两亲性
细菌
化学
十二醇
抗菌活性
纳米技术
立体化学
生物物理学
有机化学
材料科学
生物
共聚物
遗传学
聚合物
作者
Tara Gallagher,John Marafino,Brenden K. Wimbish,Brandi L. Volkers,Gabriel Fitzgerald,Kristin McKenna,Jason L. Floyd,Nicholas T. Minahan,Brenna J. C. Walsh,Kirstie A. Thompson,D. W. Bruno,Monica Paneru,Sybelle Djikeng,Stephanie Masters,Suma Haji,Kyle Seifert,Kevin L. Caran
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.colsurfb.2017.06.010
摘要
Hydra amphiphiles mimic the morphology of the mythical multi-headed creatures for which they are named. Likewise, when faced with a pathogenic bacterium, some hydra derivatives are as destructive as their fabled counterparts were to their adversaries. This report focuses on eight new tricephalic (triple-headed), single-tailed amphiphiles. Each amphiphile has a mesitylene (1,3,5-trimethylbenzene) core, two benzylic trimethylammonium groups and one dimethylalkylammonium group with a linear hydrophobe ranging from short (C8H17) to ultralong (C22H45). The logarithm of the critical aggregation concentration, log(CAC), decreases linearly with increasing tail length, but with a smaller dependence than that of ionic amphiphiles with fewer head groups. Tail length also affects antibacterial activity; amphiphiles with a linear 18 or 20 carbon atom hydrophobic chain are more effective at killing bacteria than those with shorter or longer chains. Comparison to a recently reported amphiphilic series with three heads and two tails allows for the development of an understanding of the relationship between number of tails and both colloidal and antibacterial properties.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI