Journal of Colloid and Interface Science, Vol.227, No.2, 461-468, 2000
Roles of gamma-globulin in the dynamic interfacial behavior of mixed dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine/gamma-globulin monolayers at air/liquid interfaces
This study investigated the roles of gamma-globulin in the dynamic interfacial behavior of dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC)I gamma-globulin monolayers at air/liquid interfaces at 25 degrees C. The surface tension behavior demonstrated that gamma-globulin had a large adsorption time scale. Moreover, the surface pressure-area hysteresis behavior of adsorbed gamma-globulin monolayers suggested that no significant desorption occurred during the compression stage, and the respreading of gamma-globulin molecules at the interface during the expansion stage was slow From the hysteresis behavior of adsorbed gamma-globulin monolayers with spread DPPC molecules, it was found that gamma-globulin molecules were expelled from the interface as DPPC molecules were in a condensed state. The squeeze-out of gamma-globulin molecules seemed to induce the loss of DPPC molecules at the interface with the extent depending on the initial gamma-globulin surface concentration. Furthermore, the expelled gamma-globulin molecules reentered the monolayer and participated in the surface pressure increase during the following expansion stage. The exclusion of gamma-globulin associated with the removal of DPPC during monolayer compression and the re-entry of gamma-globulin during subsequent monolayer expansion represented a mechanism for DPPC depletion and gamma-globulin enrichment at the interface, which may explain the inhibitory effect of certain proteins on the surface activity of DPPC,
Keywords:air/liquid interface;hysteresis isotherm;lipid/protein interaction;monolayer;surface pressure