posted on 2016-05-10, 00:00authored byStephanie
M. Kirby, Xujun Zhang, Paul S. Russo, Shelley L. Anna, Lynn M. Walker
Hydrophobins are amphiphilic proteins
produced by fungi. Cerato-ulmin
(CU) is a hydrophobin that has been associated with Dutch elm disease.
Like other hydrophobins, CU stabilizes air bubbles and oil droplets
through the formation of a persistent protein film at the interface.
The behavior of hydrophobins at surfaces has raised interest in their
potential applications, including use in surface coatings, food foams,
and emulsions and as dispersants. The practical use of hydrophobins
requires an improved understanding of the interfacial behavior of
these proteins, alone and in the presence of added surfactants. In
this study, the adsorption behavior of CU at air/water interfaces
is characterized by measuring the surface tension and interfacial
rheology as a function of adsorption time. CU is found to adsorb irreversibly
at air/water interfaces. The magnitude of the dilatational modulus
increases with adsorption time and surface pressure until CU eventually
forms a rigid film. The persistence of this film is tested through
the sequential addition of strong surfactant sodium dodecyl sulfate
(SDS) to the bulk liquid adjacent to the interface. SDS is found to
coadsorb to interfaces precoated with a CU film. At high concentrations,
the addition of SDS significantly decreases the dilatational modulus,
indicating disruption and displacement of CU by SDS. Sequential adsorption
results in mixed layers with properties not observed in interfaces
generated from complexes formed in the bulk. These results lend insight
to the complex interfacial interactions between hydrophobins and surfactants.