4.6 Article

On the Low Surface Tension of Lung Surfactant

Journal

LANGMUIR
Volume 27, Issue 13, Pages 8351-8358

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/la201482n

Keywords

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Funding

  1. University of Hawaii at Manoa
  2. Hawaii Community Foundation [44936]
  3. Peking University

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Natural lung surfactant contains less than 40% disaturated phospholipids, mainly dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC). The mechanism by which lung surfactant achieves very low near-zero surface tensions, well below its equilibrium value, is not fully understood. To date, the low surface tension of lung surfactant is usually explained by a squeeze-out model which predicts that upon film compression non-DPPC components are gradually excluded from the air water interface into a surface-associated surfactant reservoir. However, detailed experimental evidence of the squeeze-out within the physiologically relevant high surface pressure range is still lacking. In the present work, we studied four animal-derived clinical surfactant preparations, including Survanta, Curosurf, Infasurf, and BLES. By comparing compression isotherms and lateral structures of these surfactant films obtained by atomic force microscopy within the physiologically relevant high surface pressure range, we have derived an updated squeeze-out model. Our model suggests that the squeeze-out originates from fluid phases of a phase-separated monolayer. The squeeze-out process follows a nucleation growth model and only occurs within a narrow surface pressure range around the equilibrium spreading pressure of lung surfactant. After the squeeze-out, three-dimensional nuclei stop growing, thereby resulting in a DPPC-enriched interfacial monolayer to reduce the air water surface tension to very low values.

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