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1.
The characteristic features of hydroxystearic acid monolayers OH-substituted in the mid position of the alkyl chain deviate considerably from those of the usual nonsubstituted stearic acid. The phase behavior, domain morphology, and two-dimensional lattice structure of 9-, 11-, and 12-hydroxystearic acids are studied, using pi-A isotherms, Brewster angle microscopy (BAM), and grazing incidence X-ray diffraction (GIXD), to obtain detailed information on the effect of the exact position of the OH-substitution. The pi-A isotherms of all three hydroxyoctadecanoic acids have an extended flat plateau region, the extension of which only slightly decreases with the increase of temperature. At the same temperature, the extension of the plateau region increases and the plateau pressure decreases from 9-hydroxyoctadecanoic acid to 12-hydroxyoctadecanoic acid. The absolute -DeltaH and -DeltaS values for the phase transition increase slightly from 9-hydroxyoctadecanoic acid to 12- hydroxyoctadecanoic acid and indicate differences in the ordering of the condensed phase under consideration of the special reorientation mechanism of these bipolar amphiphiles at the fluid/condensed phase transition. The morphology of the condensed phase domains formed in the fluid/condensed coexistence region is specific for the position of the OH-substitution of the alkyl chain, just as the lattice structures of the condensed monolayer phase. 11-hydroxyoctadecanoic acid monolayers form centered rectangular lattices with the chain tilt toward the NNN (next nearest neighbor) direction, and 12-hydroxyoctadecanoic acid monolayers have an oblique lattice over the entire pressure range. A special feature of 9-hydroxystearic acid monolayers is the phase transition between two condensed phases observed in the pi-A isotherm of 5 degrees C at approximately 18 mN/m, where the centered rectangular lattice shows a NNN/NN transition. The morphology of the condensed phase domains formed in the fluid/condensed coexistence region, just as the lattice structures of the condensed monolayer phase, reveal the high specifity of the monolayer feature of the bipolar hydroxystearic acids OH-substituted in the mid position.  相似文献   

2.
In this work, organized mixed monolayers containing a cationic water-insoluble iridium(III) complex, Ir-dye, [Ir(ppy)(2)(tmphen)]PF(6), (tmphen = 3,4,7,8-tetramethyl-1,10-phenanthroline, and ppy = 2-phenylpyridine), and an anionic lipid matrix, DMPA, dimyristoyl-phosphatidic acid, with different molar proportions, were formed by the co-spreading method at the air-water interface. The presence of the dye at the interface, as well as the molecular organization of the mixed films, is deduced from surface techniques such as pi-A isotherms, Brewster angle microscopy (BAM) and reflection spectroscopy. The results obtained remark the formation of an equimolar mixed film, Ir-dye/DMPA = 1:1. BAM images reveal a whole homogeneous monolayer, with gradually increasing reflectivity along the compression process up to reaching the collapse of this equimolecular monolayer at pi approximately equal to 37 mNm(-1). Increasing the molar ratio of DMPA in the mixture, the excess of lipid molecules organizes themselves forming dark flower-like domains of pure DMPA at high surface pressures, coexisting with the mixed Ir-dye/DMPA = 1:1 monolayer. On the other hand, unstable mixed monolayers are obtained by using an initial dye surface concentration higher than the equimolecular one. These mixed Langmuir monolayers have been successfully transferred onto solid substrates by the LB (Langmuir-Blodgett) technique.  相似文献   

3.
Structural characteristics (structure, elasticity, topography, and film thickness) of dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and dioleoyl phosphatidylcholine (DOPC) monolayers were determined at the air-water interface at 20 degrees C and pH values of 5, 7, and 9 by means of surface pressure (pi)-area (A) isotherms combined with Brewster angle microscopy (BAM) and atomic force microscopy (AFM). From the pi-A isotherms and the monolayer elasticity, we deduced that, during compression, DPPC monolayers present a structural polymorphism at the air-water interface, with the homogeneous liquid-expanded (LE) structure; the liquid-condensed structure (LC) showing film anisotropy and DPPC domains with heterogeneous structures; and, finally, a homogeneous structure when the close-packed film molecules were in the solid (S) structure at higher surface pressures. However, DOPC monolayers had a liquid-expanded (LE) structure under all experimental conditions, a consequence of weak molecular interactions because of the double bond of the hydrocarbon chain. DPPC and DOPC monolayer structures are practically the same at pH values of 5 and 7, but a more expanded structure in the monolayer with a lower elasticity was observed at pH 9. BAM and AFM images corroborate, at the microscopic and nanoscopic levels, respectively, the same structural polymorphism deduced from the pi-A isotherm for DPPC and the homogeneous structure for DOPC monolayers as a function of surface pressure and the aqueous-phase pH. The results also corroborate that the structural characteristics and topography of phospholipids (DPPC and DOPC) are highly dependent on the presence of a double bond in the hydrocarbon chain.  相似文献   

