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1.
The molecular mechanism and thermodynamics of the interactions between plasmid DNA and cationic surfactants were investigated by isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC), dynamic light scattering, surface tension measurements, and UV spectroscopy. The cationic surfactants studied include benzyldimethyldodecylammonium chloride, benzyldimethyltetradecylammonium chloride, cetylpyridinium chloride, and cetyltrimethylammonium chloride. The results indicate a critical aggregation concentration (cac) of a surfactant: above the cac the surfactant forms aggregates with plasmid DNA; below the cac, however, there is no detectable interaction between DNA and surfactant. Surfactants with longer hydrocarbon chains have smaller cac, indicating that hydrophobic interaction plays a key role in DNA-surfactant complexation. Moreover, an increase in ionic strength (I) increases the cac but decreases the critical micellization concentration (cmc). These opposite effects lead to a critical ionic strength (I(c)) at which cac = cmc; when I < I(c), cac < cmc; when I > I(c), DNA does not form complexes with surfactant micelles. In the interaction DNA exhibits a pseudophase property as the cac is a constant over a wide range of DNA concentrations. ITC data showed that the reaction is solely driven by entropy because both deltaH(o) (approximately 2-6 kJ mol(-1)) and deltaS(o) (approximately 70-110 J K(-1) mol(-1)) have positive values. In the complex, the molar ratio of DNA phosphate to surfactant is in the range of 0.63-1.05. The reaction forms sub-micrometer-sized primary particles; those aggregate at high surfactant concentrations. Taken together, the results led to an inference that there is no interaction between surfactant monomers and DNA molecules and demonstrated that DNA-cationic surfactant interactions are mediated by the hydrophobic interactions of surfactant molecules and counterion binding of DNA phosphates to the cationic surfactant aggregates.  相似文献   

2.
Surfactants interact with proteins in multifarious ways which depend on surfactant concentration and structure. To obtain a global overview of this process, we have analyzed the interaction of horse myoglobin (Mb) with an anionic (SDS) and cationic (CTAC) surfactant, using both equilibrium titration techniques and stopped-flow kinetics. Binding and kinetics of conformational changes can be divided into a number of different regions (five below the cmc and one above) with very distinct features (broadly similar between the two surfactants, despite their difference in head group and chain length), which nuance the classical view of biphasic binding prior to micellization. In stage A, fairly weak interactions lead to a linear decrease in thermal stability. This gives way to a more cooperative process in stage B, where aggregates (presumably hemimicelles) start to form on the protein surface, leading to global denaturation (loss of a thermal transition) and biphasic unfolding kinetics. This is consolidated in stage C with titratable surfactant adsorption. Adsorption of this surfactant species leads to significant changes in kinetics, namely, inhibition of unfolding kinetics in CTAC and altered unfolding amplitudes in SDS, though the process is still biphasic in both surfactants. Stage D commences the reduction in exothermic binding signals, leading to further uptake of 5 (SDS) or 31 (CTAC) surfactant molecules without any major changes in protein conformation. In stage E many more surfactant molecules (46 SDS and 39 CTAC) are bound, presumably as quasi-micellar structures, and we observe a very slow unfolding phase in SDS, which disappears as we reach the cmc. Above the cmc, the unfolding rates remain essentially constant in SDS, but increase significantly in CTAC, possibly because binding of bulk micelles removes the inhibition by hemimicellar aggregates. Our work highlights the fascinating richness of conformational changes that proteins can undergo in the presence of molecules with self-assembling properties.  相似文献   

3.
Synthesis and properties of a novel class of gemini pyridinium surfactants   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A novel class of gemini pyridinium surfactants with a four-methylene spacer group was synthesized, and their surface-active properties and interactions with polyacrylamide (PAM) were evaluated by surface tension, fluorescence, and viscosity measurements. A comparison between the gemini pyridinium surfactants and their corresponding monomers was also made. The cmc's of gemini pyridinium surfactants are much lower than those of the corresponding monomeric surfactants. The C20 value is about one order of magnitude lower than that of corresponding monomers, and the longer the hydrophobic chains of the surfactants, the lower the cmc value. Surface tension measurements of the surfactant-PAM mixed systems show that the critical aggregation concentration (cac) value is much lower than the cmc value of the surfactant system alone. Viscosity measurements of the surfactant-PAM mixed systems show that the relative viscosity of the surfactant-PAM system decreased with increasing concentration of surfactant. Additionally, fluorescence measurements of the surfactant-PAM mixed system suggest the formation of surfactant-polymer aggregates, and the gemini pyridinium surfactant with longer hydrophobic chains have a stronger interaction with PAM, owing to the stronger hydrophobic interaction.  相似文献   

