension of contact zone was reduced dramatically due to the increase of membrane bending modulus. Most important, the adhesion strength of colloidal adhesion approached that of specific adhesion. Finally, the increase of osmotic stress led to the collapse of adhering vesicles on the non-deformable substrate and raised the area of adhesive contact zone. To interpret these results better, the equilibrium deformation of adhering vesicle was modeled as a truncated sphere and the adhesion energy was calculated with a new theory.  相似文献   

8.
We have investigated the effect of well-defined nanoscale topography on the 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC) lipid vesicle adsorption and supported phospholipid bilayer (SPB) formation on SiO2 surfaces using a quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring (QCM-D) and atomic force microscopy (AFM). Unilamellar lipid vesicles with two different sizes, 30 and 100 nm, were adsorbed on pitted surfaces with two different pit diameters, 110 and 190 nm, as produced by colloidal lithography, and the behavior was compared to results obtained on flat surfaces. In all cases, complete bilayer formation was observed after a critical coverage of adsorbed vesicles had been reached. However, the kinetics of the vesicle-to-bilayer transformation, including the critical coverage, was significantly altered by surface topography for both vesicle sizes. Surface topography hampered the overall bilayer formation kinetics for the smaller vesicles, but promoted SPB formation for the larger vesicles. Depending on vesicle size, we propose two modifications of the precursor-mediated vesicle-to-bilayer transformation mechanism used to describe supported lipid bilayer formation on the corresponding flat surface. Our results may have important implications for various lipid-membrane-based applications using rough or topographically structured surfaces.  相似文献   

9.
Interactions of small unilamellar negative vesicles composed of diphosphatidylglycerol (cardiolipin, CL2−), 20 mol%, and phosphatidylcholine (egg yolk lecithin, EL), 80 mol%, with various cationic polymers (CP) derived from poly(4-vinylpyridine) (PVP) were studied in water and water–salt solutions by means of photon correlation spectroscopy, microelectrophoresis, conductometry, and fluorescence techniques. The linear charge density and hydrophilic lipophilic balance of CPs were varied by quaternization of PVP with various amounts of different alkyl bromides (ethyl-(2), heptyl-(7), dodecyl-(12), cetyl-(16)). Substantial differences were observed in the behavior of exhaustingly N-ethylated PVP (CP2) and PVP N-ethylated to 50 mol% (CP2(50)) or 30 mol% (CP2(30)). All of them adsorb to the CL2−/EL vesicle membrane, neutralizing the surface negative charge and causing aggregation of the vesicles. However, CP2, a polycation with a maximum linear charge density, strongly enhances transfer of the negative lipid ions from the inner to outer bilayer leaflet, while CP2(50) and CP2(30) do not. Adsorbed CP2 does not disturb integrity of the vesicle membrane and can be completely removed from the surface of aggregated vesicles by adding a simple salt (NaCl) or a negative linear polyelectrolyte (polyacrylic acid (PAA) sodium salt). Such removal is followed by release of the original vesicles. In contrast to that, adsorbed CP2(50) or CP2(30) produce some leak through the lipid bilayer and cannot be completely desorbed either by increasing ionic strength or adding an excess of PAA. The probable reason of these differences is discussed. PVP partially N-alkylated with dodecyl or cetyl bromides (3 mol%) and then completely N-ethylated (CP2,12 and CP2,16), also having a maximum linear charge density, adsorbs to the negative vesicle surface as a result of both electrostatic binding and hydrophobic interaction. Bulky hydrocarbon pendant groups incorporate into the inner bilayer compartment. Similarly to CP2(50) and CP2(30), CP2,12 and CP2,16 cannot be removed from the surface either by adding the simple salt, or an excess of PAA. However, in contrast to CP2(50) and CP2(30), the polycations with the bulky hydrocarbon pendant groups do not cause any leak through the vesicle membrane. Finally, we have succeeded to prepare the ternary vesicles also composed of 20 mol% of CL2−, but partially replacing EL for polyoxyethylene 20 cetyl ether (Brij 58) (up to 30 mol%). The CL2−/EL/Brij vesicle carries a hydrophilic corona formed by polyoxyethylene chains exposed into water, while hydrophobic cetyl radicals are incorporated in the lipid bilayer. The CL2−/EL/Brij vesicles adsorb all studied CPs similar to the binary CL2−/EL vesicles. This means that polyoxyethylene corona is permeable for polycationic species restricting neither electrostatic binding nor incorporation of bulky hydrocarbon groups of CP2,16 into the membrane. However, the corona effectively stabilizes the CP-vesicle complexes against aggregation when the membrane surface is neutralized.  相似文献   