4.
Mixed monolayers of stearic acid (SA) and octadecylamine (ODA) at the air/water interface were investigated in this article. The miscibility of the two compounds was evaluated by the measurement of surface pressure-area per molecule (pi-A) isothems and the direct observation of Brewster angle microscopy (BAM) on the water surface. The two compounds were spread individually on the subphase (method 1) or premixed first in the spreading solvent and then cospread (method 2). The effect of spreading method on the miscibility of the two compounds was also studied. The results show that the mixed monolayers prepared by method 1 cannot get a well-mixed state. The isotherms of mixed monolayers preserve both characteristics of SA and ODA and exhibit two collapse points. The calculated excess surface area is very small. Besides, distinguished domains corresponding to those of pure SA and ODA can be inspected from the BAM images. Such results indicate that SA and ODA cannot get a well-mixed phase via 2-dimensional mixing. On the contrary, in the mixed monolayer prepared by cospreading, the two compounds exhibit high miscibility. In the pi-A isotherms, the individual characteristics of SA and ODA disappear. The calculated excess area exhibits a highly positive deviation which indicates the existence of special interaction between the two compounds. The low compressibility of isotherm implies the highly rigid characteristic of the mixed monolayer. which was also sustained by the striplike collapse morphology observed from the BAM. The rigid characteristic of SA/ODA mixed monolayer was attributed to the formation of "catanionic surfactant" by electrostatic adsorption of headgroups of SA and ODA or to the formation of salt by acid-base reaction.  相似文献   

5.
Alamethicin (ALM), a 20-amino acid antibiotic peptide (peptaibol) from fungal sources, was mixed in Langmuir monolayers with six different surfactants: semifluorinated (F6H18, F10H19, F8H10OH, F6H10SH) and hydrogenated (C18SH and DODAC), aimed at finding appropriate molecules for ALM incorporation for nanodevice construction. Alamethicin-containing mixed monolayers were investigated by means of surface manometry (pi-A isotherms) and Brewster angle microscopy (BAM). Our results show that only semifluorinated alkanes can serve as an appropriate material since they form miscible and homogeneous monolayers with ALM within the whole concentration range. All the remaining surfactants, possessing polar groups, were found to demix with ALM. This effect was explained as being due to the existence of strong polar interactions between vertically oriented surfactant molecules, which tend to separate from horizontally oriented alpha-helices of the peptide. On the contrary, semifluorinated alkanes, lacking any polar group in their structure and bearing a large dipole moment, interact with ALM, also possessing a huge cumulative dipole moment. These dipole-dipole interactions between ALM and SFAs are more attractive than those between SFA molecules in their pure monolayers, causing the large ALM molecule, situated parallel to the interface, to be surrounded by SFA molecules in perpendicular orientation, leading to the formation of a highly organized binary mixed monolayer. BAM images of the ALM monolayer indicate that this peptide collapses with the nucleation and growth mechanism, like the majority of surfactants, which contradicts the model of ALM collapse by desorption, previously published in the literature.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
Mixed monolayers of deuterated palmitic acid C(15)D(31)COOH (dPA) and deuterated stearic acid C(17)D(35)COOH (dSA) with 1-bromoalkanes of different alkyl chain length (C(4) to C(16)) at the air-water interface were investigated. Alkanes and 1-chlorohexadecane ClC(16)H(33) (ClHex) were also studied to compare the effects of the halogen on the mixed monolayers. Surface pressure-area isotherms and Brewster angle microscopy (BAM) were used to obtain the organization and phase behavior, providing a macroscopic view of the mixed monolayers. A molecular-level understanding of the interfacial molecular organization and intermolecular interactions was obtained by using vibrational sum frequency generation (SFG) spectroscopy and infrared reflection-absorption spectroscopy (IRRAS). It was found that from the alkyl halide molecules investigated 1-bromopentadecane, BrC(15)H(31) (BrPent), 1-bromohexadecane, BrC(16)H(33) (BrHex), and ClHex incorporate into the fatty acid monolayers. Alkanes of 15- and 16-carbon chain length do not incorporate into the fatty acid monolayer, which suggests that the halogen is needed for incorporation. Isotherms and spectra suggest that BrHex molecules are squeezed out, or excluded, from the fatty acid monolayer as the surface pressure is increased, while BAM images confirm this. Additionally, SFG spectra reveal that the alkyl chains of both fatty acids (dPA and dSA) retain an all-trans conformation after the incorporation of alkyl halide molecules. BAM images show that at low surface pressures BrHex does not affect the two-dimensional morphology of the dPA and dSA domains and that BrHex is miscible with dPA and dSA. We also present for the first time BAM images of BrHex deposited on a water surface, which reveal the formation of aggregates while the surface pressure remains unchanged from that of neat water.  相似文献   

