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1.
The size-dependent behavior of small unilamellar vesicles is explored by dissipative particle dynamics, including the membrane characteristics and mechanical properties. The spontaneously formed vesicles are in the metastable state and the vesicle size is controlled by the concentration of model lipids. As the vesicle size decreases, the bilayer gets thinner and the area density of heads declines. Nonetheless, the area density in the inner leaflet is higher than that in the outer. The packing parameters are calculated for both leaflets. The result indicates that the shape of lipid in the outer leaflet is like a truncated cone but that in the inner leaflet resembles an inverted truncated cone. Based on a local order parameter, our simulations indication that the orientation order of lipid molecules decreases as the size of the vesicle reduces and this fact reveals that the bilayer becoming thinner for smaller vesicle is mainly attributed to the orientation disorder of the lipids. The membrane tension can be obtained through the Young-Laplace equation. The tension is found to grow with reducing vesicle size. Therefore, small vesicles are less stable against fusion. Using the inflation method, the area stretching and bending moduli can be determined and those moduli are found to grow with reducing size. Nonetheless, a general equation with a single numerical constant can relate bending modulus, area stretching modulus, and bilayer thickness irrespective of the vesicle size. Finally, a simple metastable model is proposed to explain the size-dependent behavior of bilayer thickness, orientation, and tension.  相似文献   

2.
Monodispersed lipid vesicles have been used as a drug delivery vehicle and a biochemical reactor. To generate monodispersed lipid vesicles in the nano‐ to micrometer size range, an extrusion step should be included in conventional hand‐shaking method of lipid vesicle synthesis. In addition, lipid vesicles as a drug carrier still need to be improved to effectively encapsulate concentrated biomolecules such as cells, proteins, and target drugs. To overcome these limitations, this paper reports a new microfluidic platform for continuous synthesis of small‐sized (~10 μm) giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs) containing quantum dots (QDs) as a nanosized model drug. To generate GUVs, we introduced an additional cross‐flow to break vesicles into small size. 1,2 ‐ dimyristoyl‐sn‐glycero ‐ 3 ‐ phosphocholine (DMPC) in an octanol–chloroform mixture was used in the construction of self‐assembled membrane. Consequently, we have successfully demonstrated the fabrication of monodispersed GUVs with 7?12 μm diameter containing QDs. The proposed synthesis method of cell‐sized GUVs would be highly desirable for applications such as multipurpose drug encapsulation and delivery.  相似文献   

3.
Giant unilamellar lipid vesicles could be perfect systems to study ion channels in the environment of lipid membranes with defined chemical and physical properties. Prerequisite for electrical measurements is an intravesicular electrical contact. We describe the impalement of giant lipid vesicles by glass micropipet electrodes with a tight seal. To avoid displacement or burst during impalement, the vesicles are immobilized in relaxed conditions by microscopic picket fences of polyimide. The outer surface of the pipets is selectively coated with silanes or polylysine. Structurally, the impalement is verified by ejecting a fluorescent solution out of the pipet. For electrical characterization, current pulses are applied to the pipet and voltage transients are recorded. The data are evaluated in terms of the capacitance and effective resistance of the membrane. Directly after impalement, we observe a seal resistance up to 1.2 GOmega that continuously decays within a period of up to 20 min until it suddenly disappears without burst of the vesicle. During impalement, a spreading of the vesicle membrane along the outer surface of the pipets is observed using a fluorescent membrane-bound dye. We assign the tight pipet-vesicle contact to spreading of the lipid bilayer by a rolling mechanism and the loss of resistance to micro- and macropores that are induced by the resulting membrane tension. Limitation of spreading is attempted with barriers on the pipet.  相似文献   

