Understanding the structure of solid supported lipid multilayers is crucial to their application as a platform for novel materials. Conventionally, they are prepared from drop casting or spin coating of lipids dissolved in organic solvents, and lipid multilayers prepared from aqueous media and their structural characterisation have not been reported previously, due to their extremely low lipid solubility (i.e.∼10(-9) M) in water. Herein, using X-ray reflectivity (XRR) facilitated by a "bending mica" method, we have studied the structural characteristics of dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC) multilayers prepared via drop casting aqueous small unilamellar and multilamellar vesicle or liposome (i.e. SUV and MLV) dispersions on different surfaces, including mica, positively charged polyethylenimine (PEI) coated mica, and stearic trimethylammonium iodide (STAI) coated mica which exposes a monolayer of hydrocarbon tails. We suggest that DOPC liposomes served both as a delivery matrix where an appreciable lipid concentration in water (∼25 mg mL(-1) or 14 mM) was feasible, and as a structural precursor where the lamellar structure was readily retained on the rupture of the vesicles at the solid surface upon solvent evaporation to facilitate rapid multilayer formation. We find that multilayers on mica from MLVs exhibited polymorphism, whereas the SUV multilayers were well ordered and showed stronger stability against water. The influence of substrate chemistry (i.e. polymer coating, charge and hydrophobicity) on the multilayer structure is discussed in terms of lipid-substrate molecular interactions determining the bilayer packing proximal to the solid-liquid interface, which then had a templating effect on the structure of the bilayers distal from the interface, resulting in the overall different multilayer structural characteristics on different substrates. Such a fundamental understanding of the correlation between the physical parameters that characterise liposomes and substrate chemistry, and the structure of lipid multilayers underpins the potential development of a simple method via an aqueous liposome dispersion route for the inclusion of hydrophilic functional additives (e.g. drugs or nanoparticles) into lipid multilayer based hybrid materials, where tailored structural characteristics are an important consideration.
Surface structures with tailored morphologies can be readily delivered by the evaporation-induced self-assembly process. It has been recently demonstrated that ZnO nanorods could undergo rapid chemical and morphological transformation into 3D complex structures of Zn(OH) nanofibers as a droplet of ZnO nanofluid dries on the substrate via a mechanism very different from that observed in the coffee ring effect. Here, we have investigated how the crystallinity and morphology of ZnO nanoparticles would affect the ultimate pattern formation. Three ZnO particles differing in size and shape were used, and their crystal structures were characterized by powder X-ray diffraction (XRD) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Their dispersions were prepared by sonication in a mixture of isobutylamine and cyclohexane. Residual surface patterns were created by drop casting a droplet of the nanofluid on a silicon substrate. The residual surface patterns were analyzed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and microfocus grazing incidence X-ray diffraction (μGIXRD). Nanofluid droplets of the in-house synthesized ZnO nanoparticles resulted in residual surface patterns consisting of Zn(OH) nanofibers. However, when commercially acquired ZnO powders composed of crystals with various shapes and sizes were used as the starting material, Zn(OH) fibers were found covered by ZnO crystal residues that did not fully undergo the dissolution and recrystallization process during evaporation. The difference in the solubility of ZnO nanoparticles was linked to the difference in their crystallinity, as assessed using the Scherrer equation analysis of their XRD Bragg peaks. Our results show that the morphology of the ultimate residual pattern from evaporation of ZnO nanofluids can be controlled by varying the crystallinity of the starting ZnO nanoparticles which affects the nanoparticle dissolution process during evaporation.
Lipopolysaccharides (LPS) are a major component of the protective outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria. Understanding how the solution conditions may affect LPS-containing membranes is important to optimizing the design of antibacterial agents (ABAs) which exploit electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions to disrupt the bacteria membrane. Here, interactions between surface layers of LPS (Ra mutants) in aqueous media have been studied using a surface force apparatus (SFA), exploring the effects of temperature and divalent Ca 2+ cations. Complementary dynamic light scattering (DLS) characterization suggests that vesicle-like aggregates of diameter ∼28−80 nm are formed by LPS-Ra in aqueous media. SFA results show that LPS-Ra vesicles adsorb weakly onto mica in pure water at room temperature (RT) and the surface layers are readily squeezed out as the two surfaces approach each other. However, upon addition of calcium (Ca 2+ ) cations at near physiological concentration (2.5 mM) at RT, LPS multilayers or deformed LPS liposomes on mica are observed, presumably due to bridging between LPS phosphate groups and between LPS phosphates and negatively charged mica mediated by Ca 2+ , with a hard wall repulsion at surface separation D 0 ∼ 30−40 nm. At 40 °C, which is above the LPS-Ra β−α acyl chain melting temperature (T m = 36 °C), fusion events between the surface layers under compression could be observed, evident from δD ∼ 8−10 nm steps in the force− distance profiles attributed to LPS-bilayers being squeezed out due to enhanced fluidity of the LPS acyl-chain, with a final hard wall surface separation D 0 ∼ 8−10 nm corresponding to the thickness of a single bilayer confined between the surfaces. These unprecedented SFA results reveal intricate structural responses of LPS surface layers to temperature and Ca 2+ , with implications to our fundamental understanding of the structures and interactions of bacterial membranes.
The Notch signaling pathway mediates the direct communication between adjacent cells and regulates multiple developmental processes. Interaction of the Notch receptor with its ligands induces the liberation of the intracellular portion of Notch (NICD) referred to as regulated intramembraneous proteolysis (RIP). NICD translocates to the nucleus, and by complexing with the DNA binding protein RBPjκ and other cofactors activates transcription of bHLH genes. RIP-like processing of various mammalian Notch ligands (DLL1, JAG1 and JAG2) and the translocation of their intracellular domains (ICDs) to the nucleus has also been observed. These observations together with effects of over-expressed ligand ICDs in cultured cells on cell proliferation, differentiation, and Notch activity and target gene expression have led to the idea that the intracellular domains of Notch ligands have signaling functions. To test this hypothesis in vivo we have generated ES cells and transgenic mice that constitutively express various versions of the intracellular domain of mouse DLL1. In contrast to other cell lines, expression of DICDs in ES cells did not block proliferation or stimulate neuronal differentiation. Embryos with ubiquitous DICD expression developed to term without any apparent phenotype and grew up to viable and fertile adults. Early Notch-dependent processes or expression of selected Notch target genes were unaltered in transgenic embryos. In addition, we show that mouse DICD enters the nucleus inefficiently. Collectively, our results argue against a signaling activity of the intracellular domain of DLL1 in mouse embryos in vivo.
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