Issue 10, 2011

Label-free spectroscopic detection of vesicles in water using vibrational sum frequency scattering

Abstract

Vibrational sum frequency scattering (SFS) has been used to study sub-micron, catanionic vesicles in solution. The vesicles were synthesized from a binary mixture of dodecyltrimethylammonium bromide (DTAB) and sodium dodecylsulfate (SDS) surfactants in deuterated water, which spontaneously assemble into thermodynamically stable vesicles. The stability of these vesicles is attributed to a surfactant concentration asymmetry between the inner and outer bilayer leaflets. This concentration asymmetry should be observable by SFS due to local inversion symmetry-breaking. The signal corresponding to the symmetric sulfate stretch mode of the SDS head group is observed at 1042 cm−1, indicating that there is indeed asymmetry in the local structure of the leaflets. The results indicate that it should be possible to measure the interfacial structure of liposomes in aqueous solution and study in situ processes like the binding of sugars and proteins that are important for many processes in biophysical chemistry.

Graphical abstract: Label-free spectroscopic detection of vesicles in water using vibrational sum frequency scattering

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
22 Nov 2010
Accepted
09 Mar 2011
First published
01 Apr 2011

Soft Matter, 2011,7, 4959-4963

Label-free spectroscopic detection of vesicles in water using vibrational sum frequency scattering

M. L. Strader, H. B. de Aguiar, A. G. F. de Beer and S. Roke, Soft Matter, 2011, 7, 4959 DOI: 10.1039/C0SM01358G

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