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      Interfacial rheology and direct imaging reveal domain-templated network formation in phospholipid monolayers penetrated by fibrinogen

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      Soft matter

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          Abstract

          Phospholipids are found throughout the natural world, including the lung surfactant (LS) layer that reduces pulmonary surface tension and enables breathing. Fibrinogen, a protein involved in the blood clotting process, is implicated in LS inactivation and the progression of disorders such as acute respiratory distress syndrome. However, the interaction between fibrinogen and LS at the air-water interface is poorly understood. Through a combined microrheological, confocal and epifluorescence microscopy approach we quantify the interfacial shear response and directly image the morphological evolution when a model LS monolayer is penetrated by fibrinogen. When injected into the subphase beneath a monolayer of the phospholipid dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC, the majority component of LS), fibrinogen preferentially penetrates disordered liquid expanded (LE) regions and accumulates on the boundaries between LE DPPC and liquid condensed (LC) DPPC domains. Thus, fibrinogen is line active. Aggregates grow from the LC domain boundaries, ultimately forming a percolating network. This network stiffens the interface compared to pure DPPC and imparts the penetrated monolayer with a viscoelastic character reminiscent of a weak gel. When the DPPC monolayer is initially compressed beyond LE-LC coexistence, stiffening is significantly more modest and the penetrated monolayer retains a viscous-dominated, DPPC-like character.

          Graphical Abstract

          The shear response of a phospholipid monolayer penetrated by fibrinogen is determined by the formation of a domain-templated protein network.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          101295070
          34116
          Soft Matter
          Soft Matter
          Soft matter
          1744-683X
          1744-6848
          27 November 2019
          25 October 2019
          28 November 2019
          28 November 2020
          : 15
          : 44
          : 9076-9084
          Affiliations
          [a. ]Department of Chemical Engineering, University of California Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA 93106, USA.
          [b. ]Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA.
          Author notes
          [†]

          Present address: Department of Chemistry, University College London, 20 Gordon Street, London, WC1H 0AJ, UK

          Article
          PMC6937482 PMC6937482 6937482 nihpa1059862
          10.1039/c9sm01519a
          6937482
          31651923
          7843ea20-dcad-4876-90b0-14609e817438
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