10.
Molecular transport between organelles is predominantly governed by vesicle fission and fusion. Unlike experimental vesicles, the fused vesicles in molecular dynamics simulations do not become spherical readily, because the lipid and water distribution is inappropriate for the fused state and spontaneous amendment is slow. Here, we study the hypothesis that enhanced transport across the membrane of water, lipids, or both is required to produce spherical vesicles. This is done by adding several kinds of model proteins to fusing vesicles. The results show that equilibration of both water and lipid content is a requirement for spherical vesicles. In addition, the effect of these transmembrane proteins is studied in bilayers and vesicles, including investigations into hydrophobic matching and aggregation. Our simulations show that the level of aggregation does not only depend on hydrophobic mismatch, but also on protein shape. Additionally, one of the proteins promotes fusion by inducing pore formation. Incorporation of these proteins allows even flat membranes to fuse spontaneously. Moreover, we encountered a novel spontaneous vesicle enlargement mechanism we call the engulfing lobe, which may explain how lipids added to a vesicle solution are quickly incorporated into the inner monolayer.  相似文献   

11.
We report on the investigations of the transformation of spherically closed lipid bilayers to supported lipid bilayers in aqueous media in contact with SiO(2) surfaces. The adsorption kinetics of small unilamellar vesicles composed of dimyristoyl- (DMPC) and dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) mixtures on SiO(2) surfaces were investigated using a dissipation-enhanced quartz crystal microbalance (QCM-D) as a function of buffer (composition and pH), lipid concentration (0.01-1.0 mg/mL), temperature (15-37 degrees C), and lipid composition (DMPC and DMPC/DPPC mixtures). The lipid mixtures used here possess a phase transition temperature (T(m)) of 24-33 degrees C, which is close to the ambient temperature or above and thus considerably higher than most other systems studied by QCM-D. With HEPES or Tris.HCl containing sodium chloride (150 mM) and/or calcium chloride (2 mM), intact vesicles adsorb on the surface until a critical density ((c)) is reached. At close vesicle contact the transformation from vesicles to supported phospholipid bilayers (SPBs) occurs. In absence of CaCl(2), the kinetics of the SPB formation process are slowed, but the passage through (c) is still observed. The latter disappears when buffers with low ionic strength were used. SPB formation was studied in a pH range of 3-10, yet the passage through (c) is obtained only for pH values above to the physiological pH (7.4-10). With an increasing vesicle concentration, (c) is reached after shorter exposure times. At a vesicle concentration of 0.01-1 mg/mL, vesicle fusion on SiO(2) proceeds with the same pathway and accelerates roughly proportionally. In contrast, the pathway of vesicle fusion is strongly influenced by the temperature in the vicinity of T(m). Above and around the T(m), transformation of vesicles to SPB proceeds smoothly, while below, a large number of nonruptured vesicles coexist with SPB. As expected, the physical state of the membrane controls the interaction with both surface and neighboring vesicles.  相似文献   

12.
The study of the adhesion of lipid vesicles on surfaces is of increasing interest in the field of medical implants and tissue engineering (protein-resistant surfaces), drug delivery, biosensors, and biochips. In this work, lipid coverage was developed from PEG-coated vesicles (with sizes from 100 to 300 nm) by covalently binding poly(ethylene glycol)-alpha-disteroylphosphatidylethanolamine-omega-benzotriazole carbonate (DSPE-PEG-BTC) molecules onto the surface amine groups by carbamate chemistry. Lipid surface density and the surface structure of multilamellar (MLVs) and extruded unilamellar (LUVs) vesicles deposited on three types of polystyrene (PS) well-plates were probed by fluorescence and atomic force microscopy (AFM) imaging. A significant difference in the vesicle surface coverage of PS substrates was observed with a substantial increase in lipid multilayers on the amine-enriched PS surface using both unilamellar and multilamellar vesicles.  相似文献   

13.
Membrane fusion between two lipid membranes with different curvatures was measured by using a fluorescence fusion assay for lipid vesicle systems and was also obtained by measuring lipid monolayer surface tension upon the fusion of vesicles to monolayer membranes. For such membrane systems, it was found that when lysolipid was incorporated only in the membrane with a greater curvature, membrane fusion was more suppressed than those for the case where the same amount (molar ratio of lysolipid to non-lysolipids) of lysolipid was incorporated only in the membrane with a lower curvature. When lysolipid was incorporated only in a flat membrane (e.g., monolayer) and the fusion of small vesicles (SUV) to the monolayer was measured, suppression of membrane fusion by lysolipid was minimal. It is known that lysolipid lowers the surface energy of curved membranes, which stabilizes energetically such membrane surfaces, and thus suppresses membrane fusion. Our results support our theory of lipid membrane fusion where the membrane fusion occurs through the most curved membrane region at the contact area of two interacting membranes.  相似文献   

