Hysteresis behavior of amphiphilic model peptide in lung lipid monolayers at the air-water interface by an IRRAS measurement
- PMID: 18977123
- DOI: 10.1016/j.colsurfb.2008.09.013
Hysteresis behavior of amphiphilic model peptide in lung lipid monolayers at the air-water interface by an IRRAS measurement
Abstract
Pulmonary functions such as rapid adsorption, respreading, and hysteresis behavior of pulmonary surfactants are very important for respiratory movement. The interfacial behavior of pulmonary preparations containing an amphiphilic peptide (Hel 13-5) has recently investigated. An orientation of hydrophobic chains in a dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) with or without palmitic acid (PA) is associated with a collapse of alveoli during respiration process. Therefore, the present study focused on the acyl chain orientation in model pulmonary surfactants (DPPC/Hel 13-5 and DPPC/PA/Hel 13-5). A successive change in the orientation during cyclic compression and expansion of films at the air-water interface can be probed directly by an infrared reflection-absorption spectrometry (IRRAS) technique. The hysteresis behavior, one of very important pulmonary functions, was previously observed in surface pressure (pi)-molecular area (A) isotherms for the both model pulmonary surfactant systems (Langmuir 22(2006)1182-1192 and Langmuir 22(2006)5792-5803). In addition, it was reported that Hel 13-5 was squeezed-out of the surface on compression like native pulmonary surfactant proteins. The data obtained for the binary and ternary systems were compared with those of the equivalent pure DPPC and DPPC/PA mixtures, respectively. For an asymmetric methylene stretching vibration (nu(a)-CH(2)) RA intensity, the absolute RA values increased with shifting to small surface area, monotonously. For the corresponding wavenumber, on the other hand, the values gradually decreased into approximately 2920cm(-1). However, they were kept constant in the squeeze-out region in spite of a further decrease of surface area. These results suggested that the orientation of hydrophobic chains in DPPC and DPPC/PA mixtures became in the most packed state soon after emergence of the squeeze-out process of Hel 13-5 and then the packed orientation was retained up to the collapse state. This indicated that the squeezed-out Hel 13-5 stabilized monolayers left at the interface. For the DPPC/PA/Hel 13-5 system, in particular, dissociated PA molecules were excluded together with Hel 13-5 and the surface monolayers were refined to DPPC and undissociated PA components during the compression process. And the similar behavior in the second and third cycles supported the good respreading ability of the monolayers containing Hel 13-5.
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