Journal
BIOPHYSICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 158, Issue 2-3, Pages 119-125Publisher
ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.bpc.2011.06.001
Keywords
Phospholipid; Cholesterol; Surface pressure-area isotherm; Endogenous surfactant; Phase separation; Langmuir-Wilhelmy surface balance
Funding
- Canadian Institutes of Health Research
- Ontario Thoracic Society
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Pulmonary surfactant facilitates breathing by forming a surface tension reducing film at the air-liquid interface of the alveoli. The objective was to characterize the structure of surfactant films using endogenous rat surfactant. Solid-support surfactant films, at different surface pressures, were obtained using a Langmuir balance and were analyzed using atomic force microscopy. The results showed a lipid film structure with three distinct phases: liquid expanded, liquid ordered and liquid condensed. The area covered by the liquid condensed domains increased as surface pressure increased. The presence of liquid ordered phase within these structures correlated with the cholesterol content. At a surface pressure of 50 mN/m, stacks of bilayers appeared. Several structural details of these films differ from previous observations made with goat and exogenous surfactants. Overall, the data indicate that surfactant films demonstrate phase separation at low surface pressures and multilayer formation at higher pressure, features likely important for normal surfactant function. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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