4.
Due to their tunable optical properties and their well-defined nanometric size, core/shell nanocrystals (quantum dots, QDs) are extensively used for the design of biomarkers as well as for the preparation of nanostructured hybrid materials. It is thus of great interest to understand their interaction with soft lipidic membranes. Here we present the synthesis of water-soluble peptide CdSe/ZnS QDs and their interaction with the fluid lipidic membrane of vesicles. The use of short peptides results in the formation of small QDs presenting both high fluorescence quantum yield and high colloidal stability as well as a mean hydrodynamical diameter of 10 nm. Their interaction with oppositely charged vesicles of various surface charge and size results in the formation of hybrid giant or large unilamellar vesicles covered with a densely packed layer of QDs without any vesicle rupture, as demonstrated by fluorescence resonance energy transfer experiments, zetametry, and optical microscopy. The adhesion of nanocrystals onto the vesicle membrane appears to be sterically limited and induces the reversion of the surface charge of the vesicles. Therefore, their interaction with small unilamellar vesicles induces the formation of a well-defined lamellar hybrid condensed phase in which the QDs are densely packed in the plane of the layers, as shown by freeze-fracture electron microscopy and small-angle X-ray scattering. In this structure, strong undulations of the bilayer maximize the electrostatic interaction between the QDs and the bilayers, as previously observed in the case of DNA polyelectrolytes interacting with small vesicles.  相似文献   

5.
Among the molecular milieu of the cell, the membrane bilayer stands out as a complex and elusive synthetic target. We report a microfluidic assembly line that produces uniform cellular compartments from droplet, lipid, and oil/water interface starting materials. Droplets form in a lipid-containing oil flow and travel to a junction where the confluence of oil and extracellular aqueous media establishes a flow-patterned interface that is both stable and reproducible. A triangular post mediates phase transfer bilayer assembly by deflecting droplets from oil, through the interface, and into the extracellular aqueous phase to yield a continuous stream of unilamellar phospholipid vesicles with uniform and tunable size. The size of the droplet precursor dictates vesicle size, encapsulation of small-molecule cargo is highly efficient, and the single bilayer promotes functional insertion of a bacterial transmembrane pore.  相似文献   

6.
Cheng Z  Aspinwall CA 《The Analyst》2006,131(2):236-243
Nanometre-sized, chemically-stabilized phospholipid vesicle sensors have been developed for detection of dissolved molecular oxygen. Sensors were prepared by forming 150 nm phospholipid vesicles from 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DOPC) or DOPC doped with small (<1%) mole percentages of 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanol amine-N-(7-nitro-2-1,3-benzoxadiazol-4-yl) (NBD-PE). Sensors were stabilized via cross-linking polymerization of hydrophobic methacrylate monomers partitioned into the hydrophobic interior of the DOPC bilayer. The resultant unilamellar, nanometre-sized, polymer-lipid vesicles are spherical, biocompatible and protect sensing components that are loaded into the aqueous interior of the vesicle from interfering species in the exterior environment. For O(2) detection, the oxygen-sensitive fluorescent dye, tris(1,10-phenanthroline)ruthenium(II) chloride (Ru(phen)(3)) was encapsulated into the aqueous interior of the polymerized phospholipid vesicle. NBD-PE was introduced into the phospholipid bilayer of the sensor as a reference dye, allowing ratiometric sensors to be constructed. The resultant sensors show high sensitivity, excellent reversibility and excellent linearity over a physiological range of dissolved oxygen concentrations. These results suggest that polymerized phospholipid vesicle sensors can be used for monitoring intracellular O(2) dynamics.  相似文献   

7.
The process of vesicle solubilization and size growth by detergents, especially by octylglucoside, was examined in detail in order to elucidate the phenomena observed in the vesicle-to-micelle transition and to clarify the size-determining factor of vesicles prepared by removing detergent from phospholipid–detergent mixed micelles. In the vesicle solubilization process, when the detergent concentration in the vesicle membrane reached a critical value, the collapse of large unilamellar vesicles (LUV) into small unilamellar vesicles (SUV) was observed. This newly appeared SUV were named SUV*. The SUV* could be produced by adding an appropriate amount of detergent to the SUV prepared by an ultrasonication method so as to increase the concentration to a little over the critical value, such as, in the case of adding octylglucoside, a molar ratio of 1.0–1.1 to phospholipid in the membrane phase. The SUV* containing octylglucoside were fusible and grow time-dependently, but those containing sodium cholate were not fusible. On the basis of the SUV* data, the following problems were solved: the variety of the size of the vesicles prepared by detergent removal from mixed micelles composed of a phospholipid and different detergents, or by different removal methods; the complex appearance of turbidity or vesicle size observed in vesicle destruction and formation; the conflict between LUV and SUV in the partition behavior of detergent and the size change with addition of detergent.  相似文献   