4.
The interaction of sodium N-lauroylsarcosinate (SLS) with N-cetylpyridinium chloride (CPC) and N-dodecylpyridinium chloride (DPC) was investigated in aqueous mixtures. A strong interaction between the anionic and cationic surfactants was observed. The interaction parameter, β was determined for a wide composition range and was found to be negative. The mixed systems were found to have much lower critical micelle concentration (cmc) and surface tension at cmc. The surfactant mixtures exhibit synergism in the range of molar fractions investigated. The self-assembly formation in the mixtures of different compositions and total concentrations were studied using a number of techniques, including surface tension, fluorescence spectroscopy, dynamic light scattering (DLS), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), confocal fluorescence microscopy (CFM). Thermodynamically stable unilamellar vesicles were observed to form upon mixing of the anionic and cationic surfactants in a wide range of composition and concentrations in buffered aqueous media. TEM as well as DLS measurements were performed to obtain shape and size of the vesicular structures, respectively. These unilamellar vesicles are stable for periods as long as 3 months and appear to be the equilibrium form of aggregation. Effect of pH, and temperature on the stability was investigated. The vesicular structures were observed to be stable at pH as low as 2.0 and at biological temperature (37°C). In presence of 10 mol% of cholesterol the mixed surfactant vesicles exhibited leakage of the encapsulated calcein dye, showing potential application in pH-triggered drug release.  相似文献   

5.
Gemini surfactants typically consist of two single-chain surfactants chemically linked by a spacer molecule. We report herein the results of fully atomistic molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of a series of Gemini surfactants: CsH2s-alpha,omega-bis(C12H25N+(CH3)2Cl-), at the air/water interface with s = 3, 4, 6, 12, 14, and 16, at values of the initial surface area per surfactant AS = 70 A2, 77 A2, 95 A2, 151 A2, 133 A2, and 103 A2, respectively. The AS values employed were obtained from surface tension and neutron reflection experiments at the respective cmc of each surfactant. The Gemini surfactant corresponding to s = 3 was also simulated at AS = 105 A2, which is the experimentally derived value of surface area per surfactant at 1/10th of cmc. Only the surfactants with s = 12 and 14 and the surfactant with s = 3 at AS = 105 A2 gave a stable monolayer at the air/water interface. In other cases, we observe movement of some surfactant molecules from the air/water interface into the aqueous phase, resulting in a stable primary monolayer of surfactants at the air/water interface and a small concentration of surfactant molecules below it. The latter form aggregates, with their hydrophobic chains in the core. The density profiles along the normal to the interface are compared with the ones obtained from neutron reflection experiments. The MD simulations confirm the bending of the spacer toward the hydrophobic chains as the spacer length is increased and the spacer becomes more hydrophobic. The simulations have helped to shed light on the low-resolution picture which emerges from experimental analyses.  相似文献   

6.
Poly(asparagine) (pAsn) at 0.1wt % in the presence of dodecyltrimethylammonium bromide (DTAB) and pentaoxyethylene octyl ether (C(8)E(5)) at 1:1 molar ratio leads to the formation of mixed DTAB/C(8)E(5) micelle-like aggregates onto the polypeptide as a total surfactant critical association concentration (cac) is reached, as revealed by surface tension measurements and NMR chemical shifts. Two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser enhancement spectroscopy (NOESY) capable of revealing spatial relationships among proximal protons has been performed on the pAsn-DTAB-C(8)E(5)-water system to study structural details of the surfactant-polypeptide aggregates. NOESY cross-peaks at sample temperature of 298.15 K indicate that the polypeptide interacts with the DTAB/C(8)E(5) micelle-like aggregates. The NOE intermolecular effects also show direct interactions between surfactant and polypeptide in the pAsn-DTAB-water system, whereas no interaction has been revealed in the pAsn-C(8)E(5)-water system. Furthermore, the experimental evidence suggest that the DTAB-polypeptide complex is mainly driven by the polar attraction between the two molecules.  相似文献   

7.
表面活性剂临界胶束浓度(cmc)是表征表面活性剂胶体电解质性质的重要理化指标.常用的cmc测定方法有光散射法、染料法、增溶法、电导法和表面张力法等[1].这些方法的共同特点是依据表面活性剂在cmc附近某些理化性质的突变特性,从发生突变的函数不连续区域...  相似文献   

