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Dive into the research topics where Duncan J. McGillivray is active.

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Featured researches published by Duncan J. McGillivray.


Nature | 2006

Boundary lubrication under water

Wuge H. Briscoe; Simon Titmuss; Fredrik Tiberg; Robert J. Thomas; Duncan J. McGillivray; Jacob Klein

Boundary lubrication, in which the rubbing surfaces are coated with molecular monolayers, has been studied extensively for over half a century. Such monolayers generally consist of amphiphilic surfactants anchored by their polar headgroups; sliding occurs at the interface between the layers, greatly reducing friction and especially wear of the underlying substrates. This process, widespread in engineering applications, is also predicted to occur in biological lubrication via phospholipid films, though few systematic studies on friction between surfactant layers in aqueous environments have been carried out. Here we show that the frictional stress between two sliding surfaces bearing surfactant monolayers may decrease, when immersed in water, to as little as one per cent or less of its value in air (or oil). We attribute this to the shift of the slip plane from between the surfactant layers, to the surfactant/substrate interface. The low friction would then be due to the fluid hydration layers surrounding the polar head groups attached to the substrate. These results may have implications for future technological and biomedical applications.


Biointerphases | 2007

Molecular-scale structural and functional characterization of sparsely tethered bilayer lipid membranes

Duncan J. McGillivray; Gintaras Valincius; David J. Vanderah; Wilma Febo-Ayala; John T. Woodward; Frank Heinrich; John J. Kasianowicz; Mathias Lösche

Surface-tethered biomimetic bilayer membranes (tethered bilayer lipid membranes (tBLMs)) were formed on gold surfaces from phospholipids and a synthetic 1-thiahexa(ethylene oxide) lipid, WC14. They were characterized using electrochemical impedance spectroscopy, neutron reflection (NR), and Fourier-transform infrared reflection-absorption spectroscopy (FT-IRRAS) to obtain functional and structural information. The authors found that electrically insulating membranes (conductance and capacitance as low as 1 μS cm−2 and 0.6 μF cm−2, respectively) with high surface coverage (>95% completion of the outer leaflet) can be formed from a range of lipids in a simple two-step process that consists of the formation of a self-assembled monolayer (SAM) and bilayer completion by “rapid solvent exchange.” NR provided a molecularly resolved characterization of the interface architecture and, in particular, the constitution of the space between the tBLM and the solid support. In tBLMs based on SAMs of pure WC14, the hexa(ethylene oxide) tether region had low hydration even though FT-IRRAS showed that this region is structurally disordered. However, on mixed SAMs made from the coadsorption of WC14 with a short-chain “backfiller,” ß-mercaptoethanol, the submembrane spaces between the tBLM and the substrates contained up to 60% exchangeable solvent by volume, as judged from NR and contrast variation of the solvent. Complete and stable “sparsely tethered” BLMs (stBLMs) can be readily prepared from SAMs chemisorbed from solutions with low WC14 proportions. Phospholipids with unsaturated or saturated, straight or branched chains all formed qualitatively similar stBLMs.


Biophysical Journal | 2009

Structure of functional Staphylococcus aureus α-hemolysin channels in tethered bilayer lipid membranes

Duncan J. McGillivray; Gintaras Valincius; Frank Heinrich; Joseph W. F. Robertson; David J. Vanderah; Wilma Febo-Ayala; Ilja Ignatjev; Mathias Lösche; John J. Kasianowicz

We demonstrate a method for simultaneous structure and function determination of integral membrane proteins. Electrical impedance spectroscopy shows that Staphylococcus aureus alpha-hemolysin channels in membranes tethered to gold have the same properties as those formed in free-standing bilayer lipid membranes. Neutron reflectometry provides high-resolution structural information on the interaction between the channel and the disordered membrane, validating predictions based on the channels x-ray crystal structure. The robust nature of the membrane enabled the precise localization of the protein within 1.1 A. The channels extramembranous cap domain affects the lipid headgroup region and the alkyl chains in the outer membrane leaflet and significantly dehydrates the headgroups. The results suggest that this technique could be used to elucidate molecular details of the association of other proteins with membranes and may provide structural information on domain organization and stimuli-responsive reorganization for transmembrane proteins in membrane mimics.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2006

AND/R: Advanced neutron diffractometer/reflectometer for investigation of thin films and multilayers for the life sciences

Joseph A. Dura; Donald J. Pierce; Charles F. Majkrzak; Nicholas C. Maliszewskyj; Duncan J. McGillivray; Mathias Lösche; Kevin Vincent O'Donovan; Mihaela Mihailescu; Ursula Perez-Salas; David L. Worcester; Stephen H. White

An elastic neutron scattering instrument, the advanced neutron diffractometer/reflectometer (AND/R), has recently been commissioned at the National Institute of Standards and Technology Center for Neutron Research. The AND/R is the centerpiece of the Cold Neutrons for Biology and Technology partnership, which is dedicated to the structural characterization of thin films and multilayers of biological interest. The instrument is capable of measuring both specular and nonspecular reflectivity, as well as crystalline or semicrystalline diffraction at wave-vector transfers up to approximately 2.20 Å(-1). A detailed description of this flexible instrument and its performance characteristics in various operating modes are given.