8.
Hypelcin A, an α-aminoisobutyric acid-containing antibiotic peptide inducing fusion of egg yolk-l-α-phosphatidylcholine (egg PC) small unilamellar vesicles (SUVs), was investigated by lipid-mixing assay based on resonanceenergy transfer between fluorescent probes, electron microscopy, light scattering, and1H-nuclear magnetic-resonance spectroscopy. At a high peptide-to-lipid ratio of approximately 1:5, the peptide fuses several SUVs of 20–30 nm in diameter into a 40–100 nm vesicle. Under mild conditions where the permeability enhancement (leakage of a trapped fluorescent dye, calcein) of lipid bilayers are observed (peptide to lipid ratios around 1/100), the fusion of the SUVs also occurs, although the fusion requires a somewhat larger amount of the peptide than the leakage does. Furthermore, at higher lipid concentrations, where the aggregation step is sufficiently rapid, the fusion rate is determined by the amount of the membrane bound peptide per lipid molecule, as is the leakage rate. In contrast, for egg PC large unilamellar vesicles (110 nm), hypelcin A induces the leakage, but not the fusion. We conclude that the leakage is not due to the fusion.  相似文献   

9.
We studied the effect of a model basic peptide, hexalysiltryptophan, on the organization of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine/dipalmitoylphosphatidylserine unilamellar vesicles by means of fluorescent resonance energy transfer (FRET) between fluorescently labeled phospholipids. Several FRET theoretical models assuming different bilayer geometries and probe distributions were fitted to the time-resolved data. The experiments were carried out at two temperatures in different regions of the lipid mixture phase diagram. At 45 degrees C, the expected gel/fluid phase separation was verified by model fitting in peptide-free vesicles, which from the FRET approach means that domains are larger than approximately 200 A. No noticeable alteration of membrane organization was detected upon increasing the peptide concentration. At variance, for the single fluid phase at 60 degrees C, there was a large increase in FRET efficiency upon peptide addition to the lipid vesicles, mainly caused by peptide-induced vesicle aggregation. The system gradually changed from unilamellar lipid vesicles to a multibilayer geometry, and a limit lamellar repeat distance of approximately 57 A was recovered. Furthermore, no evidence for lateral domain formation on the FRET length scale was found at this temperature, the cationic peptide being only able to induce local lipid demixing, causing a short-range sequestration of 2-3 acidic lipids around each surface-adsorbed peptide.  相似文献   

10.
The stability and size control of reverse vesicles have been investigated for a sucrose monoalkanoate/hexaethylene glycol hexadecyl ether/decane/water system. The stability is highly dependent on the surfactant mixing ratio, amount of added water, and vesicle size. The size distribution of reverse vesicles produced by simple mixing is very large, but larger vesicles can be removed by means of the extrusion method and reasonably homogeneously size-distributed reverse vesicles can be obtained. If a probe-type ultrasonicator is used, the reverse vesicles obtained are homogeneous and of very small size (50-70 nm in diameter) and they are considered to be of the unilamellar type.  相似文献   

11.
Cells have been encapsulated inside lipid vesicles by using a new microfluidic lipid vesicle formulation technique. Lipid vesicles are formulated within minutes without using toxic lipid solvents. The encapsulation efficiency inside the vesicles is controlled by the microfluidic flows. Green fluorescent proteins (GFP), carcinoma cells, and bead encapsulated vesicles have mean diameters of 27.2 mum, 62.4 mum, and 55.9 mum, respectively. The variations of vesicle sizes are approximately 20% for the GFP and cell encapsulated vesicles and approximately 10% for the bead encapsulated vesicles.  相似文献   