8.
We have concurrently studied the surface pressure (pi) versus area (A) isotherms and microscopic surface morphological features of Langmuir monolayers of diethylene glycol mono-n-octadecyl ether (C18E2) by film balance and Brewster angle microscopy (BAM) over a wide range of temperature. At temperatures < or =10 degrees C, the monolayers exist in the form of condensed phase even just after the evaporation of the spreading solvent, suggesting that the melting point of the condensed phase is above this temperature. At > or =15 degrees C, the monolayers can exist as gas (G), liquid expanded (LE), and liquid condensed (LC) phases and undergo a pressure-induced first-order phase transition between LE and LC phases showing a sharp cusp point followed by a plateau region in the pi-A isotherms. A variety of 2-D structures, depending on the subphase temperature, are observed by BAM just after the appearance of the cusp point. It is interesting to note here that the domains attain increasingly large and compact shape as the subphase temperature increases and finally give faceted structures with sharp edges and corners at > or =30 degrees C. The BAM observations were coupled with polarization modulation infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy (PM-IRRAS) to gain better understanding regarding the conformational order and subcell packing of the molecules. The constancy of the methylene stretching modes over the studied temperature range suggests that the hydrocarbon chains do not undergo any conformational changes upon compression of the monolayer. However, the full width at half-maximum (fwhm) values of the asymmetric methylene stretching mode (nu(as)(CH(2))) are found to respond differently with changes in temperature. It is concluded that even though the trans/gauche ratio of the hydrocarbon chains remains virtually constant, the LE-LC phase transition upon compression of the monolayer is accompanied by a loss of the rotational freedom of the molecules.  相似文献   

9.
The miscibility of poly(D,L-lactide-co-glycolide) (PLG) with three amphiphilic molecules and the interaction of the PLG/surfactant mixtures with DNA at air/water interface are investigated by pi-A isotherms, Brewster angle microscopy (BAM) and atomic force microscopy (AFM) techniques. The pi-A isotherms of the PLG mixtures with cationic C(12)AzoC(6)PyBr, and C(12)AzoC(6)N(CH(3))(3)Br, are quite different from the pi-A isotherm of pure PLG on water subphase. In contrast to the case, the pi-A isotherm of PLG mixed with nonionic C(12)AzoC(6)OPy is almost identical to the pure PLG except some increasing of molecular area. Similar phenomena are observed on DNA subphase. The in situ BAM and ex situ AFM observations demonstrate that the dispersion of PLG at air/water interface becomes good when it mixes with the two cationic surfactants, whereas quite poor due to the phase separation when it mixes with the nonionic amphiphilic molecule. Based on these results we conclude that the cationic surfactants can affect the conformation change of PLG at air/water interface and figure a well miscibility with polymer whereas the nonionic amphiphilic molecule presents poor miscibility. In addition, the even mixing of the PLG and the cationic surfactants is favorable for the adsorption to DNA more effectively.  相似文献   