Biointerphases | 2008

Stable insulating tethered bilayer lipid membranes

Inga K. Vockenroth; Christian Ohm; Joseph W. F. Robertson; Duncan J. McGillivray; Mathias Lösche; Ingo Köper

Tethered bilayer lipid membranes have been shown to be an excellent model system for biological membranes. Coupling of a membrane to a solid supports creates a stable system that is accessible for various surface analytical tools. Good electrical sealing properties also enable the use of the membranes in practical sensing applications. The authors have shown that tethered membranes have extended lifetimes up to several months. Air-stability of the bilayer can be achieved by coating the membrane with a hydrogel. The structure of a monolayer and its stability under applied dc potentials have been investigated by neutron scattering.


Soft Matter | 2009

An ion-channel-containing model membrane: structural determination by magnetic contrast neutron reflectometry

Stephen A. Holt; Anton P. Le Brun; Charles F. Majkrzak; Duncan J. McGillivray; Frank Heinrich; Mathias Lösche; Jeremy H. Lakey

To many biophysical characterisation techniques, biological membranes appear as two-dimensional structures with details of their third dimension hidden within a 5 nm profile. Probing this structure requires methods able to discriminate multiple layers a few Ångströms thick. Given sufficient resolution, neutron methods can provide the required discrimination between different biochemical components, especially when selective deuteration is employed. We have used state-of-the-art neutron reflection methods, with resolution enhancement via magnetic contrast variation to study an oriented model membrane system. The model is based on the Escherichia coli outer membrane protein OmpF fixed to a gold surface via an engineered cysteine residue. Below the gold is buried a magnetic metal layer which, in a magnetic field, displays different scattering strengths to spin-up and spin-down neutrons. This provides two independent datasets from a single biological sample. Simultaneous fitting of the two datasets significantly refines the resulting model. A β-mercaptoethanol (βME) passivating surface, applied to the gold to prevent protein denaturation, is resolved for the first time as an 8.2 ± 0.6 Å thick layer, demonstrating the improved resolution and confirming that this layer remains after OmpF assembly. The thiolipid monolayer (35.3 ± 0.5 Å), assembled around the OmpF is determined and finally a fluid DMPC layer is added (total lipid thickness 58.7 ± 0.9 Å). The dimensions of trimeric OmpF in isolation (53.6 ± 2.5 Å), after assembly of lipid monolayer (57.5 ± 0.9 Å) and lipid bilayer (58.7 ± 0.9 Å), are precisely determined and show little variation.


Physical Review Letters | 2006

Charge Inversion at Minute Electrolyte Concentrations

J. Pittler; Wei Bu; David Vaknin; Alex Travesset; Duncan J. McGillivray; Mathias Lösche

Anionic dimyristoylphosphatidic acid monolayers spread on LaCl3 solutions reveal strong cation adsorption and a sharp transition to surface overcharging at unexpectedly low bulk salt concentrations. We determine the surface accumulation of La3+ with anomalous x-ray reflectivity and find that La3+ compensates the lipid surface charge by forming a Stern layer with approximately 1 La3+ ion per 3 lipids below a critical bulk concentration, ct approximately 500 nM. Above ct, the surface concentration of La3+ increases to a saturation level with approximately 1 La3+ per lipid, thus implying that the total electric charge of the La3+ exceeds the surface charge. This overcharge is observed at approximately 4 orders of magnitude lower concentration than predicted in ion-ion correlation theories. We suggest that transverse electrostatic correlations between mobile ions and surface charges (interfacial Bjerrum pairing) may contribute to the charge inversion.


Drying Technology | 2013

Properties and Stability of Spray-Dried and Freeze-Dried Microcapsules Co-Encapsulated with Fish Oil, Phytosterol Esters, and Limonene

Qiong Chen; Fang Zhong; Jingyuan Wen; Duncan J. McGillivray; Siew Young Quek

The objectives of this study were to investigate the properties and stability of microcapsules containing fish oil co-encapsulated with phytosterol ester and limonene, prepared by spray-drying and freeze-drying methods. Whey protein isolate and soluble corn fiber were used as wall materials in the encapsulation process. The properties of microcapsules, including structure, glass transition, volatile/non-volatiles retention, microencapsulation efficiency, oxidation stability, color measurement, and sensory profiles, were evaluated after drying and during a seven-day accelerated storage trial. The finding reveals that drying methods have an effect on the retention of volatile fraction and the physical structure of the wall matrix consisted of WPI and SCF, consequently influencing the storage stability of the powders. Significantly higher retention of volatile fraction (p < 0.05) and lower surface oil were found in the spray-dried samples, resulting in the higher microencapsulation efficiency. However, samples dehydrated by both methods have good redispersion properties, showing no statistical significance (p > 0.05). The oxidation of the encapsulated oils was comparable for both spray- and freeze-dried samples during the seven-day accelerated storage trial but the loss of limonene flavor was significantly higher in the freeze-dried samples (p < 0.05). Sensory evaluation indicated that the addition of limonene could mask the unpleasant fishy odor in the co-encapsulated microcapsules. Overall, freeze drying did not produce powders with superior properties and did not show better protection towards the core materials than spray drying.