12.
This paper introduces a novel approach to controlling membrane permeability in free unilamellar vesicles using shearing in the presence of a detergent with a large head-group to tune pore formation. Such shear-induced permeation could offer a simple means of postencapsulating bioactive molecules to prepare vesicle vectors for drug delivery. Using UV absorption, fluorescence emission, dynamic light scattering, and electron microscopy, we investigated the membrane permeability and the morphology of unilamellar lipid vesicles (diameter in the range 50-400 nm) subjected to a shear stress in the presence of a small amount of nonionic surfactant (Brij 76). Shear-induced leakage and fusion events were observed. We analyzed the significance of the vesicle size, the shear rate, and the surfactant-to-lipid ratio for the observed phenomena. The present approach is evaluated for postloading of preformed vesicles.  相似文献   

13.
We describe a simple approach to the controlled removal of molecules from the membrane of large unilamellar vesicles made of fatty acids. Such vesicles shrink dramatically upon mixing with micelles composed of a mixture of fatty acid and a phospholipid (1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC)), as fatty acid molecules leave the vesicle membrane and accumulate within the mixed micelles. Vesicle shrinkage was confirmed by dynamic light scattering, fluorescence recovery after photobleaching of labeled vesicles, and fluorescence resonance energy transfer between lipid dyes incorporated into the vesicle membrane. Most of the encapsulated impermeable solute is retained during shrinkage, becoming concentrated by a factor of at least 50-fold in the final small vesicles. This unprecedented combination of vesicle shrinkage with retention of contents allows for the preparation of small vesicles containing high solute concentrations, and may find applications in liposomal drug delivery.  相似文献   

14.
In this paper the immobilization of small unilamellar DMPC/GM1 lipid vesicles containing a water-soluble bodipy dye is described. The binding of the complete alphabeta toxin expressed by Vibrio cholerae to the attached vesicles was measured using Surface Plasmon Resonance (SPR) and a value of the dissociation constant K d obtained. Further measurements showed that the interaction of both the alphabeta-toxin and the beta-subunit alone resulted in the permeation of the lipid membrane, with release of a fluorophore contained within the vesicle being measured by combined SPR and Surface Plasmon enhanced Fluorescence Spectroscopy (SPFS). The leakage of dye through the membrane, measured by following the change in fluorescence, was fitted to a simple diffusion model. Finally, SPFS measurements of the effect of europium(III) chloride (EuCl 3) showed that cholera toxin binding and subsequent membrane permeation could be blocked by 1 micromol dm (-3) europium chloride. In view of the low oral toxicity of europium chloride, we speculate on the potential pharmaceutical applications of this molecule in the treatment of cholera infection.  相似文献   

15.
Catansomes, which are vesicles prepared from mixtures of oppositely charged surfactants, have been suggested as effective alternatives to phospholipid vesicles, i.e., liposomes, in applications such as drug-delivery. This is mainly due to their enhanced chemical and physical stability as well as to their relatively easy preparation, which is an advantage for large-scale productions. In this study we have investigated catansomes prepared from a perfluorinated anionic surfactant (sodium perfluorooctanoate) premixed with a hydrogenated cationic surfactant (dodecyltrimethylammonium bromide or 1-dodecylpyridinium chloride). The aim was to gain insights into the physicochemical properties of these systems, such as size, stability, surface charge, and membrane morphology, which are essential for their use in drug-delivery applications. The catansomes were mostly unilamellar and 100-200 nm in size, and were stable for more than five months at room temperature. After loading the catansomes with the fluorescent marker calcein, they were found to exhibit an appreciable encapsulation efficiency and a low calcein leakage over time. The addition of fatty acids to calcein-loaded catansomes considerably promoted the release of calcein, and the rate and efficiency of calcein release were found to be proportional to the fatty acid concentration and chain length. Our results prove the feasibility of utilizing catansomes as drug-delivery vehicles as well as provide a means to efficiently release the encapsulated load.  相似文献   