10.
In this work we have analyzed the structural and topographical characteristics of mixed monolayers formed by an adsorbed whey protein isolate (WPI) and a spread monoglyceride monolayer (monopalmitin or monoolein) on the previously adsorbed protein film. Measurements of the surface pressure (pi)-area (A) isotherm were obtained at 20 degrees C and at pH 7 for protein-adsorbed films from water in a Wilhelmy-type film balance. Since the surface concentration (1/A) is actually unknown for the adsorbed monolayer, the values were derived by assuming that the A values for adsorbed and spread monolayers were equal at the collapse point of the mixed film. The pi-A isotherm deduced for adsorbed WPI monolayer in this work is practically the same as that obtained directly by spreading. For WPI-monoglyceride mixed films, the pi-A isotherms for adsorbed and spread monolayers at pi higher than the equilibrium surface pressure of WPI are practically coincident, a phenomenon which may be attributed to the protein displacement by the monoglyceride from the interface. At lower surface pressures, WPI and monoglyceride coexist at the interface and the adsorbed and spread pi-A isotherms (i.e., the monolayer structure of the mixed films) are different. Monopalmitin has a higher capacity than monoolein for the displacement of protein from the air-water interface. However, some degree of interactions exists between proteins and monoglycerides and these interactions are higher for adsorbed than for spread films. The topography of the monolayer corroborates these conclusions.  相似文献   

11.
The phase behavior of 2,3-disubstituted methyl octadecanoate monolayers at the air-water interface is studied by film balance and a Brewster angle microscope (BAM). The comparison of the surface pressure-molecular area (pi-A) isotherms with the corresponding BAM images provides information on the phase behavior of the monolayers. Variations in the phase behavior of different 2,3-disubstituted methyl octadecanoate monolayers can be correlated with the size of the headgroups, the interactions between the polar molecular moieties and the subphase, and the intermolecular interactions. The enlarging of the headgroups makes forming a condensed monolayer difficult for the molecules, even after introduction of substituents giving rise to the formation of hydrogen bonds between the molecules, which may balance the steric repulsion and stabilize the monolayers. Model calculations of the two-dimensional lattice structure of the 2,3-disubstituted methyl octadecanoates on basis of the pg and p1 space group are performed and correspond well with the experimental results.  相似文献   

12.
Amphiphilic derivative of the laminin peptide YIGSR and three other mutated peptides with mutation at Y with V (valine), I (isoleucine), and L (leucine) have been synthesized. The monolayer formation and the stability of these peptide analogues at air/water interface and the interaction with phospholipid monolayers have been studied using surface pressure-molecular area (pi-A) and surface potential-molecular area (DeltaV-A) isotherms. The single amino acid mutation in the native sequence leads to appreciable changes in surface activity, orientation and insertion into lipid monolayers with LIGSR showing most hydrophobic character while YIGSR showed most polar nature. The morphology of spread monolayers in the most close packed state was carried out using Brewster angle microscopy (BAM). LB films of these amphiphilic peptide derivatives transferred to hydrophilic quartz surfaces and hydrophobically modified surfaces showed significant changes in the work of adhesion as well as spreading behavior of water with the L substituted sequence showing maximum work of adhesion and the native sequence YIGSR, the least work of adhesion. From theoretical estimates, the long-range effects of the different amino acid residues in position 1 on the alkyl chains have been studied from charge on the carbon and hydrogen atoms of the alkyl tails. The present study demonstrates that amphiphilic derivatives of the laminin peptide YIGSR show enhanced activity compared to the original sequence. This work shows that the amino acid substituents on the head group clearly influence the distal methylene groups of the tail. Thus, any mutation of even single amino acid in a peptide sequence influences and plays an important role in determining macroscopic properties such as surface energy and adhesion both at air/solution and solid/solution interfaces.  相似文献   

