Mechanism of
Time-Dependent Adsorption for Phosphatidylcholine
onto a Clean Air–Water Interface from a Dispersion of Vesicles:
Effect of Temperature and Acyl Chain Length
posted on 2019-12-09, 18:52authored byJennifer
A. Staton, Steven W. Stearns, Stephanie R. Dungan
Dynamic surface tension measurements were used to track
adsorption
kinetics for dilauroylphosphatidylcholine (DLPC) or dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine
(DMPC) from monodisperse vesicle dispersions to an air–water
interface at elevated temperatures ≥30 °C. Effects of
vesicle concentration, aqueous solubility of the lipids, and temperature T on the adsorption kinetics were determined, and the controlling
transport pathway was identified. Adsorption dynamics were tracked
for 0.1–10 mM DLPC at 30 and 38 °C and for 1–10
mM DMPC at 30, 50, and 58 °C. Experimental results were compared
to theoretical predictions for a reaction-enhanced, molecular transport
mechanism, which was previously shown to effectively predict DLPC
adsorption kinetics at 22 °C. At higher temperatures, for DLPC
concentrations ≥0.25 mM or DMPC concentrations ≥1 mM,
a weak dependence of adsorption time on concentration was observed,
again consistent with the reaction-enhanced molecular pathway. Molecular
release rates from vesicles increased with increasing temperature
or decreasing acyl chain length. At equivalent ratios T/Tm of the dispersion temperature to
the lipid chain phase transition temperature Tm, measured adsorption times for DLPC were approximately 10-fold
shorter than those for DMPC, suggesting that the fluidity of the acyl
tails is not the only lipid property determining adsorption rates.
Despite the significant difference in aqueous solubility and chain
phase transition temperature between DLPC and DMPC, the results provide
further evidence for an adsorption mechanism that is well described
by diffusion of molecular lipid, with rates of molecular diffusion
near the interface enhanced by release from nearby vesicles.