Abstract
Lung surfactant films at the air/water interface exhibit the particularity that surfactant molecules are expelled from the surface monolayer into a surface associated multilamellar phase during compression. They are able to re-enter the surface film during the following expansion. The underlying mechanism for this behavior is not fully understood yet. However, an important role is ascribed to the surfactant-associated protein C (SP-C). Here, we studied a model lung surfactant, consisting of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC), dipalmitoylphosphatidylglycerol (DPPG), and SP-C, by means of scanning near-field optical microscopy (SNOM). Attaching a fluorescent dye to the protein allowed the localization of its lateral distribution at various surface pressures with high resolution. At an early stage of compression, the film appears demixed into a pure lipid phase and a protein-enriched phase. Within the latter phase, protein aggregations are revealed. They show a uniform density, having three times the fluorescence intensity of their surroundings. Across the phase boundary between the lipid phase and the protein-rich phase, there is a protein density gradient rather than an abrupt border. When the film is highly compressed, we observe the formation of multilamellar structures that are fluorescent. They are often surrounded by a slightly fluorescent monolayer. The fluorescence of the multilayer stacks (i.e., the protein content per unit area) is proportional to the height of the stacks.
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