The microstructure of aggregates formed by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and 1-pentanol in mixtures of water and a polar aprotic solvent (propylene carbonate, PC) was investigated by means of pulsed gradient spin-echo NMR, dynamic light scattering, viscosity, and conductivity measurements. PC partitions itself between micelles and aqueous bulk. The fraction of micellized propylene carbonate remains constant along PC-dilution, and the phase separation takes place when the composition of continuous phase attains the PC/water miscibility gap. The micellized PC is present mainly in the micelle's palisade and strongly increases the total interfacial area, thus acting as a cosurfactant. At high PC content, the system is composed by very small aggregates (around 10 A in radius) made by few SDS molecules (10-6) and PC and pentanol. The resulting system can be described as a nanostructured fluid with a huge interfacial area and a small dispersed phase.
The effect of propylene carbonate on SDS micelles was investigated by means of pulsed gradient spin-echo (PGSE) NMR, small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), conductivity and ion-selective electrode (ISE) measurements. The knowledge of the cosolvent partition between continuous phase and micelles (obtained by means of PGSE-NMR) allowed the identification of relevant dilution paths. Along these paths the system is composed of identical micelles that become more and more diluted. The extrapolation of measured self-diffusion coefficient to infinite dilution (where direct and hydrodynamic interactions are negligible) permits the determination of hydrodynamic size of the micelles. Moreover, the micelle ionization degree (measured by means of ISE) combined with PGSE-NMR and conductivity data furnishes an estimate of the aggregation number without any assumptions on micellar shape. On the other hand, troublesome hydrodynamic interactions are irrelevant to SAXS, and scattering data collected at fixed composition can be analyzed according to a reasonable model by exploiting the insight on the propylene carbonate partition gained through PGSE-NMR. By means of these approaches, we have found that propylene carbonate acts mainly as cosurfactant for the SDS micelles, decreasing their size and aggregation number by increasing the mean headgroup area of SDS.
Screening and characterization of novel tyrosinase inhibitors is useful for applications in food technology,\ud
cosmetics and medicine. The hydrodistilled essential oils from lavender Lavandula spica L. and peppermint Mentha x piperita L.\ud
were investigated for tyrosinase inhibitory activity. Their composition was assessed by gas chromatography–mass\ud
spectrometry. Both oils inhibited mushroom tyrosinase in a dose dependent manner. The IC50 values were estimated,\ud
kinetics were analysed and Ki values were determined. Our results indicate that lavender and peppermint essential oils\ud
may be promising herbal ingredients for developing depigmenting agents in clinical, cosmetic and industrial processes
The inhibiting or inactivating effects of some beta-lactam antibiotics on beta-lactamase from Mycobacterium fortuitum were studied. Among all substrates tested, clavulanic acid and sulbactam were the strongest competitive inhibitors of the enzyme although the latter was slightly hydrolyzed. Imipenem and cefoxitin scarcely inhibited the beta-lactamase yet expressed good activity against the microorganism in vitro, suggesting that the effectiveness of these drugs on M. fortuitum might be due to high permeation through the cell wall. All the isoxazolylpenicillins tested and methicillin inactivated the enzyme of M. fortuitum by a first rapid phase of acylation followed by a steady-state process of enzyme reactivation (deacylation). Clavulanic acid and sulbactam showed Ki values for the enzyme inactivation closely corresponding to hematic concentrations achievable in vivo during antibiotic treatment.
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