The aggregation properties of different linear, single-chain alkyl
phosphates and phosphonates in water were
investigated at concentrations of up to 50 mM as a function of pH,
focusing in particular on spontaneous
vesicle formation. Under conditions where about half the molecules
are monoionic and half the molecules
are completely protonated (pH ≈ 2), n-dodecylphosphoric
acid, n-decylphosphonic acid, and
n-dodecylphosphonic acid spontaneously form vesicles at room temperature. For
n-hexadecylphosphoric acid, stable vesicles
only form above ∼40 °C. The presence of vesicles was evidenced
by light and electron microscopy and in
the case of n-dodecylphosphoric acid by entrapment
experiments using as water soluble probes glucose,
dextran,
and pepsin. The phase-transition temperature of vesicles of
n-dodecylphosphoric acid was 2.3 °C, as
determined
by differential scanning calorimetry. For
n-hexadecylphosphoryladenosine evidence for micelle
formation
has been obtained with a cmc of 20−50 μM at 25 °C. In an
experimental extension of the vesicle self-reproduction principles to phosphoamphiphiles, results are also
presented on the alkaline hydrolysis of the
water-insoluble di-n-decyl-4-nitrophenyl phosphate, which
led to the formation of 4-nitrophenol and di-n-decyl phosphate, the latter being a known vesicle-forming
amphiphile.
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