8.
The interaction between silver nanoparticles (Ag NPs) of different surface charge and surfactants relevant to the laundry cycle has been investigated to understand changes in speciation, both in and during transport from the washing machine. Ag NPs were synthesized to exhibit either a positive or a negative surface charge in solution conditions relevant for the laundry cycle (pH 10 and pH 7). These particles were characterized in terms of size and surface charge and compared to commercially laser ablated Ag NPs. The surfactants included anionic sodium dodecylbenzenesulfonate (LAS), cationic dodecyltrimethylammoniumchloride (DTAC) and nonionic Berol 266 (Berol). Surfactant-Ag NP interactions were studied by means of dynamic light scattering, Raman spectroscopy, zeta potential, and Quartz Crystal Microbalance. Mixed bilayers of CTAB and LAS were formed through a co-operative adsorption process on positively charged Ag NPs with pre-adsorbed CTAB, resulting in charge reversal from positive to negative zeta potentials. Adsorption of DTAC on negatively charged synthesized Ag NPs and negatively charged commercial Ag NPs resulted in bilayer formation and charge reversal. Weak interactions were observed for nonionic Berol with all Ag NPs via hydrophobic interactions, which resulted in decreased zeta potentials for Berol concentrations above its critical micelle concentration. Differences in particle size were essentially not affected by surfactant adsorption, as the surfactant layer thicknesses did not exceed more than a few nanometers. The surfactant interaction with the Ag NP surface was shown to be reversible, an observation of particular importance for hazard and environmental risk assessments.  相似文献   

9.
The effect of synthesis conditions (molar ratio between precursors, concentration of surfactants, synthesis temperature) on the size of CdS, ZnS and Ag2S nanoparticles (NPs) stabilized by sodium bis(2-ethylhexyl)succinate and polyoxyethylenesorbitan monooleate was studied. It was established that stabilization by polyoxyethylenesorbitan results in formation of smaller NPs (~8 nm) as compared to that in the presence of sodium bis(2-ethylhexyl)sulfosuccinate (14–60 nm), which is due to the difference between the adsorption rates of these surfactants onto the surface of synthesized NPs. The resulting aqueous dispersions of CdS, ZnS and Ag2S NPs exhibit long-term stability to sedimentation. The nanoparticle size increases insignificantly with temperature increasing to 65–70°C and rises abruptly at higher temperatures. The increase in the ratio between concentrations of precursors (sulfide and metal ions) also results in an increase in NP size, allowing one to synthesize nanoparticles of prescribed sizes. The optical properties of the resulting nanoparticles were studied. The positions of the exciton peaks and the luminescence intensity peaks of the dispersions of synthesized CdS and ZnS NPs were determined.  相似文献   

10.
An anionic/cationic mixed surfactant aqueous system of surfactin and cetyl trimethyl ammonium bromide (CTAB) at different molar ratios was studied by surface tension and fluorescence methods (pH 8.0). Various parameters that included critical micelle concentration (cmc), micellar composition (X 1), and interaction parameter (β m) as well as thermodynamic properties of mixed micelles were determined. The β m was found to be negative and the mixed system was found to have much lower cmc than pure surfactant systems. There exits synergism between anionic surfactin and cationic CTAB surfactants. The degree of participation of surfactin in the formation of mixed micelle changes with mixing ratio of the two surfactants. The results of aggregation number, fluorescence anisotropy, and viscosity indicate that more packed and larger aggregates were formed from mixed surfactants than unmixed, and the mixed system may be able to form vesicle spontaneously at high molar fraction of surfactin.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The interaction between pentaethylene glycol n-octyl ether (C8E5) and low-molecular-weight poly(acrylic acid) (PAA, M(w)=2000) in aqueous solution has been investigated by various experimental techniques at constant polymer concentration (0.1% w/w) with varying surfactant molality. Spectrofluorimetry, using pyrene as molecular probe, shows (i) the formation of surfactant-polymer aggregates at a surfactant molality (T(1)) lower than the critical micelle concentration (cmc) of C8E5 in water and (ii) the formation of free micelles at a surfactant molality (T(2)) slightly higher than the cmc. Fluorescence quenching measurements indicate that the presence of PAA induces a lowering of the C8E5 aggregation number. Calorimetry confirms spectrofluorimetric evidence; in addition, it shows the presence of weak interactions below T(1) between monomeric surfactant molecules and the polymer chains. Tensiometry shows that, above T(1), only a low fraction of surfactant molecules interact with the polymer and that free micelle formation occurs before polymer saturation. The peculiarities of the interaction between surfactants and low-molecular-weight polymers have been discussed.  相似文献   

