Subphase Material Stabilizes Films of Pulmonary Surfactant

2020 
When compressed by the shrinking alveolar surface area during exhalation, films of pulmonary surfactant in situ reduce surface tension to levels, at which surfactant monolayers collapse from the surface in vitro. Vesicles of pulmonary surfactant added below these monolayers slow collapse. X-ray scattering here determined the structural changes that improve stability. Grazing incidence X-ray diffraction on monolayers of extracted calf surfactant detected an ordered phase. Mixtures of dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine and cholesterol, but not the phospholipid alone, mimic that structure. At concentrations that stabilize the monolayers, vesicles in the subphase had no effect on the unit cell, and the film remained monomolecular. The added vesicles, however, produced a concentration-dependent increase in the diffracted intensity. These results suggest that the enhanced resistance to collapse results from components of an ordered interfacial phase which partition from subphase to the surface, increasing the area of the ordered structure. SIGNIFICANCELow alveolar surface tensions are essential for maintaining the integrity of the pulmonary air-sacks during normal breathing. Films of pulmonary surfactant cause the low tensions. The interfacial structures required for the low surface tensions remain uncertain. These studies used X-ray scattering to determine the initial structure of pulmonary surfactant monolayers, and to establish how vesicles of pulmonary surfactant enhance the ability of those initial monolayers to sustain low tensions. The initial monolayers contained ordered structures that differ from the crystalline forms widely speculated to occur in alveolar films. The added vesicles had no effect on the local structure of the initial monolayer, but substantially increased the area of the ordered regions. This structural change reasonably explains the functional improvement.
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