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1.
In this study, a pseudodouble-chained ion pair amphiphile, hexadecyltrimethylammonium-dodecylsulfate (HTMA-DS), was prepared from a mixture of cationic surfactant, hexadecyltrimethylammonium bromide, and anionic surfactant, sodium dodecylsulfate. Positively charged catanionic vesicles were then successfully fabricated from HTMA-DS with the addition of cationic surfactants, dialkyldimethylammonium bromide (DXDAB), including ditetradecyldimethylammonium bromide (DTDAB), dihexadecyldimethylammonium bromide, and dioctadecyldimethylammonium bromide (DODAB), with a mechanical disruption approach. The control of charge characteristic and physical stability of the catanionic vesicles through the variations of DXDAB molar fraction and alkyl chain length was then explored by size, zeta potential, and Fourier transform infrared analyses. It was found that the molecular packing and/or molecular interaction of HTMA-DS with DXDAB rather than the electrostatic repulsion between the charged vesicles dominated the physical stability of the mixed HTMA-DS/DXDAB vesicles. The presence of DTDAB, which possesses short alkyl chains, could adjust the packing of the unmatched chains of HTMA+ and DS? and promote the vesicle formation. However, the weak molecular interaction due to the short chains of DTDA+ could not maintain the vesicle structures in long-term storage. With increasing the alkyl chain length of DXDAB, it was possible to improve the vesicle physical stability through the enhanced molecular interaction in the vesicular bilayer. However, the long alkyl chains of DODAB unmatched with those of HTMA-DS, resulting in the vesicle disintegration in long-term storage. For the formation of stable charged catanionic vesicles of HTMA-DS/DXDAB, a good match in hydrophobic chains and strong molecular interaction were preferred for the vesicle-forming molecules.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
The thermotropic phase behavior of cationic liposomes in mixtures of two of the most investigated liposome-forming double-chain lipids, dioctadecyldimethylammonium bromide (DODAB) and didodecyldimethylammonium bromide (DDAB), was investigated by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), turbidity, and Nile Red fluorescence. The dispersions were investigated at 1.0 mM total surfactant concentration and varying DODAB and DDAB concentrations. The gel to liquid-crystalline phase transition temperatures (Tm) of neat DDAB and DODAB in aqueous dispersions are around 16 and 43 degrees C, respectively, and we aim to investigate the Tm behavior for mixtures of these cationic lipids. Overall, DDAB reduces the Tm of DODAB, the transition temperature depending on the DDAB content, but the Tm of DDAB is roughly independent of the DODAB concentration. Both DSC and fluorescence measurements show that, within the mixture, at room temperature (ca. 22 degrees C), the DDAB-rich liposomes are in the liquid-crystalline state, whereas the DODAB-rich liposomes are in the gel state. DSC results point to a higher affinity of DDAB for DODAB liposomes than the reverse, resulting in two populations of mixed DDAB/DODAB liposomes with distinctive phase behavior. Fluorescence measurements also show that the presence of a small amount of DODAB in DDAB-rich liposomes causes a pronounced effect in Nile Red emission, due to the increase in liposome size, as inferred from turbidity results.  相似文献   

4.
A number of fundamental studies on the interactions between lipid bilayers and (ethylene oxide)-b-(propylene oxide)-b-(ethylene oxide) copolymers (PEO-PPO-PEO, Pluronics) have been carried out recently as model systems for the complex behavior of cell membranes with this class of polymers often employed in pharmaceutical formulations. We report here a study by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) of the interactions in water between Pluronic F127 (F127), and the cationic vesicles of di-n-octadecyldimethylammonium bromide (DODAB), as a function of concentration of the two components (DODAB 0.1 and 1.0 mM; F127 0.1 to 5.0 mM) and of the sample preparation protocol. The DSC studies follow the critical micellization temperature (cmt ≈ 27 °C at 1.0 mM) of F127 and the gel-liquid crystal transition (T(m) ≈ 45 °C) of the DODAB bilayer and of F127/DODAB mixtures. Upon heating past T(m), vesicle/polymer mixtures undergo an irreversible conversion into mixed DODAB/F127 micelles and/or F127-bearing vesicles, depending on the relative amount of each component, together with, in some cases, residual intact F127 micelles or DODAB vesicles. Sample preparation protocol is shown to have little impact on the composition of mixed systems once they are heated above T(m).  相似文献   

5.
N-(1-piperidinepropionyl)amphotericin B methyl ester (in short, PAME), a low-toxicity amphotericin B derivative, has been investigated in Langmuir monolayers at the air/water interface alone and in mixtures with cellular membrane sterols (a mammalian sterol, cholesterol, and a fungal sterol, ergosterol) and a model phospholipid (DPPC). The analysis of the strength of interaction between PAME and both sterols as well as DPPC was based, on surface pressure measurements and analysis of the isothermal compressibility (C(s)(-1)), the mean area per molecule (A(12)), the excess free energy of mixing (DeltaG(Exc)) and the total free energy of mixing (DeltaG(M)). It has been found that the interactions between PAME and sterols are attractive; however, their strength is significantly weaker for mixtures of PAME with cholesterol than with ergosterol. This casts light on the improved selectivity of PAME toward fungal cells. The strongest interactions, found for PAME/DPPC mixtures, proved an important role of DPPC in the mechanism of reduced toxicity of PAME as compared to amphotericin B. Due to stable complex formation between PAME and DPPC the antibiotic is immobilized with DPPC molecules, which reduces the concentration of free antibiotic, which is capable of interacting with membrane sterols.  相似文献   

6.
The self-assembly of dialkyl chain cationic surfactant dihexadecyldimethyl ammonium bromide, DHDAB, and nonionic surfactants monododecyl hexaethylene glycol, C(12)E(6), and monododecyl dodecaethylene glycol, C(12)E(12), mixtures has been studied using predominantly small-angle neutron scattering, SANS. The scattering data have been used to produce a detailed phase diagram for the two surfactant mixtures and to quantify the microstructure in the different regions of the phase diagram. For cationic-surfactant-rich compositions, the microstructure is in the form of bilamellar, blv, or multilamellar, mlv, vesicles at low surfactant concentrations and is in an L(beta) lamellar phase at higher surfactant concentrations. For nonionic-rich compositions, the microstructure is predominantly in the form of relatively small globular mixed surfactant micelles, L(1). At intermediate compositions, there is an extensive mixed (blv/mlv) L(beta)/L(1) region. Although broadly similar, in detail there are significant differences in the phase behavior of DHDAB/C(12)E(6) and DHDAB/C(12)E(12) as a result of the increasing curvature associated with C(12)E(12) aggregates compared to that of C 12E 6 aggregates. For the DHDAB/C(12)E(12) mixture, the mixed (blv/mlv) L(beta)/L(1) phase region is more extensive. Furthermore, C(12)E(12) has a greater impact upon the rigidity of the bilayer in the blv, mlv, and L(beta) regions than is the case for C(12)E(6). The general features of the phase behavior are also reminiscent of that observed in phospholipid/surfactant mixtures and other related systems.  相似文献   

7.
A recently described non-viral gene delivery system [dioctadecyldimethylammonium bromide (DODAB)/monoolein (MO)] has been studied in detail to improve knowledge on the interactions between lamellar (DODAB) and non-lamellar-forming (MO) lipids, as a means to enhance their final cell transfection efficiency. Indeed, the morphology, fluidity, and size of these cationic surfactant/neutral lipid mixtures play an important role in the ability of these systems to complex nucleic acids. The different techniques used in this work, namely dynamic light scattering (DLS), fluorescence spectroscopy, differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), cryogenic transmission electron microscopy (cryo-TEM), light microscopy (LM), and surface pressure-area isotherms, allowed fully characterization of the phase behavior and aggregate morphology of DODAB/MO mixtures at different molar ratios. Overall, the results indicate that the final morphology of DODAB/MO aggregates depends on the balance between the tendency of DODAB to form zero-curvature bilayer structures and the propensity of MO to form non-bilayer structures with negative curvature. These results also show that in the MO-rich region, an increase in temperature has a similar effect on aggregate morphology as an increase in MO concentration.  相似文献   

8.
The interactions of amphotericin B (AmB) with sterols and phospholipids have been studied by adsorption of AmB from aqueous solutions into Langmuir monolayers from dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC), ergosterol, cholesterol and their mixtures. The results show that AmB exhibits stronger interaction with cholesterol than ergosterol in one-component monolayers. However, for DPPC–sterol monolayers, the effectiveness of AmB penetration depends on the proportion of both film components in the mixed film as well as on the strength of interaction between DPPC and particular sterol.  相似文献   

