Recruitment and Immobilization of a Fluorinated Biomarker Across an Interfacial Phospholipid Film using a Fluorocarbon Gas.

Yang G, O'Duill M, Gouverneur V, Krafft MP

Perfluorohexane gas when introduced in the air atmosphere above a film of phospholipid self-supported on an aqueous solution of C2F5-labeled compounds causes the recruitment and immobilization of the latter in the interfacial film. When the phospholipid forms a liquid-condensed Gibbs monolayer, which is the case for dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC), the C2F5-labeled molecule remains trapped in the monolayer after removal of F-hexane. Investigations involve bubble profile analysis tensiometry (Gibbs films), Langmuir monolayers and microbubble experiments. The new phenomenon was utilized to incorporate a hypoxia biomarker, a C2F5-labeled nitrosoimidazole (EF5), in microbubble shells. This finding opens perspectives in the delivery of fluorinated therapeutic molecules and biomarkers.

Keywords:

Gases

,

Hydrocarbons, Fluorinated

,

Fluorocarbons

,

Nitroso Compounds

,

Imidazoles

,

1,2-Dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine

,

Drug Delivery Systems

,

Microbubbles