Jérôme F. L. Duval
University of Lorraine
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Featured researches published by Jérôme F. L. Duval.
Water Research | 2008
Jérémie Langlet; Fabien Gaboriaud; Jérôme F. L. Duval; Christophe Gantzer
We report an experimental investigation of the electrokinetic properties and size variations of four F-specific bacteriophages of the types MS2, GA, Qbeta and SP (21-30 nm in diameter) over a broad range of pH values (1.5-7.5) and NaNO3 electrolyte concentrations (1-100 mM). The results obtained by dynamic light scattering show that the aggregation of SP and GA particles takes place over the whole range of pH and ionic strength conditions examined. For MS2 phages, the aggregation of MS2 particles is not observed for pH higher than the isoelectric point (pI) and large ionic strengths for which interparticular repulsive electrostatic interactions are however expected to be sufficiently screened. Aggregation of the MS2 phages, dispersed in 1 and 100 mM electrolyte concentration, occurs at pH 4, which basically corresponds to the pI as determined by electrophoresis measurements. The Qbeta particles suspended in solutions of low electrolyte concentrations aggregate at low pH values (pI approximately 3) and, unlike MS2, at large ionic strengths over the whole range of pH conditions considered in this study. These elements allow the determination of the hydrophobic sequence for the four phages SP approximately GA>Qbeta>MS2. Close inspection of the electrokinetic results reveals small to significant variations of the pI values-depending on the phage considered-with respect to the concentration of indifferent NaNO3 electrolyte. This indicates that features other than chemical and electrostatic in nature play a key role in determining the pI and more generally the electrophoretic mobility mu of viral particles. A qualitative interpretation is given and is based on the consideration of inner electro-osmotic flow within the isolated or aggregated particles. The impact of the flow properties within the particles is further in agreement with recent theoretical formalism developed for the electrokinetics of soft multiplayer particles, the phages analyzed here being some illustrative examples. The determination and qualitative interpretation of the surface properties of the viral particles as reported in the current study are commented within the context of water treatment especially concerning viral removal by membrane filtration processes.
Biophysical Journal | 2008
Jérémie Langlet; Fabien Gaboriaud; Christophe Gantzer; Jérôme F. L. Duval
We report a theoretical investigation of the electrohydrodynamic properties of spherical soft particles composed of permeable concentric layers that differ in thickness, soft material density, chemical composition, and flow penetration degree. Starting from a recent numerical scheme developed for the computation of the direct-current electrophoretic mobility (mu) of diffuse soft bioparticles, the dependence of mu on the electrolyte concentration and solution pH is evaluated taking the known three-layered structure of bacteriophage MS2 as a supporting model system (bulk RNA, RNA-protein bound layer, and coat protein). The electrokinetic results are discussed for various layer thicknesses, hydrodynamic flow penetration degrees, and chemical compositions, and are discussed on the basis of the equilibrium electrostatic potential and hydrodynamic flow field profiles that develop within and around the structured particle. This study allows for identifying the cases where the electrophoretic mobility is a function of the inner structural and chemical specificity of the particle and not only of its outer surface properties. Along these lines, we demonstrate the general inapplicability of the notions of zeta potential (zeta) and surface charge for quantitatively interpreting electrokinetic data collected for such systems. We further shed some light on the physical meaning of the isoelectric point. In particular, numerical and analytical simulations performed on structured soft layers in indifferent electrolytic solution demonstrate that the isoelectric point is a complex ionic strength-dependent signature of the flow permeation properties and of the chemical and structural details of the particle. Finally, the electrophoretic mobilities of the MS2 virus measured at various ionic strength levels and pH values are interpreted on the basis of the theoretical formalism aforementioned. It is shown that the electrokinetic features of MS2 are to a large extent determined not only by the external proteic capsid but also by the chemical composition and hydrodynamic flow permeation of/within the inner RNA-protein bound layer and bulk RNA part of the bacteriophage. The impact of virus aggregation, as revealed by decreasing diffusion coefficients for decreasing pH values, is also discussed.
