Maohui Chen
University of Guelph
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Publication
Featured researches published by Maohui Chen.
Langmuir | 2008
Ming Li; Maohui Chen; Erin Sheepwash; Christa L. Brosseau; Hong-Qiang Li; Bruno Pettinger; Hans Gruler; Jacek Lipkowski
Atomic force microscopy (AFM) has been used to characterize the formation of a phospholipid bilayer composed of 1,2-dimyristyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DMPC) at a Au(111) electrode surface. The bilayer was formed by one of two methods: fusion of lamellar vesicles or by the combination of Langmuir-Blodgett (LB) and Langmuir-Schaefer (LS) deposition. Results indicate that phospholipid vesicles rapidly adsorb and fuse to form a film at the electrode surface. The resulting film undergoes a very slow structural transformation until a characteristic corrugated phase is formed. Force-distance curve measurements reveal that the thickness of the corrugated phase is consistent with the thickness of a bilayer lipid membrane. The formation of the corrugated phase may be explained by considering the elastic properties of the film and taking into account spontaneous curvature induced by the asymmetric environment of the bilayer, in which one side faces the gold substrate and the other side faces the solution. The effect of temperature and electrode potential on the stability of the corrugated phase has also been described.
Langmuir | 2008
Christa L. Brosseau; J. Jay Leitch; X. Bin; Maohui Chen; Sharon G. Roscoe; Jacek Lipkowski
Differential capacitance, chronocoulometry, and polarization modulation infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy (PM-IRRAS) measurements were used to characterize the structure and orientation of a DMPC + cholesterol + GM 1 (60:30:10 mol %) bilayer supported at a Au(111) electrode surface prepared using combined Langmuir-Blodgett/Langmuir-Schaefer (LB/LS) deposition. The electrochemical measurements indicate that the incorporation of ganglioside GM 1 into the membrane significantly improves the quality of the bilayer, reflected in the very low capacitance value of approximately 0.8 microF cm (-2). An analysis of the infrared data suggests that the incorporation of the glycolipid into the membrane changes both the orientation of the lipid acyl chains in the membrane and the hydration of the membrane, particularly with respect to the interfacial region of the lipids.
Langmuir | 2009
Maohui Chen; Ming Li; Christa L. Brosseau; Jacek Lipkowski
Atomic force microscopy (AFM) was used to characterize a phospholipid bilayer composed of 70 mol % 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DMPC) and 30 mol % cholesterol, at a Au(111) electrode surface. Results indicate that addition of cholesterol relaxes membrane elastic stress, increases membrane thickness, and reduces defect density. The thickness and thermotropic properties of the mixed DMPC-cholesterol bilayer supported at the gold electrode surface are quite similar to the properties of the mixed membrane in unilamellar vesicles. The stability of the supported membrane at potentials negative to the potential of zero charge E(pzc) was investigated. This study demonstrates that the bilayer supported at the gold electrode surface is stable provided the applied potential (E - E(pzc)) is less than -0.3 V. At larger polarizations, swelling of the membrane is observed. Polarizations larger than -1 V cause electrodewetting of the bilayer from the gold surface. At these negative potentials, the bilayer remains in close proximity to the metal surface, separated from it by a approximately 2 nm thick layer of electrolyte.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008
Slawomir Sek; Shimin Xu; Maohui Chen; G. Szymanski; Jacek Lipkowski
Electrochemical scanning tunneling microscopy (EC-STM) has been applied to study the structure of the film formed by fusion of cholesterol suspensions and mixed dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC)/cholesterol vesicles on a Au(111) electrode surface. It has been demonstrated that cholesterol molecules assemble at the gold support into several structures templated by the crystallography of the metal surface and involving flat or edge-on adsorbed molecules. Studies of the film formed by fusion of mixed DMPC/cholesterol vesicles revealed that ordered domains of either pure DMPC or pure cholesterol were formed. These results indicate that, at the metal surface, the molecules released by the rupture of a vesicle initially self-assemble into a well-ordered monolayer. The self-assembly is controlled by the hydrocarbon skeleton-metal surface interaction. In the case of mixed DMPC/cholesterol vesicles, the molecule-metal interactions induce segregation of the two components into single component domains. However, the molecule-metal interaction induced monolayer is a transient phenomenon. When more molecules accumulate at the surface, the molecule-molecule interactions dominate the assembly, and the monolayer is transformed into a bilayer.
Surface Science | 2009
Maohui Chen; Ian J. Burgess; Jacek Lipkowski
Langmuir | 2007
Thamara Laredo; J. Jay Leitch; Maohui Chen; Ian J. Burgess; John Dutcher; Jacek Lipkowski
Langmuir | 2007
Shimin Xu; Maohui Chen; Ewa Cholewa; G. Szymanski; Jacek Lipkowski
Langmuir | 2007
Slawomir Sek; Maohui Chen; Christa L. Brosseau; Jacek Lipkowski
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2009
Amanda Quirk; Maohui Chen; Darrell Cockburn; Sarah Regli; Anthony J. Clarke; John Dutcher; Jacek Lipkowski; Sharon G. Roscoe
Biophysical Journal | 2009
Maohui Chen; Ming Li; Christa L. Brosseau; Jacek Lipkowski