14.
Liposomes containing distearoylphosphatidylethanolamine with covalently linked polyethylene glycol of molecular weight 2,000 (DSPE-PEG2000) covering a range of 0–30 mol% were prepared by a mechanical dispersion or detergent-removal method. The effects of DSPE-PEG2000 on particle sizes and lamellarity of liposomes were investigated. The average diameters of vesicles prepared from both methods decreased when the concentration of DSPE-PEG2000 was increased. The decrease in vesicle size with increase in DSPE-PEG2000 was ascribed to the steric hindrance of strongly hydrated PEG. The significant decrease in the sizes of DSPE-PEG2000-containing EggPC vesicles prepared by the detergent-removal method could be explained by the postvesiculation size growth in the process of micelle–vesicle transition. For DMPC vesicles prepared by the detergent-removal method, electron micrographs showed that inclusion of DSPE-PEG2000 promoted vesicle formation. Based on the results of investigation of calcein entrapment efficiency, we concluded that the lamellarity of liposomes is reduced as PEG lipid concentration is increased. Fragmentation of multilamellar vesicles into smaller unilamellar vesicles occurred more readily when the liposome suspension was subjected to repetitive freeze-thawing. After five cycles of freezing and thawing, vesicles containing more than 0.5 mol% DSPE-PEG2000 were fragmented into unilamellar vesicles with diameters smaller than 300 nm.  相似文献   

15.
Classical methods for characterizing supported artificial phospholipid bilayers include imaging techniques such as atomic force microscopy and fluorescence microscopy. The use in the past decade of surface-sensitive methods such as surface plasmon resonance and ellipsometry, and acoustic sensors such as the quartz crystal microbalance, coupled to the imaging methods, have expanded our understanding of the formation mechanisms of phospholipid bilayers. In the present work, reflective interferometric Fourier transform spectrocopy (RIFTS) is employed to monitor the formation of a planar phospholipid bilayer on an oxidized mesoporous Si (pSiO(2)) thin film. The pSiO(2) substrates are prepared as thin films (3 μm thick) with pore dimensions of a few nanometers in diameter by the electrochemical etching of crystalline silicon, and they are passivated with a thin thermal oxide layer. A thin film of mica is used as a control. Interferometric optical measurements are used to quantify the behavior of the phospholipids at the internal (pores) and external surfaces of the substrates. The optical measurements indicate that vesicles initially adsorb to the pSiO(2) surface as a monolayer, followed by vesicle fusion and conversion to a surface-adsorbed lipid bilayer. The timescale of the process is consistent with prior measurements of vesicle fusion onto mica surfaces. Reflectance spectra calculated using a simple double-layer Fabry-Perot interference model verify the experimental results. The method provides a simple, real-time, nondestructive approach to characterizing the growth and evolution of lipid vesicle layers on the surface of an optical thin film.  相似文献   

16.
A simple method for modifying a polymer surface to induce lipid bilayer formation by vesicle fusion is described. A silicate gel was prepared by condensation of tetraethyl orthosilicate (TEOS) in the presence of acid. When applied to a poly(methylmethacrylate) substrate, either a rough or a smooth layer could be produced, depending on the method used for the application. The smooth surface induced formation of a supported lipid bilayer by fusion of lipid vesicles; the rough silicate surface induced adsorption of a vesicle layer. A high-frequency acoustic waveguide device was used to follow the initial adsorption of vesicles, the transition from a vesicle layer to a bilayer, and the formation of a complete bilayer; the time required to form a bilayer was determined as a function of lipid concentration in suspension. The presence of a bilayer on the smooth silicate surface was confirmed by fluorescence recovery after photobleaching. An additional procedure is described to modify a gold surface to induce bilayer formation.  相似文献   

