Issue 16, 2010

The sequential growth mechanism of a protein monolayer at the air–water interface

Abstract

The growth mechanism of a protein monolayer at the air–water interface was investigated using dynamic surface tension, diffuse X-ray scattering and X-ray fluorescence techniques. To ensure the surface sensitivity, the grazing angle was kept smaller than the critical angle of the total external reflection for water. The protein solution was inserted into liquid in a Langmuir trough and the surface was monitored with time-resolved measurements which demonstrate a sequential mechanism involving adsorption and relaxation processes characterized with different time-scales. X-ray measurements provide evidence for sudden time-scale shifts which could not be observed with surface pressure measurements. We propose a mechanism to separate adsorption and relaxation processes by simultaneously measuring surface pressure and X-ray scattering. The X-ray fluorescence technique, which is not sensitive to in-plane structural organisation at the surface, supports the X-ray scattering results.

Graphical abstract: The sequential growth mechanism of a protein monolayer at the air–water interface

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
02 Dec 2009
Accepted
22 Apr 2010
First published
28 Jun 2010

Soft Matter, 2010,6, 3826-3831

The sequential growth mechanism of a protein monolayer at the air–water interface

A. Singh, O. Konovalov, J. Novak and A. Vorobiev, Soft Matter, 2010, 6, 3826 DOI: 10.1039/B925365C

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