The mechanism of hydroxide ion binding to nonionic surfaces is explored by variation of the properties of the water-aggregate interface and by variation of the type of the aggregate.
Sugar-based gemini surfactants (GSs) display rich pH-dependent phase diagrams and are considered to be promising candidates as gene- and drug-delivery vehicles for biomedical applications. Several sugar-based GSs form vesicles around neutral pH. The vesicular dispersions undergo transitions toward wormlike micelles and spherical micelles at acidic pH, whereas flocculation followed by redispersion upon charge reversal is observed at basic pH. The influence of various amounts of the double-tailed phospholipids DOPC (1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine) and DOPE (1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine) and of the single-tailed surfactants lyso-PC (1-palmitoyl-2-hydroxy-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine) and OTAC (octadecyltrimethylammonium chloride) on the phase behavior of GS1 (1,8-bis(N-octadec-9-yl-1-deoxy-D-glucitol-1-ylamino)3,6-dioxaoctane) was determined as a function of pH, in water and in water at physiological ionic strength. The pH corresponding to the phase transitions and the characteristics of the aggregates were determined by means of a combination of physical techniques: static and dynamic light scattering (SLS and DLS), fluorescence spectroscopy, cryo-TEM and diffusion- and (31)P NMR. The results show that the additives affect the phase behavior of the GS1 dispersions in a pH-dependent fashion. In the presence of double-tailed phospholipids, a higher degree of protonation of GS1 must be reached to observe micelle formation, whereas single-tailed surfactants affect these transitions only slightly. In the presence of increasing amounts of lyso-PC, the pH range of flocculation becomes more narrow, indicating the increased hydration of the vesicles. The pH of redispersion after charge reversal is particularly sensitive to the presence of positively charged additives. It is suggested that the cationic headgroups disturb the hydrogen-bond structure of water at the vesicular surface, hampering OH(-) binding. The effect of an increase in ionic strength to physiological values is found to be modest, except for the dispersions containing the positively charged additives.
The present study aims at a better understanding of the mechanism of transfection mediated by two sugar-based gemini surfactants GS1 and GS2. Previously, these gemini surfactants have been shown to be efficient gene vectors for transfection both in vitro and in vivo. Here, using Nile Red, a solvatochromic fluorescent probe, we investigated the phase behavior of these gemini surfactants in complexes with plasmid DNA, so-called lipoplexes. We found that these lipoplexes undergo a lamellar-to-non-inverted micellar phase transition upon decreasing the pH from neutral to mildly acidic. This normal (non-inverted) phase at acidic pH is confirmed by the colloidal stability of the lipoplexes as shown by turbidity measurements. We therefore propose a normal hexagonal phase, H(I), for the gemini surfactant lipoplexes at acidic endosomal pH. Thus, we suggest that besides an inverted hexagonal (H(II)) phase as reported for several transfection-potent cationic lipid systems, another type of non-inverted non-bilayer structure, different from H(II), may destabilize the endosomal membrane, necessary for cytosolic DNA delivery and ultimately, cellular transfection.
Two double-tailed pyridinium cationic amphiphiles, differing only in the degree of unsaturation of the alkyl chains, have been selected for a detailed study of their aggregation behavior, under conditions employed for transfection experiments. The transfection efficiencies of the two molecules are remarkably different, especially when combined with 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (DOPE) as helper lipid. The phase behavior of the cationic amphiphile/DOPE mixtures have been studied using (31)P- and (2)H-NMR (on deuterated cationic amphiphiles) as main techniques, to monitor independently the behavior of the two components. In water, the lamellar organization is dominant for both the surfactants in their mixtures with the helper lipid. In HEPES saline buffer (HBS), the mixtures of the unsaturated surfactant form inverted phases and, in particular, stable H(II) phases for DOPE contents > or =30 mol %. By contrast, the saturated surfactant does not form homogeneously mixed inverted phases in mixtures with DOPE at room temperature. However, mixed inverted phases are observed for this system at higher temperatures and, after mixing has been achieved by heating, the metastable mixed phases remain present for several hours at 5 degrees C. At 35 degrees C the dominant phase is the cubic phase. The lipoplex composed of equimolar mixtures of the unsaturated surfactant with DOPE and plasmid DNA was found to be organized in highly curved bilayers.
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