9.
The impact of some model perfumes on surfactant self-assembly has been investigated, using small-angle neutron scattering. A range of different model perfumes, with differing degrees of hydrophilicity/hydrophobicity, have been explored, and in order of increasing hydrophobicity include phenyl ethanol (PE), rose oxide (RO), limonene (LM), linalool (LL), and dihydrogen mercenol (DHM). The effect of their solubilization on the nonionic surfactant micelles of dodecaethylene monododecyl ether (C12EO12) and on the mixed surfactant aggregates of C12EO12 and the cationic dialkyl chain surfactant dihexadecyl dimethyl ammonium bromide (DHDAB) has been quantified. For PE and LL the effect of their solubilization on the micelle, mixed micelle/lamellar and lamellar regimes of the C12EO12/DHDAB mixtures, has also been determined. For the C12EO12 and mixed DHDAB/C12EO12 micelles PE is solubilized predominantly at the hydrophilic/hydrophobic interface, whereas the more hydrophobic perfumes, from RO to DHM, are solubilized predominantly in the hydrophobic core of the micelles. For the C12EO12 micelles, with increasing perfume concentration, the more hydrophobic perfumes (RO to DHM) promote micellar growth. Relatively modest growth is observed for RO and LM, whereas substantial growth is observed for LL and DHM. In contrast, for the addition of PE the C12EO12 micelles remain as relatively small globular micelles, with no significant growth. For the C12EO12/DHDAB mixed micelles, the pattern of behavior with the addition of perfume is broadly similar, except that the micellar growth with increasing perfume concentration for the more hydrophobic perfumes is less pronounced. In the Lbeta (Lv) region of the DHDAB-rich C12EO12/DHDAB phase diagram, the addition of PE results in a less structured (less rigid) lamellar phase, and ultimately a shift toward a structure more consistent with a sponge or bicontinuous phase. In the mixed L1/Lbeta region of the phase diagram PE induces a slight shift in the coexistence from Lbeta toward L1. The addition of LL to the Lbeta (Lv) region of the DHDAB-rich C12EO12/DHDAB phase diagram also results in a reduction in the lamellar structure (less rigid lamellae), and a shift toward a structure more consistent with a sponge or bicontinuous phase, or a coexisting phase of small vesicles. For the mixed L1/Lbeta region of the phase diagram LL induces a shift toward a greater L beta component.  相似文献   

10.
Inverse gas chromatography (IGC) has been used to measure the interaction parameter between two twin-tailed cationic surfactants. Didodecyldimethylammonium (DDAB) and dioctadecyldimethylammonium (DODAB) bromides and their mixtures were used as stationary phases. IGC and DSC techniques have been used for the determination of the temperature zone of working. The activity coefficients at infinite dilution (on a mole fraction basis) were calculated for eleven probe solutes on each pure surfactant column. Values of interaction parameter between surfactants obtained at four weight fractions of the mixtures and at five temperatures are positive and suggested that the interactions is more unfavourable with the increment of DODAB concentration in the mixture. The results are interpreted on the basis of partial miscibility between DDAB and DODAB.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
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   

13.
Neutron reflectivity, NR, and surface tension have been used to study the adsorption at the air-solution interface of mixtures of the dialkyl chain cationic surfactant dihexadecyl dimethyl ammonium bromide (DHDAB) and the nonionic surfactants monododecyl triethylene glycol (C12E3), monododecyl hexaethylene glycol (C12E6), and monododecyl dodecaethylene glycol (C12E12). The adsorption behavior of the surfactant mixtures with solution composition shows a marked departure from ideal mixing that is not consistent with current theories of nonideal mixing. For all three binary surfactant mixtures there is a critical composition below which the surface is totally dominated by the cationic surfactant. The onset of nonionic surfactant adsorption (expressed as a mole fraction of the nonionic surfactant) increases in composition as the ethylene oxide chain length of the nonionic cosurfactant increases from E3 to E12. Furthermore, the variation in the adsorption is strongly correlated with the variation in the phase behavior of the solution that is in equilibrium with the surface. The adsorbed amounts of DHDAB and the nonionic cosurfactants have been used to estimate the monomer concentration that is in equilibrium with the surface and are shown to be in reasonable qualitative agreement with the variation in the mixed critical aggregation concentration (cac).  相似文献   

