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Preferential orientation of an immunoglobulin in a glycolipid monolayer controlled by the disintegration kinetics of proteo-lipidic vesicles spread at an air-buffer interface

Year: 2003

Journal: Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 1617 (2003) 39-51, 20111221

Authors: Agnes P. Girard-Egrot , Stephanie Godoy , Jean-Paul Chauvet , Paul Boullanger

Organizations: a Laboratoire de Genie Enzymatique et Biomoleculaire, UMR 5013/EMB2-CNRS/UCBL, Universite Claude Bernard Lyon 1, 43 Bvd du 11 novembre 1918, Villeurbanne cedex F-69622, France b Ingenierie et Fonctionnalisation des Surfaces, UMR 5621-CNRS/ECL, Ecole Centrale de Lyon, 36 Avenue Guy de Collongue, Ecully cedex F-69134, France c Laboratoire de Chimie Organique 2, UMR 5181-CNRS/UCBL, Universite Claude Bernard Lyon 1, Ecole Superieure de Chimie Physique Electronique de Lyon, 43 Bvd du 11 novembre 1918, Villeurbanne cedex F-69622, France

The insertion of immunoglobulin (IgG) in a glycolipid monolayer was achieved by using the ability of new proteo-glycolipid vesicles to disintegrate into a mixed IgG-glycolipid interfacial film after spreading at an air-buffer interface. The interfacial disintegration kinetics was shown to be directly dependent on the initial vesicle surface density and on the buffer ionic strength. The presence of the immunoglobulin in the glycolipid film was displayed by an increase of the lateral compressibility (Cs) during monolayer compression. Cs magnitude modifications, due to the antibody effect on the monolayer packing, decreases as the spread vesicle density increases. At interfacial saturation, the lateral compressibility profile becomes similar to that of a control monolayer without antibody. However, the careful analysis of the mixed monolayer after transfer by Langmuir-Blodgett technique (ATR-FTIR characterisation, enzyme immunoassociation) clearly demonstrated that the antibody was still present in such conditions and was not completely squeezed out from the interface as compressibility changes could have meant. At nonsaturating vesicle surface density, IgG molecules initially lying in the lipid matrix with the Y-shape plane parallel to the interface move to a standing-up position during the compression, leading to lateral compressibility modifications. For a saturating vesicle surface density, the glycolipid molecules force the IgG molecules to directly adopt a more vertical position in the interfacial film and, consequently, no lateral compressibility modification was recorded during the compression.