4.6 Article

Surface Plasmon Resonance Monitoring of Mono-Rhamnolipid Interaction with Phospholipid-Based Liposomes

Journal

LANGMUIR
Volume 37, Issue 26, Pages 7975-7985

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.1c00846

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Funding

  1. Tunisian government
  2. Institut de Chimie de Lyon (ICL)

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The interactions between mono-rhamnolipids and model membranes were studied using a biomimetic approach and multiparametric surface plasmon resonance (MP-SPR) technique. The results demonstrated the efficiency of the MP-SPR technique in detecting and measuring the binding of rhamnolipids to phospholipid liposomes.
The interactions of mono-rhamnolipids (mono-RLs) with model membranes were investigated through a biomimetic approach using phospholipid-based liposomes immobilized on a gold substrate and also by the multiparametric surface plasmon resonance (MP-SPR) technique. Biotinylated liposomes were bound onto an SPR gold chip surface coated with a streptavidin layer. The resulting MP-SPR signal proved the efficient binding of the liposomes. The thickness of the liposome layer calculated by modeling the MP-SPR signal was about 80 nm, which matched the average diameter of the liposomes. The mono-RL binding to the film of the phospholipid liposomes was monitored by SPR and the morphological changes of the liposome layer were assessed by modeling the SPR signal. We demonstrated the capacity of the MP-SPR technique to characterize the different steps of the liposome architecture evolution, i.e., from a monolayer of phospholipid liposomes to a single phospholipid bilayer induced by the interaction with mono-RLs. Further washing treatment with Triton X-100 detergent left a monolayer of phospholipid on the surface. As a possible practical application, our method based on a biomimetic membrane coupled to an SPR measurement proved to be a robust and sensitive analytical tool for the detection of mono-RLs with a limit of detection of 2 mu g mL(-1).

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