14.
The surface pressure of monolayers of an insoluble surfactant, didodecyldimethylammonium bromide (DODAB), has been measured onto subphases with different concentrations of poly(styrenesulfonate) (PSS) and at different temperatures. The presence of PSS in the subphase shifts the surface-pressure (Pi) curves to larger areas per DODAB molecule, A, and shifts the surface phase transition to higher Pi's. The presence of PSS chains decreases the surface electric potential; the decrease is higher than expected from the formation of a double layer between the DODAB molecules and the PSS segments. Increasing the temperature shifts the surface-pressure curves to higher areas and also increases the values of Pi of the surface phase transition. The effect of the PSS chains on the Pi versus A curves is contrary to the one induced by the presence of inert electrolytes in the subphase. The behavior is consistent with the existence of a dense layer of PSS segments beneath the DODAB monolayer at low PSS concentrations, c. Two PSS layers exist at higher concentrations, a dense layer immediately below the DODAB and a less-dense layer, below the first one, that protrudes deep into the subphase. The surface-pressure relaxation curves have been found to be bimodal through the whole range of surface pressures and at all the values of polymer concentration studied. These results point out that the adsorption layers behave mainly as elastic bodies, with zero-frequency elasticity, epsilon(omega = 0), which agrees with the equilibrium compressibility modulus. The increase [epsilon(omega = 1) - epsilon(omega = 0)] has been found to be independent of both polymer concentration and molecular weight. The zero-frequency-dilational viscosity, kappa(omega = 0), strongly increases with Pi in the two-dimensional condensed-liquid region. The surface viscosity strongly decreases with increasing frequency; the decreasing rate is higher than the one found for the monolayers of nonionic insoluble polymers. kappa(omega = 0) has also been found to be independent of both polymer concentration and molecular weight. These results seem to indicate that it is the film formed by the DODAB molecules and the first dense polymer layer that determines the surface viscoelastic moduli of this system.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of monovalent salt nature and concentration over a range of low ionic strengths (0-10 mM LiCl, NaCl, KCl, or CsCl) and at two different pH values (6.3 and 10.0) on adsorption of dioctadecyldimethylammonium bromide (DODAB) bilayer fragments (BF) onto flat SiO(2) surfaces was systematically evaluated by means of in situ ellipsometry. High-affinity adsorption isotherms fitted by the Langmuir model indicated that adsorption maxima were consistent with bilayer deposition only around 10 mM monovalent salt at both pH values. In pure water, the mean thickness of the DODAB adsorbed layer was close to zero with bilayer deposition taking place only around 10 mM ionic strength. In the presence of 10 mM CsCl or LiCl, the highest and the lowest affinity constants for DODAB adsorption onto SiO(2) were, respectively, obtained consistently with the expected facility of cation exchange at the surface required for DODAB adsorption. The cation more tightly bound to the solid surface should be Li(+), which would present the largest resistance to displacement by the DODAB cation, whereas the less tightly bound cation should be Cs(+) due to its largest ionic radius and lowest charge density. In other words, DODAB adsorption proceeds in accordance with charge density on the solid surface, which depends on the nature and concentration of bound counterions as well as DODAB cation ability to displace them. AFM images show a very smooth DODAB film adsorbed onto the surface in situ with a large frequency of BF auto-association from their edges. The present results for flat surfaces entirely agree with previous data from our group for DODAB adsorption onto silica particles.  相似文献   

16.
An investigation of the temperature dependence of the fluorescence spectral characteristics of 2-[(p-methyl-amino)phenyl]-3,3-dimethyl-5-carboethoxy-3H indole (I) in aqueous micelles(sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB)) and surfactant vesicles (dioctadecyldimethylammonium bromide (DODAB)) is presented. The gel-to-liquid crystalline phase transition temperature Tc, determined to be approximately 309 K (36°C) for DODAB vesicles, is in close agreement with the value reported previously. A pretransition at 294 K (21°C) has also been obtained. The blue shift in the fluorescence maximum and the increase in bandwidth are accounted for by the displacement of molecule I towards the interior of the bilayer as a function of temperature. Arrhenius plots for the non-radiative decay processes competing with fluorescence as a function of temperature show relatively high values for the activation energy above the phase transition temperature, indicating the displacement of molecule I to a new, more viscous, less polar site compared with its initial location in DODAB. The highest value of the activation energy in water indicates that the decay dynamics of this molecule are different in water than in the organized media studied here.  相似文献   

17.
The evolution of the microstructure and composition occurring in the aqueous solutions of di-alkyl chain cationic/nonionic surfactant mixtures has been studied in detail using small angle neutron scattering, SANS. For all the systems studied we observe an evolution from a predominantly lamellar phase, for solutions rich in di-alkyl chain cationic surfactant, to mixed cationic/nonionic micelles, for solutions rich in the nonionic surfactant. At intermediate solution compositions there is a region of coexistence of lamellar and micellar phases, where the relative amounts change with solution composition. A number of different di-alkyl chain cationic surfactants, DHDAB, 2HT, DHTAC, DHTA methyl sulfate, and DISDA methyl sulfate, and nonionic surfactants, C12E12 and C12E23, are investigated. For these systems the differences in phase behavior is discussed, and for the mixture DHDAB/C12E12 a direct comparison with theoretical predictions of phase behavior is made. It is shown that the phase separation that can occur in these mixed systems is induced by a depletion force arising from the micellar component, and that the size and volume fraction of the micelles are critical factors.  相似文献   