17.
We consider the adhesive interaction energy between a pair of vesicles in the strong adhesion limit, in which bending forces play a negligible role in determining vesicle shape compared to forces due to membrane stretching. Although force?distance or energy?distance relationships characterizing adhesive interactions between fluid bilayers are routinely measured using the surface forces apparatus, the atomic force microscope, and the biomembrane force probe, the interacting bilayers in these methods are supported on surfaces (e.g., mica sheet) and cannot be deformed. However, it is known that, in a suspension, vesicles composed of the same bilayer can deform by stretching or bending, and can also undergo changes in volume. Adhesively interacting vesicles can thus form flat regions in the contact zone, which will result in an enhanced interaction energy as compared to rigid vesicles. The focus of this paper is to examine the magnitude of the interaction energy between adhesively interacting, deformed vesicles relative to free, undeformed vesicles as a function of the intervesicle separation. The modification of the intervesicle interaction energy due to vesicle deformability can be calculated knowing the undeformed radius of the vesicles, R0, the bending modulus, k(b), the area expansion modulus, k(a), and the adhesive minimum, W(P)(0), and separation, D(P)(0), in the energy of interaction between two flat bilayers, which can be obtained from the force?distance measurements made using the above supported-bilayer methods. For vesicles with constant volumes, we show that adhesive potentials between nondeforming bilayers such as |W(P)(0)| 5 × 10(?4) mJ/m2, which are ordinarily considered weak in the colloidal physics literature, can result in significantly deep (>10×) energy minima due to increase in vesicle area and flattening in the contact region. If the osmotic expulsion of water across the vesicles driven by the tense, stretched membrane in the presence of an osmotically active solute is also taken into account, the vesicles can undergo additional deformation (flattening), which further enhances the adhesive interaction between them. Finally, equilibration of ions and solutes due to the concentration differences created by the osmotic exchange of water can lead to further enhancement of the adhesion energy. Our result of the progressively increasing adhesive interaction energy between vesicles in the above regimes could explain why suspensions of very weakly attractive vesicles may undergo flocculation and eventual instability due to separation of vesicles from the suspending fluid by gravity. The possibility of such an instability is an extremely important issue for concentrated vesicle-based products and applications such as fabric softeners, hair therapeutics and drug delivery.  相似文献   

18.
Polyethylene glycol (PEG)-modified amino acid surfactant-based vesicles were prepared to improve the stability and cellular delivery of drugs. The vesicles comprised PEG-2000, sodium N-lauroylsarcosinate hydrate (SNLS), 1-decanol, and deionized water. The complex showed vesicular structures that were almost the same as the original vesicles, and their size distribution was (100–150 nm). Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) results revealed that no fusion occurred at 1.25 wt.% PEG concentration. The steric hindrance present among the vesicles prevented aggregation of the particles. No visual phase separation was observed for 6 months at room temperature 28?ºC. At higher molar concentration of PEG, fusion and wrinkling occurred owing to the association of PEG chains. The decreasing bending curvature led to the formation of fused vesicles with multilayer structure, as revealed by TEM and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC).  相似文献   

19.
Skeletonized zirconium phosphonate surfaces are used to support planar lipid bilayers and are shown to be viable substrates for studying transmembrane proteins. The skeletonized surfaces provide space between the bilayer and the solid support to enable protein insertion and avoid denaturation. The skeletonized zirconium octadecylphosphonate surfaces were prepared using Langmuir-Blodgett techniques by mixing octadecanol with octadecylphosphonic acid. After zirconation of the transferred monolayer, rinsing the coating with organic solvent removes the octadecanol, leaving holes in the film ranging from ~50 to ~500 nm in diameter, depending on the octadecanol content. Upon subsequent deposition of a lipid bilayer, either by vesicle fusion or by Langmuir-Blodgett/Langmuir-Schaefer techniques, the lipid assemblies span the holes providing reservoirs beneath the bilayer. The viability of the supported bilayers as model membranes for transmembrane proteins was demonstrated by examining two approaches for incorporating the proteins. The BK channel protein inserts directly into a preformed bilayer on the skeletonized surface, in contrast to a bilayer on a nonskeletonized film, for which the protein associates only weakly. As a second approach, the integrin α(5)β(1) was reconstituted in lipid vesicles, and its inclusion in supported bilayers on the skeletonized surface was achieved by vesicle fusion. The integrin retains its ability to recognize the extracellular matrix protein fibronectin when supported on the skeletonized film, again in contrast to the response if the bilayer is supported on a nonskeletonized film.  相似文献   

20.
The structure and formation of supported membranes at silica surfaces by vesicle fusion was investigated by neutron reflectivity and quartz crystal microbalance (QCM-D) measurements. The structure of equimolar phospholipid mixtures of DLPC-DPPC, DMPC-DPPC, and DOPC-DPPC depends intricately on the vesicle deposition conditions. The supported bilayer membranes exhibit varying degrees of compositional asymmetry between the monolayer leaflets, which can be modified by the deposition temperature as well as the salt concentration of the vesicle solution. The total lipid composition of the supported bilayers differs from the composition of the vesicles in solution, and the monolayer proximal to the silica surface is always enriched in DPPC compared to the distal monolayer. The results, which show unambiguougsly that some exchange and rearrangement of lipids occur during vesicle deposition, can be rationalized by considering the effects of salt screening and temperature on the rates of lipid exchange, rearrangement, and vesicle adsorption, but there is also an intricate dependence on the lipid-lipid interactions. Thus, although both symmetric and asymmetric supported bilayers can be prepared from vesicles, the optimal conditions are sensitive to the lipid composition of the system.  相似文献   

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