Discher B M, Maloney K M, Grainger D W, Sousa C A, Hall S B
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland 97201-3098, USA.
Biochemistry. 1999 Jan 5;38(1):374-83. doi: 10.1021/bi981386h.
We have shown previously that lateral compression of pulmonary surfactant monolayers initially induces separation of two phases but that these remix when the films become more dense (1). In the studies reported here, we used fluorescence microscopy to examine the role of the different surfactant constituents in the remixing of the separated phases. Subfractions containing only the purified phospholipids (PPL), the surfactant proteins and phospholipids (SP&PL), and the neutral and phospholipids (N&PL) were obtained by chromatographic separation of the components in extracted calf surfactant (calf lung surfactant extract, CLSE). Compression of the different monolayers produced nonfluorescent domains that emerged for temperatures between 20 and 41 degreesC at similar surface pressures 6-8 mN/m higher than values observed for dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC), the most prevalent component of pulmonary surfactant. Comparison of the different preparations showed that the neutral lipid increased the total nonfluorescent area at surface pressures up to 25 mN/m but dispersed that total area among a larger number of smaller domains. The surfactant proteins also produced smaller domains, but they had the opposite effect of decreasing the total nonfluorescent area. Only the neutral lipids caused remixing. In images from static monolayers, the domains for N&PL dropped from a maximum of 26 +/- 3% of the interface at 25 mN/m to 4 +/- 2% at 30 mN/m, similar to the previously reported behavior for CLSE. During continuous compression through a narrow range of pressure and molecular area, in N&PL, CLSE, and mixtures of PPL with 10% cholesterol, domains became highly distorted immediately prior to remixing. The characteristic transition in shape and abrupt termination of phase coexistence indicate that the remixing caused by the neutral lipids occurs at or close to a critical point.
我们之前已经表明,肺表面活性剂单分子层的侧向压缩最初会诱导两相分离,但当薄膜变得更致密时,这些相会重新混合(1)。在本文报道的研究中,我们使用荧光显微镜来研究不同表面活性剂成分在分离相重新混合中的作用。通过对提取的小牛表面活性剂(小牛肺表面活性剂提取物,CLSE)中的成分进行色谱分离,获得了仅含有纯化磷脂(PPL)、表面活性剂蛋白和磷脂(SP&PL)以及中性脂质和磷脂(N&PL)的亚组分。不同单分子层的压缩产生了非荧光区域,这些区域在20至41摄氏度的温度下出现,其表面压力比肺表面活性剂最主要成分二棕榈酰磷脂酰胆碱(DPPC)所观察到的值高6 - 8 mN/m。不同制剂的比较表明,中性脂质在表面压力高达25 mN/m时增加了总的非荧光面积,但将该总面积分散到更多更小的区域中。表面活性剂蛋白也产生较小的区域,但它们具有相反的效果,即减少总的非荧光面积。只有中性脂质会导致重新混合。在静态单分子层的图像中,N&PL的区域在25 mN/m时从界面的最大26±3%下降到30 mN/m时的4±2%,这与之前报道的CLSE的行为相似。在通过狭窄压力和分子面积范围的连续压缩过程中,在N&PL、CLSE以及PPL与10%胆固醇的混合物中,区域在重新混合之前立即变得高度扭曲。形状的特征转变和相共存的突然终止表明,由中性脂质引起的重新混合发生在或接近临界点。