Formation and elasticity of membranes of the class II hydrophobin Cerato-ulmin at oil-water interfaces

Zhang, X; Kirby, SM; Chen, Y; Anna, SL; Walker, LM; Hung, FR; Russo, PS

HERO ID

4968887

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2018

Language

English

PMID

29413625

HERO ID 4968887
In Press No
Year 2018
Title Formation and elasticity of membranes of the class II hydrophobin Cerato-ulmin at oil-water interfaces
Authors Zhang, X; Kirby, SM; Chen, Y; Anna, SL; Walker, LM; Hung, FR; Russo, PS
Journal Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces
Volume 164
Page Numbers 98-106
Abstract Protein surfactants show great potential to stabilize foams, bubbles, and emulsions. An important family of surface active proteins, the hydrophobins, is secreted by filamentous fungi. Two hydrophobin classes have been recognized, with Class II exhibiting slightly better solubility than Class I, although neither is very soluble in water. Hydrophobins are small proteins (8-14 kDa), but they are larger and more rigid than typical surfactants such as sodium dodecyl sulfate. This rigidity seems to be manifested in the strength of adsorbed hydrophobin layers on oil droplets or air bubbles. A particular Class II hydrophobin, Cerato-ulmin, was characterized at the oil-water interface (the oil was squalane). The results are compared to measurements at the air-water interface, newly extended to lower Cerato-ulmin concentrations. For both oil-water and air-water interfaces, static and dynamic properties were measured during the evolution of the membrane structure. The static measurements reveal that dilute Cerato-ulmin solution efficiently decreases the interfacial tension, whether at oil-water or air-water interfaces. The reduction in surface tension requires several hours. Interfacial mechanics were characterized too, and the dilatational modulus was found to reach large values at both types of interfaces: 339 ± 19 mN/m at the squalane-water interface and at least 764 ± 45 mN/m at the air-water interface. Both values well exceed those typical of small-molecule surfactants, but come closer to those expected of particulate-loaded interfaces. Circular dichroism provides some insight to adsorption-induced molecular rearrangements, which seem to be more prevalent at the oil-water interface than at the air-water interface.
Doi 10.1016/j.colsurfb.2018.01.017
Pmid 29413625
Wosid WOS:000429762100012
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English