Volume 94, 1992

Internal and interfacial structure of membranes studied using X-ray standing waves

Abstract

The X-ray standing wave (XSW) method developed in the mid-Sixties was used then to determine the position of heavy atoms in and on crystals of silicon and germanium with sub-ångström resolution. The advent of layered synthetic microstructures, used primarily as wide-bandpass X-ray monochromators, heralded a new era in the use of XSW to study biologically relevant structures with a length scale of the order of tens of Ångströms. The original measurements were performed on model membrane Langmuir-Blodgett (LB) films and served to establish the utility of the XSW approach in determining heavy-atom location in such systems with sub-Ängström resolution and in tracking the heavy-atom layer as it moves during a thermotropic transition. Recent measurements show that the XSW is well defined at close to 1000 Å from the XSW generating surface. Thus, the useful probing distance of XSW is of this length scale also without a compromise in resolution. In addition to the above measurements on well ordered systems the XSW method is being used to profile ion distribution ‘direclty’ at the membrane/aqueous interface. Recent results show that the diffuse double layer can be established reversibly by suitably adjusting the pH of the aqueous phase next to a phospholipid membrane. The advantages and disadvantages of this new surface technique as applied to the study of membrane structure and interfacial phenomena are discussed.

Article information

Article type
Paper

Faraday Discuss., 1992,94, 283-293

Internal and interfacial structure of membranes studied using X-ray standing waves

M. Caffrey and J. Wang, Faraday Discuss., 1992, 94, 283 DOI: 10.1039/FD9929400283

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