A known monoterpene, named γ-terpineol, was incorporated in mixed Langmuir monolayers composed of dipalmitoyl-phosphoethanolamine (DPPE) and peptidoglycans as a model of microbial membranes. Surface pressure and surface potential isotherms, dynamical surface rheology, Brewster angle microscopy (BAM), and infrared spectroscopy were employed to characterize the compound-membrane interactions. The compound expanded the monolayers denoting repulsive interactions. At 30 mN/m, the monolayer presented lower viscoelastic and in-plane elasticity parameters and an increased all-trans/gauche conformers ratio for the alkyl chains, confirming molecular order. The morphology of the monolayer was analyzed by BAM, which revealed a heterogeneous distribution of γ-terpineol along the mixed monolayer, which tends to segregate. In conclusion, the compound changes the thermodynamic, electric, rheological, morphological, and structural properties of the peptidoglycan-DPPE monolayer, which may be essential to understand, at the molecular level, the action of bioactives in selected membrane models.
Keywords: Air-water interface; Langmuir monolayers; Peptidoglycans; Terpineol.
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