Lipid order, saturation and surface property relationships: A study of human meibum saturation
Autor: | Diana Duran, Marta C. Yappert, Gary R. Dennis, Ryan J. Smith, Gregory W. Cox, Poonam Mudgil, Douglas Borchman, John Whitehall, Rahul Bhola |
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Rok vydání: | 2013 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male Phase transition Phase transition temperature Spectrophotometry Infrared Surface Properties Analytical chemistry Meibomian gland Surface pressure Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience Pulmonary surfactant medicine Humans Lipid bilayer phase behavior Aged Chemistry Temperature Meibomian Glands Middle Aged Lipids Sensory Systems Ophthalmology medicine.anatomical_structure Tears Langmuir trough Female sense organs Saturation (chemistry) |
Zdroj: | Experimental Eye Research. 116:79-85 |
ISSN: | 0014-4835 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.exer.2013.08.012 |
Popis: | Tear film stability decreases with age however the cause(s) of the instability are speculative. Perhaps the more saturated meibum from infants may contribute to tear film stability. The meibum lipid phase transition temperature and lipid hydrocarbon chain order at physiological temperature (33 °C) decrease with increasing age. It is reasonable that stronger lipid–lipid interactions could stabilize the tear film since these interactions must be broken for tear break up to occur. In this study, meibum from a pool of adult donors was saturated catalytically. The influence of saturation on meibum hydrocarbon chain order was determined by infrared spectroscopy. Meibum is in an anhydrous state in the meibomian glands and on the surface of the eyelid. The influence of saturation on the surface properties of meibum was determined using Langmuir trough technology. Saturation of native human meibum did not change the minimum or maximum values of hydrocarbon chain order so at temperatures far above or below the phase transition of human meibum, saturation does not play a role in ordering or disordering the lipid hydrocarbon chains. Saturation did increase the phase transition temperature in human meibum by over 20 °C, a relatively high amount. Surface pressure–area studies showing the late take off and higher maximum surface pressure of saturated meibum compared to native meibum suggest that the saturated meibum film is quite molecularly ordered (stiff molecular arrangement) and elastic (molecules are able to rearrange during compression and expansion) compared with native meibum films which are more fluid agreeing with the infrared spectroscopic results of this study. In saturated meibum, the formation of compacted ordered islands of lipids above the surfactant layer would be expected to decrease the rate of evaporation compared to fluid and more loosely packed native meibum. Higher surface pressure observed with films of saturated meibum compared to native meibum suggests greater film stability especially under the high shear stress of a blink. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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