18.
The surface adsorption behavior and solution aggregate microstructure of the dichain cationic surfactant dihexadecyl dimethylammonium bromide (DHDAB) have been studied using small angle neutron scattering (SANS), light scattering, neutron reflectivity (NR), and surface tension (ST). Using a combination of surface tension and neutron reflectivity, the DHDAB equilibrium surface excess at saturation adsorption has been measured as 2.60 +/- 0.05 x 10 (-10) mol.cm (-2). The values obtained by both methods are in good agreement and are consistent with the values reported for other dialkyl chain surfactants. The critical aggregation concentration (CAC) values obtained from both methods (NR and ST) are also in good agreement, with a mean value for the CAC of 4 +/- 2 x 10 (-5) M. The surface equilibrium is relatively slow, and this is attributed to monomer depletion in the near surface region, as a consequence of the long monomer residence times in the surfactant aggregates. The solution aggregate morphology has been determined using a combination of SANS, dynamic light scattering (DLS), cryogenic transmission electron microscopy (CryoTEM), and ultrasmall angle neutron scattering (USANS). Within the concentration range 1.5-80 mM, the aggregates are in the form of bilamellar vesicles with a lamellar " d-spacing" of the order of 900 A. The vesicles are relatively polydisperse with a particle size in the range 2000-4000 A. Above 80 mM, the bilamellar vesicles coexist with an additional L beta lamellar phase.  相似文献   

19.
A surfactant/polymer wall coating consisting of the doubly chained cationic surfactant dimethyldioctadecylammonium bromide (DODAB) and polyoxyethylene (POE) 40 stearate is investigated. The coating is formed by simply rinsing a capillary with a solution containing DODAB and POE 40 stearate. The resultant coating is semi-permanent--demonstrating stable electroosmotic flow (EOF) even after a 60 min high pressure rinse with buffer. The EOF (-0.45+/-(0.23) x 10(-4) cm(2) V(-1) s(-1) at pH 7.4) is suppressed by more than a factor of ten compared to that observed for DODAB alone. Model protein mixtures were separated over a pH range of 3-10 with efficiencies of up to greater than 1 million plates/m for the basic proteins cytochrome c, lysozyme, ribonuclease A and alpha-lactalbumin, and the acidic proteins insulin chain A, trypsin inhibitor, and alpha-chymotrypsinogen A. Migration time reproducibility was 0.5-4.0% from run to run and 0.6-4.3% from day to day. Protein recoveries with this coating ranged from 84% to 97%.  相似文献   

20.
The colloid stability of supramolecular assemblies composed of the synthetic cationic lipid dioctadecyldimethylammonium bromide (DODAB) on carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) supported on polystyrene amidine (PSA) microspheres was evaluated via turbidimetry kinetics, dynamic light scattering for particle sizing, zeta-potential analysis, and determination of DODAB adsorption on CMC-covered particles. At 0.1 g L(-1) CMC and 2 x 10(11) PSA particles/mL, CMC did not induce significant particle flocculation, and a vast majority of CMC-covered single particles were present in the dispersion so that this was the condition chosen for determining DODAB concentration (C) effects on particle size and zeta potentials. At 0.35 mM DODAB, charge neutralization, maximal size, and visible precipitation indicated extensive flocculation and minimal colloid stability for the DODAB/CMC/PSA assembly. At 0.1 g L(-1) CMC, isotherms of high affinity for DODAB adsorption on CMC-covered particles presented a plateau at a limiting adsorption of 700 x 10(17) DODAB molecules adsorbed per square meter PSA which was well above bilayer deposition on a smooth particle surface. The polyelectrolyte layer on hydrophobic particles was swelled and fluffy (ca. 11-nm hydrodynamic thickness), and maximal adsorption of DODAB lipid onto this layer produced a compressed composite cationic film with 20 mV of zeta potential and about 10-nm mean thickness. The assembly of cationic lipid/CMC layer/polymeric particle was stable only well above charge neutralization of the polyelectrolyte by the cationic lipid, at relatively large lipid concentrations (at and above 1 mM DODAB) with charge neutralization leading to extensive particle aggregation.  相似文献   

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