Abstract
Stablen-hexadecane/water andn-tetradecane/water macroemulsions containing monolayers of natural (egg yolk lecithin, EY) and synthetic (dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine, DMPC) phospholipids at liquid-liquid interfaces were prepared. The existence of the monolayers was proved by studying the reduction kinetics of a surface-active spin probe with ascorbate anions. Spin labeled derivatives of stearic acid in which the nitroxide group is locared at different distances from the polar head (5-, 12-, and 16-doxylstearic acids) were used to study the temperature dependences of the molecular ordering, rotational mobility, and local polarity in the monolayers in emulsions and also in bilayers in liposomes obtained from the same lipids. In the EY monolayers, the degree of spin probe solubilization is higher, while the order parameters (S) and rotational correlation times (τ) are lower than those in EY bilayers. The differences between these parameters for mono- and bilayers increase with an increase in the distance of the reporter group from the aqueous phase. In the DMPC monolayers, a first-order phase transition was detected by measuring the temperature dependences ofS and τ. The temperature region of the phase transition in monolayers is shifted to lower temperatures with respect to that for bilayers and depends on the nature of the oil phase. It was concluded that the phospholipid monolayers in emulsions incorporate hydrocarbon molecules, whose concentration in the DMPC monolayers increases on going from the low-temperature (gel) to the high-temperature (liquid crystal) phase.
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