Biointerphases | 2008

Solid supported lipid membranes: New concepts for the biomimetic functionalization of solid surfaces

Wolfgang Knoll; Renate Naumann; Marcel C. Friedrich; Joseph W. F. Robertson; Mathias Lösche; Frank Heinrich; Duncan J. McGillivray; Bernhard Schuster; Petra C. Gufler; Dietmar Pum; Uwe B. Sleytr

Surface-layer (S-layer( supported lipid membranes on solid substrates are interfacial architectures mimicking the supramolecular principle of cell envelopes which have been optimized for billions of years of evolution in most extreme habitats. The authors implement this biological construction principle in a variety of layered supramolecular architectures consisting of a stabilizing protein monolayer and a functional phospholipid bilayer for the design and development of new types of solid-supported biomimetic membranes with a considerably extended stability and lifetime — compared to existing platforms — as required for novel types of bioanalytical sensors. First, Langmuir monolayers of lipids at the water/air interface are used as test beds for the characterization of different types of molecules which all interact with the lipid layers in various ways and, hence, are relevant for the control of the structure, stability, and function of supported membranes. As an example, the interaction of S-layer proteins from the bulk phase with a monolayer of a phospholipid synthetically conjugated with a secondary cell wall polymer (SCWP) was studied as a function of the packing density of the lipids in the monolayer. Furthermore, SCWPs were used as a new molecular construction element. The exploitation of a specific lectin-type bond between the N-terminal part of selected S-layer proteins and a variety of glycans allowed for the buildup of supramolecular assemblies and thus functional membranes with a further increased stability. Next, S-layer proteins were self-assembled and characterized by the surface-sensitive techniques, surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy and quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring. The substrates were either planar gold or silicon dioxide sensor surfaces. The assembly of S-layer proteins from solution to solid substrates could nicely be followed in-situ and in real time. As a next step toward S-layer supported bilayer membranes, the authors characterized various architectures based on lipid molecules that were modified by a flexible spacer separating the amphiphiles from the anchor group that allows for a covalent coupling of the lipid to a solid support, e.g., using thiols for Au substrates. Impedance spectroscopy confirmed the excellent charge barrier properties of these constructs with a high electrical resistance. Structural details of various types of these tethered bimolecular lipid membranes were studied by using neutron reflectometry. Finally, first attempts are reported to develop a code based on a SPICE network analysis program which is suitable for the quantitative analysis of the transient and steady-state currents passing through these membranes upon the application of a potential gradient.


Biomacromolecules | 2016

Nonlinear Behavior of Gelatin Networks Reveals a Hierarchical Structure

Zhi Yang; Yacine Hemar; L. Hilliou; Elliot P. Gilbert; Duncan J. McGillivray; Martin A. K. Williams; Saharoui Chaieb

We investigate the strain hardening behavior of various gelatin networks-namely physical gelatin gel, chemically cross-linked gelatin gel, and a hybrid gel made of a combination of the former two-under large shear deformations using the pre-stress, strain ramp, and large amplitude oscillations shear protocols. Further, the internal structures of physical gelatin gels and chemically cross-linked gelatin gels were characterized by small angle neutron scattering (SANS) to enable their internal structures to be correlated with their nonlinear rheology. The Kratky plots of SANS data demonstrate the presence of small cross-linked aggregates within the chemically cross-linked network whereas, in the physical gelatin gels, a relatively homogeneous structure is observed. Through model fitting to the scattering data, we were able to obtain structural parameters, such as the correlation length (ξ), the cross-sectional polymer chain radius (R(c)) and the fractal dimension (d(f)) of the gel networks. The fractal dimension d(f) obtained from the SANS data of the physical and chemically cross-linked gels is 1.31 and 1.53, respectively. These values are in excellent agreement with the ones obtained from a generalized nonlinear elastic theory that has been used to fit the stress-strain curves. The chemical cross-linking that generates coils and aggregates hinders the free stretching of the triple helix bundles in the physical gels.

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Mathias Lösche

Carnegie Mellon University

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Jitendra P. Mata

Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation

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Andrew Nelson

Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation

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John W. White

Australian National University

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Frank Heinrich

Carnegie Mellon University

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David J. Vanderah

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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