Issue 39, 2023

Voltage and concentration gradients across membraneless interface generated next to hydrogels: relation to glycocalyx

Abstract

Next to many hydrophilic surfaces, including those of biological cells and tissues, a layer of water that effectively excludes solutes and particles can be generated. This interfacial water is the subject of research aiming for practical applications such as removal of salts, pathogens or manipulation of biomolecules. However, the exact mechanism of its creation is still elusive because its persistence and extension contradict hydrogen-bond dynamics and electric double layer predictions. The experimentally recorded negative voltage of this interfacial water remains to be properly explained. Even less is known about the nature of such water layers in biological systems. We present experimental evidence for ion and particle exclusion as a result of separation of ionic charges with distinct diffusion rates across a liquid junction at the gel/water interface and the subsequent repulsion of ions of a given sign by a like-charged gel surface. Gels represent features of biological interfaces (in terms of functional groups and porosity) and are subject to biologically relevant chemical triggers. Our results show that gels with –OSO3 and –COO groups can effectively generate ion- and particle-depleted regions of water reaching over 100 μm and having negative voltage up to −30 mV. Exclusion distance and electric potential depend on the liquid junction potential at the gel/water interface and on the concentration gradient at the depleted region/bulk interface, respectively. The voltage and extension of these ion- and particle-depleted water layers can be effectively modified by CO2 (respiratory gas) or KH2PO4 (cell metabolite). Possible implications pertain to biologically unstirred water layers and a cell's bioenergetics.

Graphical abstract: Voltage and concentration gradients across membraneless interface generated next to hydrogels: relation to glycocalyx

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
06 Jul 2023
Accepted
31 Aug 2023
First published
01 Sep 2023

Soft Matter, 2023,19, 7528-7540

Voltage and concentration gradients across membraneless interface generated next to hydrogels: relation to glycocalyx

M. Kowacz, S. Withanage and S. Niestępski, Soft Matter, 2023, 19, 7528 DOI: 10.1039/D3SM00889D

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