Abstract

Lipid polymorphism plays an important role in the lung surfactant cycle. A better understanding of the influence of phase transitions on the formation of a lipid film from dispersions of vesicles will help to describe the mechanism of action of lung surfactant. The surface pressure (or tension) of dispersions of DPPC, DMPC, and DPPE unilamellar vesicles was studied as a function of temperature. These aggregates rapidly fuse with a clean air–water interface when the system is at their phase transition temperature ( T m), showing a direct correlation between phase transition and film formation. Based on these results, an explanation on how fluid aggregates in the alveolar subphase can form a rigid monolayer at the alveolar interface is proposed.

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