Abstract

The gel-to-liquid-crystalline phase transition of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) vesicle membrane was observed in the presence of various types of surfactants: sodium alkylsulfates, alkyltrimethylammonium bromides, alkanoyl- N-methylglucamides, and hexaethyleneglycol mono n-dodecyl ether. The phase transition was monitored by a change in scattered light intensity of the lipid suspension. For all the surfactants examined, the phase transition temperature was depressed linearly with the surfactant concentration in the measured concentration range, from which the partition coefficient, K, of the surfactant between bulk solution and lipid membrane was estimated. Except alkyltrimethylammonium bromides, log K and log CMC showed a linear relationship, which indicates that the driving force to transfer the surfactant from bulk solution to lipid membrane is a hydrophobic interaction. The addition of surfactants increased the transition width. The extent of widening the transitionwidth was in the order of sodium alkylsulfate > alkyltrimethylammonium bromides > hexaethyleneglycol mono n-dodecyl ether; in the case of alkanoyl- N-methylglucamides, the transition width was not affected by the addition. These effects on the transition width was interpreted qualitatively in terms of the cooperativity of the transition.

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