16.
This article describes the first single-vesicle study of proton permeability across the lipid membrane of small (approximately 100 nm) uni- and multilamellar vesicles, which were composed of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC). To follow proton permeation into the internal volume of each vesicle, we encapsulated carboxyfluorescein, a pH-sensitive dye whose fluorescence was quenched in the presence of excess protons. A microfluidic platform was used for easy exchange of high- and low-pH solutions, and fluorescence quenching of single vesicles was detected with single-molecule total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy. Upon solution exchange and acidification of the extravesicular solution (from pH 9 to 3.5), we observed for each vesicle a biphasic decay in fluorescence. Through single-vesicle analysis, we found that rate constants for the first decay followed a Poisson distribution, whereas rate constants for the second decay followed a normal distribution. We propose that proton permeation into each vesicle first arose from formation of transient pores and then transitioned into the second decay phase, which occurred by the solubility-diffusion mechanism. Furthermore, for the bulk population of vesicles, the decay rate constant and vesicle intensity (dependent on size) correlated to give an average permeability coefficient; however, for individual vesicles, we found little correlation, which suggested that proton permeability among single vesicles was heterogeneous in our experiments.  相似文献   

17.
Recently, block copolymer vesicles have attracted considerable attention because of their properties in encapsulation and release. To explore their applications in biorelated fields, functionalization of the polymer vesicle is necessary. Herein, a reactive unilamellar vesicle is reported by self-assembly of poly(ethylene oxide)-block-poly(glycidyl methacrylate) copolymer (PEO-b-PGMA) in solution. When water was added into the PEO-b-PGMA solution in THF, unilamellar vesicles were produced. If hydrophobic primary amine additives, such as hexamethylenediamine (HDA) and dodecylamine (DA), were introduced during block copolymer assembling, the vesicular morphology remained unchanged; instead, the amines reacted with the epoxys and the vesicles were fixed by cross-linking. Furthermore, when 3-aminopropyl trimethoxysilane (APS) was applied, the organic/inorganic hybrid vesicles were obtained, which were stable against the solvent change. Therefore, this research not only supplies a new way to fix the vesicular morphology but also a reactive vesicle scaffold for introducing functional species.  相似文献   

18.
When exposed to the intracellular environment fluorescent probes sensitive to pH exhibit changes of photophysical characteristics as a result of an interaction of the dye molecule with cell constituents such as proteins, lipids or nucleic acids. This effect is reflected in calibration curves different from those found with the same dye in pure buffer solutions. To study an interaction of the probe 5'(and 6')-carboxy-10-dimethylamino-3-hydroxy- spiro[7H-benzo[c]xanthene-7,1'(3H)-isobenzofuran]-3'-one (carboxy SNARF-1) with membrane lipids, we measured its fluorescence in model systems of large unilamellar vesicles (LUV) prepared by extrusion. When the dye was removed from the bulk solution by gel filtration the relative fluorescence intensity of the lipid-bound dye form was enhanced, showing a strong interaction of the dye molecule with LUV membrane lipids. Surprisingly, the dye molecules seem to be bound predominantly to the outer surface of the lipid bilayer. The same situation was found with small unilamellar vesicles prepared by sonication. This effect makes it difficult to use carboxy SNARF-1 for measurements of the internal pH in suspensions of liposomes.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
The spontaneous self-assembly of unilamellar vesicles was investigated by means of time-resolved synchrotron small-angle X-ray scattering. The self-assembly process was initiated by rapid mixing of anionic surfactant micelles with either zwitterionic or cationic surfactant micelles in equimolar ratio using a stopped-flow device. For the zwitteranionic systems, transient disklike mixed micelles are observed as structural intermediates prior to the onset of vesiculation. These disklike micelles display an exponential growth law, and above a critical size they close to form unilamellar vesicles. In the catanionic system, the earliest observable structures within the mixing time of 4 ms are unilamellar vesicles. Nevertheless, in both systems a narrow distribution of the vesicle size was observed at the initial stages of their formation. The subsequent evolution of the vesicle size distribution depends on the subtle differences in the bilayer composition and properties.  相似文献   

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