posted on 2007-01-16, 00:00authored byTapani Viitala, Jari T. Hautala, Jorma Vuorinen, Susanne K. Wiedmer
The adsorption of anionic phospholipids on silica was investigated by the dissipative quartz crystal microbalance
(QCM) technique. Liposomes composed of 1 mM 80:20 mol % of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine
(POPC)/phosphatidic acid, POPC/phosphatidylglycerol, or POPC/phosphatidylserine in N-(2-hydroxyethyl)piperazine-N‘-(2-ethanesulfonic acid) buffer at pH 7.4 (with or without 3 mM of CaCl2) were examined. We have previously
demonstrated that similar phospholipid coatings can be used in capillary electrochromatography as a stationary phase
for the separation of analytes. In this work, we focus on the formation of the coatings and on the type of lipid structure
formed on silica. The QCM investigation comprised qualitative results based on changes in frequency and resistance,
and quantitative modeling of the obtained results. The latter was performed using the dissipative QCM, which measures
the quartz crystal impedance, combined with equivalent circuit analysis. A previously developed coating and cleaning
procedure for phospholipid-coated fused silica capillaries was adopted in this study, and the same silica-coated crystal
was used throughout the QCM study. We will demonstrate in this work that the type of lipid structure formed on silica,
that is, a rather rigid supported lipid bilayer or a viscoelastic supported vesicle layer (SVL), is highly dependent on
the lipid and solvent composition. We also show for the first time that the modeling of the dissipative QCM data can
be used to extract a more quantitative picture of an adsorbed SVL, because, so far, published studies have merely
used the QCM data in a qualitative sense.