13.
Recent progress in studies of the main characteristics of supramolecular assemblies formed by interfacial molecular recognition between an amphiphilic monolayer and a non-surface-active species, which is dissolved in the aqueous subphase, by complementary hydrogen bonding and/or electrostatic interaction at the air-water interface is reviewed. Systems consisting of an amphiphilic melamine-type monolayer and an pyrimidine derivative dissolved in the aqueous subphase are representative model systems for molecular recognition on the basis of complementary hydrogen bonding. Most of the studies have been performed with 2,4-di(n-undecylamino)-6-amino-1,3,5-triazine (2C11H23-melamine) monolayers as host component and thymine, uracil or barbituric acid as dissolved non-surface-active pyrimidine derivatives. The combination of surface pressure studies with Brewster angle microscopy (BAM) imaging and Grazing incidence X-ray diffraction (GIXD) measurements is optimal for the characterization of the change in structure and phase behavior at the interfacial recognition process. The molecular recognition of all pyrimidine derivatives dissolved in the aqueous subphase changes drastically and in a specific way the characteristic features (pi-A isotherms, morphology of the condensed phase domains) of the 2C11H23-melamine monolayer. The small condensed phase domains of the pure 2C11H23-melamine monolayer are compact without an inner texture. The monolayers of the supramolecular 2C11H23-melamine entities with thymine or uracil form specifically well-shaped condensed phase domains with an inner alkyl chain texture essentially oriented parallel to the periphery. The completely different morphology of the 2C11H23-melamine-barbituric acid monolayers is characterized by the formation of large homogeneous areas of condensed phase that transfer at smaller areas per molecule to a homogeneous condensed monolayer. The striking differences in the main characteristics between the supramolecular entities are related to their different chemical structures: complementary hydrogen bonding of two thymine or uracil molecules by one 2C11H23-melamine molecule and a linearly extended hydrogen bonding network between 2C11H23-melamine and barbituric acid. The high values of hydrogen bonding energy obtained by quantum chemical calculations on the basis of the semi-empirical PM3 method state the high stability of the supramolecular entities. The GIXD results reveal that the formation of hydrogen-bond based superstructures between the polar head groups of the amphiphilic 2C11H23-melamine monolayer and the non-surface-active pyrimidine derivatives gives rise only to quantitative changes in the two-dimensional lattice structure of the alkyl chains. The alternative possibility to construct interfacial molecular recognition systems on the basis of acid-base interaction is demonstrated by the experimental results obtained by molecular recognition of the heptadecyl-benzamidinium chloride monolayers with dissolved non-surface-active phenylacetate ions. The formation of supramolecular assemblies causes also drastical changes of the surface features in these systems. Here, the development of a substructure in the condensed phase domains consisting of long filigree strings and the favoured formation of bilayers overgrowing the strings indicates a linearly extended amidinium-carboxylate interfacial structure of the base and acid component in alternating sequence.  相似文献   

14.
Dipalmitoyl phosphatidyl glycerol (DPPG) as Langmuir monolayers at the air/water interface was investigated by means of surface pressure measurements in addition to Brewster angle microscopy (BAM) during film compression/expansion. A characteristic phase transition region appeared in the course of surface pressure-area (pi-A) isotherms for monolayers spread on alkaline water or buffer subphase, while on neutral or acidic water the plateau region was absent. This phase transition region was attributed to the ionization of DPPG monolayer. It has been postulated that the ionization of the phosphatidyl glycerol group leads to its increased solvation, which probably provokes both a change in the orientation of the polar group and its deeper penetration into bulk phase. Film compression along the transition region provokes the dehydration of polar groups and subsequent change of their conformation, thus causing the DPPG molecules to emerge up to the interface. Quantitative Brewster angle microscopy (BAM) measurements revealed that along the liquid-expanded to liquid-condensed phase transition the thickness of the ionized DPPG monolayer increases by 4.2 A as a result of the conformational changes of the ionized polar groups, which tend to emerge from the bulk subphase up to the surface.  相似文献   

15.
A synthesized peptidolipid (C18IIGLM-NH2) comprised of a single C18-saturated hydrocarbon chain connected to the amino acid sequence IIGLM terminated with the NH2 group was spread on water, which formed a stable Langmuir monolayer. The Langmuir and Langmuir-Blodgett (LB) films have been characterized by measurements of surface pressure-area (pi-A) and surface potential-area (DeltaV-A) isotherms and infrared multiple-angle incidence resolution spectrometry (MAIRS). The Langmuir monolayer had a significantly larger limiting molecular area than that of a similar molecule of C18IIGLM-OH, which was reported in our previous study. The surface dipole moment analysis coupled with the pi-A isotherm suggested that the C18IIGLM-NH2 monolayer was extraordinarily stiff and the fundamental structure of the monolayer was brought about before the monolayer compression. The infrared MAIRS analysis of the C18IIGLM-NH2 LB film revealed that the backbone structure of the monolayer was the 'antiparallel' beta sheet aligned parallel to the substrate. Since the C18IIGLM-OH LB film was made of 'parallel' beta sheet with a random orientation, it has been found that the present C18IIGLM-NH2 Langmuir monolayer has a largely different monolayer structure, although the chemical structures are slightly different from each other by the terminal group only.  相似文献   