13.
The interaction between the achiral sulfonated porphyrin 5,10,15,20-tetrakis(4-sulfonatophenyl)porphyrin, H 2TPPS 4 (4-), and two chiral cationic surfactants has been studied by optical absorption, fluorescence, and circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopies. At surfactant concentrations above the critical micellar concentration (cmc) the porphyrin is included in the micellar aggregates, but it is CD silent. Below the cmc at a definite porphyrin/surfactant stoichiometry the formation of heteroaggregates with transfer of chirality to the porphyrin chromophore occurs. The preferred surfactant/porphyrin stoichiometry is 3:1, which suggests a structure driven by electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions between porphyrin and surfactant and dipolar and ionic interactions with the water solution. At surfactant concentrations above the cmc, depending on the protocol of preparation of the samples, the formation of the two kinds of aggregates can be observed, reversible for the simple surfactant micelles incorporating the porphyrin, but irreversible for the heteroaggregates.  相似文献   

14.
The effect of TbCl3 on the aggregation processes of the anionic surfactants sodium decyl sulfate (SDeS) and sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) has been investigated. Electrical conductivity data, combined with Tb(III) luminescence measurements suggest that the formation of micelles involving TbCl3 and SDS occurs at concentrations below the critical micelle concentration (cmc) of the pure surfactants; the formation of these mixed aggregates was also monitored by light scattering, which indicates that the addition of TbCl3 to surfactant concentration at values below the pure surfactant cmc results in a much greater light scattering than that found with pure sodium alkylsulfate surfactant micelles. This phenomenon is dependent upon the alkyl chain length of the surfactant. With Tb(III)/DS-, complexes are formed with a cation/anion binding ratio varying from 3 to 6, which depends upon the initial concentration of Tb(III). This suggests that the majority of the cation hydration water molecules can be exchanged by the anionic surfactant. When the carbon chain length decreases, interactions between surfactant and Tb(III) also decrease, alterations in conductivity and fluorescence data are not so significant and, consequently, no binding ratio can be detected even if existing. The surfactant micellization is dependent on the presence of electrolyte in solution with apparent cmc being lower than the corresponding cmc value of pure SDS.  相似文献   

15.
We show that all four classes of surfactants (anionic, cationic, non-ionic, and zwitterionic) denature alpha-lactalbumin (alphaLA), making alphaLA an excellent model system to compare their denaturation mechanisms. This involves at least two steps in all surfactants but is more complex in charged surfactants due to their strong binding properties. At very low concentrations, charged surfactants bind specifically as monomers, but the first denaturation process only sets in when 4-10 surfactant molecules are bound to form clusters on the protein surface and is followed by a second loss of structure as 20-25 surfactant molecules are bound. Sub-micellar interactions can be modeled as simple independent binding at multiple sites which does not achieve saturation before micelle formation sets in. In contrast, no specific sub-micellar surfactant binding is detected by calorimetry in the presence of zwitterionic and non-ionic surfactants, and denaturation only occurs around the cmc. Unfolding rates are very rapid in charged surfactants and reach a similar plateau level around the cmc, indicating that monomers and micelles operate on a mutually exclusive basis. In contrast, unfolding occurs slowly in zwitterionic and non-ionic surfactants and the rate increases with the cmc, suggesting that monomers cooperate with micelles in denaturation.  相似文献   

16.
A novel fluorescence method for the determination of the critical micelle concentration (cmc) is reported. The cmc values of nonionic and anionic surfactants were evaluated utilizing a photosensitive monoazacryptand-Ba2+ complex, whose fluorescence intensity is sensitively changed by environmental conditions based on the photoinduced electron transfer (PET) mechanism as a fluorescent probe (PET method). Based on a comparison of the cmc values obtained by the PET method versus those obtained by conventional fluorescence-based methods as well as the values reported in the literature, one can conclude that the PET method is useful for the cmc determination. In particular, the PET method was more effective for the cmc determination of nonionic surfactants with very low cmc values (< 10(-5) M) than any other fluorescence-based method. In the cases of anionic surfactants, the PET method revealed the formation of the premicellar aggregates comprised of surfactant molecules and fluorescent probes below the cmc. Moreover, the hydrophobicity around the monoazacryptand-Ba2+ complex incorporated into various nonionic surfactant micelles was evaluated by this PET method.  相似文献   