PLOS ONE | 2011
Pavel Polyakov; Charles Soussen; Junbo Duan; Jérôme F. L. Duval; David Brie; Grégory Francius
Atomic force microscopy (AFM) has now become a powerful technique for investigating on a molecular level, surface forces, nanomechanical properties of deformable particles, biomolecular interactions, kinetics, and dynamic processes. This paper specifically focuses on the analysis of AFM force curves collected on biological systems, in particular, bacteria. The goal is to provide fully automated tools to achieve theoretical interpretation of force curves on the basis of adequate, available physical models. In this respect, we propose two algorithms, one for the processing of approach force curves and another for the quantitative analysis of retraction force curves. In the former, electrostatic interactions prior to contact between AFM probe and bacterium are accounted for and mechanical interactions operating after contact are described in terms of Hertz-Hooke formalism. Retraction force curves are analyzed on the basis of the Freely Jointed Chain model. For both algorithms, the quantitative reconstruction of force curves is based on the robust detection of critical points (jumps, changes of slope or changes of curvature) which mark the transitions between the various relevant interactions taking place between the AFM tip and the studied sample during approach and retraction. Once the key regions of separation distance and indentation are detected, the physical parameters describing the relevant interactions operating in these regions are extracted making use of regression procedure for fitting experiments to theory. The flexibility, accuracy and strength of the algorithms are illustrated with the processing of two force-volume images, which collect a large set of approach and retraction curves measured on a single biological surface. For each force-volume image, several maps are generated, representing the spatial distribution of the searched physical parameters as estimated for each pixel of the force-volume image.
Langmuir | 2003
D. Barten; J.M. Kleijn; Jérôme F. L. Duval; Herman P. van Leeuwen; J. Lyklema; M.A. Cohen Stuart
Colloidal probe atomic force microscopy was used to determine the electric double layer interactions between a gold electrode and a spherical silica probe. The double layer properties of the gold/solution interface were varied through the pH and salt concentration of the electrolyte, as well as by externally applying an electric potential. The double layer potentials ψ(d) of the gold surface were obtained by fitting the force-distance curves according to the DLVO (Derjaguin-Landau-Verwey-Overbeek) theory, using earlier obtained values for the double layer potential of the silica probe as input parameter. It was found that the gold electrode combines the features of reversible and polarizable interfaces; i.e., its charge and potential are determined by both the solution pH and the external potential. The pH dependence is attributed to proton adsorption and desorption from oxidic groups on the gold surface. In the potential range studied, ψ(d) varies linearly with the applied potential; the variation in ψ(d) is roughly 10% of that in the applied potential. The potential of zero force (the external potential at which ψ(d) = 0) varies with pH. The various features of the gold/electrolyte interface are described well by an amphifunctional double layer model. The results of this study form the basis of the interpretation of adsorption studies on gold as a function of pH and externally applied potential.
Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry | 2001
Jérôme F. L. Duval; J. Mieke Kleijn; Herman P. van Leeuwen
Abstract This paper reports on the electrochemical processes at the surface of conducting materials such as aluminium in a thin-layer cell usually employed for electrokinetic measurements. The cell contains one or more planar Al wafers in contact with an electrolyte solution, which is subjected to an external electric field parallel to the surfaces of the wafers. Beyond a certain threshold value of the magnitude of the field, the current through the cell increases more than proportionally with the field strength. This is due to faradaic processes occurring at the two ends of the conducting substrates, i.e. reduction at the positive side of the electric field in the solution and oxidation at the negative side. In the case of Al wafers, anodic dissolution of the metal takes place and the progression of the ‘corroding’ edge can be followed visually. The overall electrolytic process, corresponding with the distributed current along the surface of the wafer, could be explained and modeled on the basis of the conventionally measured Butler–Volmer characteristics of the monopolar Al electrode.