16.
The peptide corresponding to the sequence (279-298) of the Hepatitis G virus (HGV/GBV-C) E2 protein was synthesized, and surface activity measurements, pi-A compression isotherms, and penetration of E2(279-298) into phospholipid monolayers spread at the air-water interface were carried out on water and phosphate buffer subphases. The results obtained indicated that the pure E2(279-298) Langmuir monolayer exhibited a looser packing on saline-buffered than on pure water subphase and suggest that the increase in subphase ionic strength stabilizes the peptide monolayer. To better understand the topography of the monolayer, Brewster angle microscopy (BAM) images of pure peptide monolayers were obtained. Penetration of the peptide into the pure lipid monolayers of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and into mixtures of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine/dimyristoylphosphatidylglycerol (DMPC/DMPG) at various initial surface pressures was investigated to determine the ability of these lipid monolayers to host the peptide. The higher penetration of peptide into phospholipids is attained when the monolayers are in the liquid expanded state, and the greater interaction is observed with DMPC. Furthermore, the penetration of the peptide dissolved in the subphase into these various lipid monolayers was investigated to understand the interactions between the peptide and the lipid at the air-water interface. The results obtained showed that the lipid acyl chain length is an important parameter to be taken into consideration in the study of peptide-lipid interactions.  相似文献   

17.
Crystalline monolayers of octadecylsulfonate amphiphiles (C18S) separated by hydrophilic guanidinium (G) spacer molecules were formed at the air-water interface at a surface coverage that was consistent with that expected for a fully condensed monolayer self-assembled by hydrogen bonding between the G ions and the sulfonate groups. The surface pressure-area isotherms reflected reinforcement of this monolayer by hydrogen bonding between the G ions and the sulfonate groups, and grazing incidence X-ray diffraction (GIXD) measurements, performed in-situ at the air-water interface, revealed substantial tilt of the alkyl hydrophobes (t = 49 degrees with respect to the surface normal), which allowed the close packing of the C18 chains needed for a stable crystalline monolayer. This property contrasts with behavior observed previously for monolayers of hexadecylbiphenylsulfonate (C16BPS) and G, which only formed crystallites upon compression, accompanied by ejection of the G ions from the air-water interface. Upon compression to higher surface pressures, GIXD revealed that the highly tilted (G)C18S monolayer crystallites transformed to a self-interdigitated (G)C18S crystalline multilayer accompanied by a new crystalline monolayer phase with slightly tilted alkyl chains and disordered sulfonate headgroups. This transformation was dependent on the rate of compression, suggesting kinetic limitations for the "zipper-like" transformation from the crystalline monolayer to the self-interdigitated (G)C18S crystalline multilayer.  相似文献   