17.
Recent progress in the understanding of the binding of surfactants to hydrophobically modified polymers (HMP), and the consequences of such binding, is reviewed. HMP are water-soluble polymers onto which low proportions of hydrophobic sidechains (hydrophobes) have been grafted. In an aqueous environment, the HMP hydrophobes associate among themselves and with added surfactant molecules into micelle-like aggregates. An HMP may therefore be considered as a ‘modified surfactant’, and the binding of surfactants to HMP is analogous to the mixed micellisation in mixed surfactant solutions. The binding isotherm gives the concentration of free (monomeric) surfactant and the stoichiometry of the HMP/surfactant complex at different total compositions. In mixtures involving ionic surfactants, it is found that the free surfactant often dominates, and gives important contributions to the ionic strength. Characteristic properties of HMP/surfactant mixtures may be related to stoichiometries of the mixed complexes. Thus, the maximum in solution viscosity, which is commonly found in HMP/surfactant mixtures, occurs at a similar hydrophobe stoichiometry (ratio of bound surfactant to HMP hydrophobe) for many different systems, although the total concentrations of surfactant at the maximum may vary by orders of magnitude, depending on the surfactant cmc. The solubility of a complex of oppositely charged HMP and surfactant is related to the charge stoichiometry of the complex. The phase separation/redissolution phenomena occurring in the bulk solution influence the HMP adsorption to surfaces and the forces between surfaces with adsorbed HMP.  相似文献   

18.
The effect of glycerol on the micellization of the cationic surfactant cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) and of the ethoxylated nonionic surfactant Brij 58 has been investigated by various experimental techniques. For both surfactants the critical micellar concentration (cmc), determined by surface tension measurements, is almost unaffected by the presence of glycerol in the mixture; only at high glycerol concentrations (>/=20% w/w) does the cmc significantly increase. The area per surfactant molecule at the air-solution interface, A, increases with increasing glycerol weight percentage, w(g). Fluorescence quenching measurements indicate that the presence of glycerol induces a lowering of the aggregation number of both surfactants. The glycerol intradiffusion coefficient has been measured by the pulsed-gradient spin-echo NMR technique as a function of glycerol content at constant surfactant concentration. It is almost unaffected by the presence of the surfactants, indicating that no direct glycerol-surfactant interaction occurs in the mixture. The surfactant intradiffusion coefficient has been also measured. In the case of CTAB, it increases with increasing glycerol concentration, a reflection of the decreased aggregation number. For Brij 58, in spite of the lowering of the aggregation number, the surfactant intradiffusion coefficient decreases with increasing glycerol concentration, suggesting an increase of the intermicellar interaction. The experimental evidence shows that for both surfactants the micellization is affected by the presence of glycerol through an indirect, solvent-mediated mechanism. In the case of CTAB, the main effect of glycerol is a lowering of the medium dielectric constant, which enhances the electrostatic interactions in solution. In the case of Brij 58, the results can be interpreted in terms of a salting-out effect according to which glycerol competes with the surfactant for water molecules, causing a dehydration of the surfactant ethoxylic headgroup.  相似文献   

19.
Conductivity (kappa), turbidity (tau), and fluorescence (I1/I3) studies of hexadecyltrimethylammonium bromide (HTAB), hexadecylpyridinium bromide (HPyBr), and hexadecylpyridinium chloride (HPyCl) in aqueous poly(amido amine) (PAMAM) dendrimers of generations 0 to 2.5 G have been carried out. The complexation of surfactant monomers with the PAMAM surface groups is demonstrated by the critical aggregation concentration (cac), which is two to three orders of magnitude less than the micellization of cationic surfactants in aqueous PAMAM and denoted by critical micelle concentration (cmc*). In the presence of aqueous amine-terminated PAMAM, the cmc* value for each surfactant was much lower than the cmc in pure water, while they remain close to each other in the presence of aqueous ester-terminated PAMAM for each surfactant. The fluorescence studies demonstrated that both amine- and ester-terminated PAMAM interact with the cationic surfactants, though the mode of interaction varied due to the different nature of surface groups.  相似文献   

20.
The micellization of anionic gemini surfactant, N,N'-ethylene(bis(sodium N-dodecanoyl-beta-alaninate)) (212), and its monomer, N-dodecanoyl-N-methyl alaninate (SDMA), and polyethoxylated nonionic surfactants, C(12)E(5) and C(12)E(8), has been studied tensiometrically in pure and mixed states in an aqueous solution of 0.1 M NaCl at pH 11 to determine physicochemical properties such as critical micellar concentration (cmc), surface tension at the cmc (gamma(cmc)), maximum surface excess (Gamma(max)) and minimum area per surfactant molecule at the air/water interface (A(min)). The theories of Rosen, Rubingh, Motomura, Maeda, and Nagarajan have been applied to investigate the interaction between those surfactants at the interface and in the micellar solution, the composition of the aggregates formed, the theoretical cmc in pure and mixed states, and the structural parameters as proposed by Tanford and Israelachvili. Various thermodynamic parameters (free energy of micellization and interfacial adsorption) have been calculated with the help of regular solution theory and the pseudophase model for micellization.  相似文献   

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