H. Bianco-peled et al., Structural study of langmuir monolayers containing lipidated poly(ethyleneglycol) and peptides, LANGMUIR, 17(22), 2001, pp. 6931-6937
The structure of Langmuir monolayers containing either a lipidated poly(eth
ylene glycol) (PEG-lipid) or a lipidated peptide (peptide-amphiphile) or a
binary mixture of both was studied using neutron reflectivity. The PEG port
ion of the PEG-lipid extends into the water, forming dense polymer "brushes
". The PEG volume fraction profiles and the brush height were evaluated fro
m the reflectivity curves for monolayers containing PEG-lipids with PEG mol
ecular masses of 120, 750, 2000, and 5000 Da at various grafting densities.
At relatively low surface densities, the segmental concentration profile f
or DSPE-PEG5000 (1,2-distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine-N-[(ethyle
ne glycol)(n)], DSPE) and DSPE-PEG2000 was well-described by the parabolic
profile predicted by the analytical self-consistent mean field theory. An i
ncrease in the surface density produced "flattening" of the profile, which
became more pronounced as the chain length decreased. The dependence of the
brush height on the surface density and the chain length was in close agre
ement with the power laws predicted by the self-consistent mean field and t
he scaling theories. Unlike the flexible PEG chains, the peptide-amphiphile
that was used in this study has a stiff conformation. The headgroup is ori
ented perpendicular to the air-water interface, and this configuration is n
early unaffected by changes in the surface density. Incorporation of the pe
ptide-amphiphile into a PEG-lipid monolayer results in perturbation of the
brush structure, due to the enhanced configuration constraints. These studi
es enable us to gauge how the tethered peptide in the monolayer can be expo
sed or masked when mixed with tethered PEG chains.