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Originally published as Biophys J. BioFAST on April 6, 2007.
doi:10.1529/biophysj.106.095513
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Biophysical Journal 93:123-139 (2007)
© 2007 The Biophysical Society

A Freeze-Fracture Transmission Electron Microscopy and Small Angle X-Ray Diffraction Study of the Effects of Albumin, Serum, and Polymers on Clinical Lung Surfactant Microstructure

Andreas Braun *, Patrick C. Stenger *, Heidi E. Warriner *, Joseph A. Zasadzinski *, Karen W. Lu {dagger} {ddagger} and H. William Taeusch {dagger} {ddagger}

* Department of Chemical Engineering, University of California, Santa Barbara, California 93106; {dagger} Department of Pediatrics, University of California, San Francisco; and {ddagger} San Francisco General Hospital, San Francisco, California 94110

Correspondence: Address reprint requests to J. A. Zasadzinski, Dept. of Chemical Engineering, University of California Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA 93106. Tel.: 805-893-4769; Fax: 805-893-4731; E-mail: gorilla{at}engineering.ucsb.edu.

Freeze-fracture transmission electron microscopy shows significant differences in the bilayer organization and fraction of water within the bilayer aggregates of clinical lung surfactants, which increases from Survanta to Curosurf to Infasurf. Albumin and serum inactivate all three clinical surfactants in vitro; addition of the nonionic polymers polyethylene glycol, dextran, or hyaluronic acid also reduces inactivation in all three. Freeze-fracture transmission electron microscopy shows that polyethylene glycol, hyaluronic acid, and albumin do not adsorb to the surfactant aggregates, nor do these macromolecules penetrate the interior water compartments of the surfactant aggregates. This results in an osmotic pressure difference that dehydrates the bilayer aggregates, causing a decrease in the bilayer spacing as shown by small angle x-ray scattering and an increase in the ordering of the bilayers as shown by freeze-fracture electron microscopy. Small angle x-ray diffraction shows that the relationship between the bilayer spacing and the imposed osmotic pressure for Curosurf is a screened electrostatic interaction with a Debye length consistent with the ionic strength of the solution. The variation in surface tension due to surfactant adsorption measured by the pulsating bubble method shows that the extent of surfactant aggregate reorganization does not correlate with the maximum or minimum surface tension achieved with or without serum in the subphase. Albumin, polymers, and their mixtures alter the surfactant aggregate microstructure in the same manner; hence, neither inhibition reversal due to added polymer nor inactivation due to albumin is caused by alterations in surfactant microstructure.




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H. Lee, R. M. Venable, A. D. MacKerell Jr., and R. W. Pastor
Molecular Dynamics Studies of Polyethylene Oxide and Polyethylene Glycol: Hydrodynamic Radius and Shape Anisotropy
Biophys. J., August 15, 2008; 95(4): 1590 - 1599.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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