PLOS ONE | 2011
Grégory Francius; Pavel Polyakov; Jenny Merlin; Yumiko Abe; Jean-Marc Ghigo; Christophe Merlin; Jérôme F. L. Duval
The physicochemical properties and dynamics of bacterial envelope, play a major role in bacterial activity. In this study, the morphological, nanomechanical and electrohydrodynamic properties of Escherichia coli K-12 mutant cells were thoroughly investigated as a function of bulk medium ionic strength using atomic force microscopy (AFM) and electrokinetics (electrophoresis). Bacteria were differing according to genetic alterations controlling the production of different surface appendages (short and rigid Ag43 adhesins, longer and more flexible type 1 fimbriae and F pilus). From the analysis of the spatially resolved force curves, it is shown that cells elasticity and turgor pressure are not only depending on bulk salt concentration but also on the presence/absence and nature of surface appendage. In 1 mM KNO3, cells without appendages or cells surrounded by Ag43 exhibit large Young moduli and turgor pressures (∼700–900 kPa and ∼100–300 kPa respectively). Under similar ionic strength condition, a dramatic ∼50% to ∼70% decrease of these nanomechanical parameters was evidenced for cells with appendages. Qualitatively, such dependence of nanomechanical behavior on surface organization remains when increasing medium salt content to 100 mM, even though, quantitatively, differences are marked to a much smaller extent. Additionally, for a given surface appendage, the magnitude of the nanomechanical parameters decreases significantly when increasing bulk salt concentration. This effect is ascribed to a bacterial exoosmotic water loss resulting in a combined contraction of bacterial cytoplasm together with an electrostatically-driven shrinkage of the surface appendages. The former process is demonstrated upon AFM analysis, while the latter, inaccessible upon AFM imaging, is inferred from electrophoretic data interpreted according to advanced soft particle electrokinetic theory. Altogether, AFM and electrokinetic results clearly demonstrate the intimate relationship between structure/flexibility and charge of bacterial envelope and propensity of bacterium and surface appendages to contract under hypertonic conditions.
PLOS ONE | 2008
Abigail Clements; Fabien Gaboriaud; Jérôme F. L. Duval; Jacinta L. Farn; Adam Jenney; Trevor Lithgow; Odilia L. C. Wijburg; Elizabeth L. Hartland; Richard A. Strugnell
Analysing the pathogenic mechanisms of a bacterium requires an understanding of the composition of the bacterial cell surface. The bacterial surface provides the first barrier against innate immune mechanisms as well as mediating attachment to cells/surfaces to resist clearance. We utilised a series of Klebsiella pneumoniae mutants in which the two major polysaccharide layers, capsule and lipopolysaccharide (LPS), were absent or truncated, to investigate the ability of these layers to protect against innate immune mechanisms and to associate with eukaryotic cells. The capsule alone was found to be essential for resistance to complement mediated killing while both capsule and LPS were involved in cell-association, albeit through different mechanisms. The capsule impeded cell-association while the LPS saccharides increased cell-association in a non-specific manner. The electrohydrodynamic characteristics of the strains suggested the differing interaction of each bacterial strain with eukaryotic cells could be partly explained by the charge density displayed by the outermost polysaccharide layer. This highlights the importance of considering not only specific adhesin:ligand interactions commonly studied in adherence assays but also the initial non-specific interactions governed largely by the electrostatic interaction forces.
Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2003
Jérôme F. L. Duval; Geertje K Huijs; Wim F Threels; J. Lyklema; Herman P. van Leeuwen
Streaming potentials (E(str)) have been measured in a flat thin-layer cell with gold and aluminum surfaces. The conventional relation between E(str) and the zeta-potential is shown to be applicable only as long as charge transfer reactions at the metal-electrolyte solution interface are insignificant in terms of the ensuing contribution to the overall cell conductivity. Owing to the irreversibility of the reduction/oxidation of water at most metal surfaces, streaming potentials can be obtained over a very broad range of pressure gradients for metallic substrates in electrolytes such as KNO3. The situation changes drastically in the presence of a reversible redox couple like Fe(CN)(6)3-/Fe(CN)(6)4-. Even small streaming potentials are then greatly diminished due to the extensive conduction that results from the bipolar electrolysis at the metal surface. For gold and aluminum in the presence of various electroinactive and electroactive electrolytes, the measured values for E(str) are shown to be consistent with their conventional voltammetric characteristics.
Langmuir | 2011
Jérôme F. L. Duval; David Küttner; Carsten Werner; Ralf Zimmermann
We report a comprehensive formalism for the electrokinetics (streaming current, I(str)) at soft multilayered polyelectrolyte films. These assemblies generally consist of a succession of permeable diffuse layers that differ in charge density, thickness, and hydrodynamic softness. The model, which extends one that we recently reported for the electrokinetics of monolayered soft thin films (Langmuir 2010, 26, 18169-18181), is valid without any restriction in the number and thickness of layers, or in the degree of dissociation and density of ionizable groups they carry. It further covers the limiting cases of hard and free draining films and correctly compares to semianalytical expressions derived for I(str) under conditions where the Debye-Hückel approximation applies. The flexibility of the theory is illustrated by simulations of I(str) for a two-layer assembly of cationic and anionic polymers over a large range of pH values and electrolyte concentrations. On this basis, it is shown that the point of zero streaming current (PZSC) of soft multilayered interphases, defined by the pH value where I(str) = 0, generally depends on the concentration of the (indifferent) electrolyte. The magnitude and direction of the shift in PZSC with varying salinity are intrinsically governed by the dissymmetry in protolytic characteristics and density of dissociable groups within each layer constituting the film, together with the respective film thickness and hydrodynamic softness. The fundamental effects covered by the theory are illustrated by streaming current measurements performed on two practically relevant systems, a polyelectrolyte bilayer prepared from poly(ethylene imine) (PEI) and poly(acrylic acid) (PAA) and a polymer-cushioned (PEI) bilayer lipid membrane.
Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2010
Stanislav S. Dukhin; Ralf Zimmermann; Jérôme F. L. Duval; Carsten Werner
The Stokes equation is commonly used within the field of electrokinetics of hard impermeable surfaces while the Brinkman equation is adopted for tackling hydrodynamics in the framework of soft (permeable) surface electrokinetics (SSE). The latter was initially proposed for modeling the hydrodynamics in so-called hybrid systems that consist of a porous medium and an adjacent fluid phase basically because the conventional Darcy law or Debye and Bueche model initially proposed for that purpose failed to provide the required velocity and shear stress-continuity conditions at the porous media-fluid interface. However, even though the physical background of the Brinkman equation and its boundary conditions have been discussed when applied to the hydrodynamics of hybrid systems, controversy still remains with respect to their applicability in the field of SSE. Indeed, recent experiments pointed out better agreement between shear flow into a regular array of rods oriented across the flow and the solution of the Brinkman equation for hybrid systems providing a stress-jump boundary condition is taken into account (M.F. Tachie et al., J. Fluid. Mech. 493 (2003) 319). As there is identity in the Brinkman model for hybrid systems and for SSE, the question arises whether the above discontinuity of viscous stress must be incorporated or not into SSE modeling. Recent determination of hydrodynamic penetration length lambda(o)(-1) of swollen and collapsed thermo-responsive films (J.F.L. Duval, R. Zimmermann, A.L. Cordeiro, N. Rein, C. Werner, Langmuir 25 (2009) 10691) suggests that there is no need for a cardinal revision of the Brinkman model, although further experimental investigations are required to support such a conclusion. With regard to these experiments, almost complete agreement between independent determination of lambda(o)(-1) by swelling experiments and its derivation according to Brinkman model was obtained.