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1.
J Phys Chem B ; 111(4): 909-17, 2007 Feb 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17249835

ABSTRACT

The mechanism of anesthetic action on membranes is still an open question, regardless of their extensive use in medical practice. It has been proposed that anesthetics may have the effect of promoting pore formation across membranes or at least switching transmembrane channels. In both cases this may be the result of changes in the interfacial curvature of the membrane due to the presence of anesthetic molecules. Aqueous solutions of surfactants display phases that mimic, in a simplified manner, real biological membranes. Therefore, in this study, two nonionic surfactant systems C16E6/H2O in concentrated solution and C10E3/H2O in dilute solution have been used as model membranes for the investigation of the effects of six common anesthetics (halothane, sodium thiopental, lidocaine base form and hydrochloride, prilocaine hydrochloride, and ketamine hydrochloride). Both binary surfactant-water systems exhibit phase transitions from the lamellar phase, Lalpha, that has zero spontaneous curvature and zero monolayer curvature to phases with more local interfacial curvature. These are the random mesh phase, Mh1(0), which consists of lamellae pierced by water-filled pores with local areas of positive interfacial curvature and the sponge phase, L3, that consists of the lamellar phase with interlamellae attachments, often referred to as a "melted" cubic phase, possessing negative monolayer curvature. Small-angle X-ray scattering and 2H NMR experiments upon the C16E6/2H2O system and optical observations of the C10E3/H2O system showed that all anesthetics employed in this study cause a shift in the Mh1(0) to Lalpha phase transition temperature and in the Lalpha to L3 transition temperature, respectively. All of the anesthetics studied bind to the interfacial region of the surfactant systems. Two types of behavior were observed on anesthetic addition: type I anesthetics, which decreased interfacial curvature, and type II, which increased it. However, at physiological pH both types of anesthetics decreased interfacial curvature.


Subject(s)
Anesthetics/chemistry , Chemistry, Physical/methods , Anesthetics, Local/chemistry , Lidocaine/chemistry , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Models, Chemical , Scattering, Radiation , Surface-Active Agents/chemistry , Temperature , Water/chemistry , X-Rays
2.
Langmuir ; 22(26): 10951-7, 2006 Dec 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17154570

ABSTRACT

The binary system of hexaethylene glycol n-hexadecyl ether (C16EO6) and water (2H2O) has a complex, temperature-dependent lyotropic phase sequence, in the concentration region of 48-62 wt %. On cooling it shows the sequence lamellar phase, L(alpha), random mesh phase Mh1(0), rhombohedral mesh phase, Mh1(R(-)3m), bicontinuous cubic phase, V1(Ia(-)3d), and a two-phase hexagonal region, H1+Lbeta. On heating from the latter two-phase region the phase sequence is V1(Ia(-)3d), ,Mh1(0), and Lalpha. Polarizing optical microscopy, 2H nuclear magnetic resonance, and small-angle X-ray scattering have been used to study the stability of these phases, their sequence, and their physical parameters with the addition of the oils, 1-hexene, decane, and octadecane. The oils are located within the alkyl chain regions of the mesophase structures. Depending on whether the added oil is "penetrating" or "swelling", it may reside in the region between the C16 alkyl chains of the surfactant or at the center of the bilayer and affect phase stability. Oils affect both the volume of the alkyl chain region (at fixed surfactant water mole ratio) and the rigidity of the interfacial region. Both effects can influence the phase structures and their ranges of stability. Adding different types of oil to the mesh phases gives an opportunity to understand the factors that are important in their formation. The transition from the Mh1(R(-)3m) phase to Mh1(0) phase is triggered by the hydrocarbon region swelling to a critical volume fraction of 0.32, a surfactant rod radius of approximately 1.75 nm, and a critical water layer thickness of approximately 2.5 nm. The latter is most likely responsible for a weakening of the interlayer headgroup overlap interaction and the loss of correlation between the layers. The lamellar phase becomes the only stable phase at high oil content.

3.
J Phys Chem B ; 110(16): 8184-7, 2006 Apr 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16623494

ABSTRACT

Random mesh phases share many common features with the classical lamellar phase in that they are layered phases; but crucially, they possess nonuniform interfacial curvature, since the lamellae are pierced by water-filled pores. The introduction of curvature into the lamellae has been posited as a transitional precursor for other lyotropic phases. In this paper, we show that simple 2H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experiments provide strong indication for the formation of the random mesh phase and the NMR data correlate well with literature results from small-angle X-ray scattering. The thermal evolution of the recorded quadrupolar splitting (DeltanuQ) is monitored within the lamellar phase of two nonionic surfactants, C16E6 and C12E5, as the samples are cooled or heated, and a marked and reversible change in the evolution of DeltanuQ is observed. Data from heavy water and deuterium labeled surfactant show the same temperature dependence and consequently report on the same structural changes with temperature. The formation of the random mesh phase is quantified in terms of an effective order parameter that is unity in the classical lamellar phase and takes values of <1 in the random mesh phase, reaching 0.6 at lower temperatures.

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