18.
The review demonstrates the recent theoretical and experimental progress in the understanding of penetration systems at the air-water interface in which a dissolved amphiphile (surfactant, protein) penetrates into a Langmuir monolayer. The critical review of the existing theoretical models which describe the thermodynamics of the penetration are critically reviewed. Although a rigorous thermodynamic analysis of penetration systems is unavailable due to their complexity, some model assumptions, e.g. the invariability of the activity coefficient of the insoluble component of the monolayer during the penetration of the soluble component results in reasonable solutions. New theoretical models describing the equilibrium behaviour of the insoluble monolayers which undergo the 2D aggregation in the monolayer, and the equations of state and adsorption isotherms which assume the existence of multiple states (conformations) of a protein molecule within the monolayer and the non-ideality of the adsorbed monolayers are now available. The theories which describe the penetration of a soluble surfactant into the main phases of Langmuir monolayers were presented first for the case of the mixture of the molecules possessing equal partial molar surfaces (the mixture of homologues), with further extension of the models to include the interesting process of the protein penetration into the monolayer of 2D aggregating phospholipid. This extension was based on a concept which subdivides the protein molecules into independent fragments with areas equal to those of the phospholipid molecule. Various mechanisms for the effect of the soluble surfactant on the aggregation of the insoluble component were considered in the theoretical models: (i) no effect on the aggregate formation process; (ii) formation of mixed aggregates; and (iii) the influence on the aggregating process via the change of aggregation constant, but without any formation of mixed aggregates. Accordingly depending on the mechanism, different forms of the equations of state of the monolayer and of the adsorption isotherms of soluble surfactant are predicted. Based on the shape of the experimental pi-A isotherms, interesting conclusions can be drawn on the real mechanism. First experimental evidence has been provided that the penetration of different proteins and surfactants into a DPPC monolayer in a fluid-like state induces a first order main phase transition of pure DPPC. The phase transition is indicated by a break point in the pi(t) penetration kinetics curves and the domain formation by BAM. Mixed aggregates of protein with phospholipid are not formed. These results agree satisfactorily with the predictions of the theoretical models. New information on phase transition and phase properties of Langmuir monolayers penetrated by soluble amphiphiles are obtained by coupling of the pi(t) penetration kinetics curves with BAM and GIXD measurements. The GIXD results on the penetration of beta-lactoglobulin into DPPC monolayers have shown that protein penetration occurs without any specific interactions with the DPPC molecules and the condensed phase consists only of DPPC.  相似文献   

19.
Monolayer behavior of an ion pair amphiphile (IPA), hexadecyltrimethylammonium-dodecylsulfate (HTMA-DS), with normal long-chain alcohols at the air/water interface was analyzed by the Langmuir trough technique with the Brewster angle microscope (BAM) observations, and the pronounced stability enhancement of a HTMA-DS monolayer with the presence of the alcohol additives was demonstrated. Two normal long-chain alcohols with alkyl chain lengths of C16 and C18, 1-hexadecanol (HD) and 1-octadecanol (OD), were chosen as the additives. The surface pressure-area and surface potential-area isotherms of the monolayers with BAM images of monolayer morphology implied that the addition of either HD or OD with a comparatively small head group in a double-chained HTMA-DS monolayer at the interface led to better molecular packing and attractive interaction between the molecules, showing a similar condensing effect as that observed in mixed phospholipid/cholesterol systems. Moreover, the monolayer hysteresis and relaxation curves indicated that the incorporation of the alcohols into a HTMA-DS monolayer was able to lessen the monolayer hysteresis and to enhance the monolayer stability. In comparison with OD, HD seemed more effective as an additive in stabilizing a HTMA-DS monolayer, most likely due to the relatively better molecular packing of HTMA-DS and HD molecules at the interface. It is inferred that the stability of a monolayer or vesicular bilayer structure composed of IPAs can be improved by adjusting the molecular packing/interaction with a suitable long-chain alcohol as the additive.  相似文献   

20.
In this work, surface film balance and Brewster angle microscopy techniques have been used to analyze the structural characteristics (structure, topography, reflectivity, thickness, miscibility, and interactions) of hydrolysates from sunflower protein isolate (SPI) and dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) mixed monolayers spread on the air-water interface. The degree of hydrolysis (DH) of SPI, low (5.62%), medium (23.5%), and high (46.3%), and the protein/DPPC mass fraction were analyzed as variables. The structural characteristics of the mixed monolayers deduced from the surface pressure (pi)-area (A) isotherms depend on the interfacial composition and degree of hydrolysis. At surface pressures lower than the equilibrium surface pressure of SPI hydrolysate (pi(e)(SPI hydrolysate)), both DPPC and protein are present in the mixed monolayer. At higher surface pressures (at pi > pi(e)(SPI hydrolysate)), collapsed protein residues may be displaced from the interface by DPPC molecules. The differences observed between pure SPI hydrolysates and DPPC in reflectivity (I) and monolayer thickness during monolayer compression have been used to analyze the topographical characteristics of SPI hydrolysates and DPPC mixed monolayers at the air-water interface. The topography, reflectivity, and thickness of mixed monolayers confirm at microscopic and nanoscopic levels the structural characteristics deduced from the pi-A isotherms.  相似文献   

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