Juan Carlos Castillo-Sánchez, Ainhoa Collada, Emma Batllori-Badia, Alberto Galindo, Antonio Cruz, Jesús Pérez-Gil
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Pulmonary surfactant is a lipid/protein complex that coats the alveolar air-liquid interface to minimize surface tension facilitating breathing mechanics. Native surfactant (NS) is typically obtained from lavages of animal lungs, where it has gone through structural alterations as a result of exposure to respiratory dynamics and highly oxidative environments. We have studied here the structure of interfacial films formed by human amniotic fluid surfactant (AFS), thought to maintain the structural and functional features of a fully operative still non-used surfactant, as it has not been subjected to breathing dynamics yet. The results show that AFS adsorbs better at the interface, to form films supporting higher compression rates, than NS upon spreading at comparable concentrations and amounts. Films formed by AFS exhibit condensed regions excluding fluorescently labeled lipids from the mere adsorption, while films formed by NS only showed segregation of ordered-like domains once subjected to compression-expansion dynamics. Finally, AFS films were consistent with the presence of solid-like highly ordered phases, while NS consisted under comparable conditions of a coexistence of liquid-disordered/liquid-ordered fluid phases. This indicates that operative surfactant films formed by freshly secreted surfactant could be much more condensed than previously supposed, likely providing maximal stability under breathing mechanics.
期刊介绍:
Physiological Reports is an online only, open access journal that will publish peer reviewed research across all areas of basic, translational, and clinical physiology and allied disciplines. Physiological Reports is a collaboration between The Physiological Society and the American Physiological Society, and is therefore in a unique position to serve the international physiology community through quick time to publication while upholding a quality standard of sound research that constitutes a useful contribution to the field.