화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.130, No.17, 5736-5743, 2008
STM studies of fusion of cholesterol suspensions and mixed 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DMPC) cholesterol vesicles onto a Au(111) electrode surface
Electrochemical scanning tunneling microscopy (EC-STM) has been applied to study the structure of the film formed by fusion of cholesterol suspensions and mixed dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC)/ cholesterol vesicles on a Au(111) electrode surface. It has been demonstrated that cholesterol molecules assemble at the gold support into several structures templated by the crystallography of the metal surface and involving flat or edge-on adsorbed molecules. Studies of the film formed by fusion of mixed DMPC/ cholesterol vesicles revealed that ordered domains of either pure DMPC or pure cholesterol were formed. These results indicate that, at the metal surface, the molecules released by the rupture of a vesicle initially self-assemble into a well-ordered monolayer. The self-assembly is controlled by the hydrocarbon skeleton-metal surface interaction. In the case of mixed DMPC/cholesterol vesicles, the molecule-metal interactions induce segregation of the two components into single component domains. However, the molecule-metal interaction induced monolayer is a transient phenomenon. When more molecules accumulate at the surface; the molecule-molecule interactions dominate the assembly, and the monolayer is transformed into a bilayer.