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Dive into the research topics where Martin E. Leser is active.

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Featured researches published by Martin E. Leser.


Advances in Colloid and Interface Science | 2009

Thermodynamics, adsorption kinetics and rheology of mixed protein-surfactant interfacial layers

Cs. Kotsmar; V. Pradines; V.S. Alahverdjieva; E.V. Aksenenko; Valentin B. Fainerman; V.I. Kovalchuk; J. Krägel; Martin E. Leser; Boris A. Noskov; R. Miller

Depending on the bulk composition, adsorption layers formed from mixed protein/surfactant solutions contain different amounts of protein. Clearly, increasing amounts of surfactant should decrease the amount of adsorbed proteins successively. However, due to the much larger adsorption energy, proteins are rather strongly bound to the interface and via competitive adsorption surfactants cannot easily displace proteins. A thermodynamic theory was developed recently which describes the composition of mixed protein/surfactant adsorption layers. This theory is based on models for the single compounds and allows a prognosis of the resulting mixed layers by using the characteristic parameters of the involved components. This thermodynamic theory serves also as the respective boundary condition for the dynamics of adsorption layers formed from mixed solutions and their dilational rheological behaviour. Based on experimental studies with milk proteins (beta-casein and beta-lactoglobulin) mixed with non-ionic (decyl and dodecyl dimethyl phosphine oxide) and ionic (sodium dodecyl sulphate and dodecyl trimethyl ammonium bromide) surfactants at the water/air and water/hexane interfaces, the potential of the theoretical tools is demonstrated. The displacement of pre-adsorbed proteins by subsequently added surfactant can be successfully studied by a special experimental technique based on a drop volume exchange. In this way the drop profile analysis can provide tensiometry and dilational rheology data (via drop oscillation experiments) for two adsorption routes--sequential adsorption of the single compounds in addition to the traditional simultaneous adsorption from a mixed solution. Complementary measurements of the surface shear rheology and the adsorption layer thickness via ellipsometry are added in order to support the proposed mechanisms drawn from tensiometry and dilational rheology, i.e. to show that the formation of mixed adsorption layer is based on a modification of the protein molecules via electrostatic (ionic) and/or hydrophobic interactions by the surfactant molecules and a competitive adsorption of the resulting complexes with the free, unbound surfactant. Under certain conditions, the properties of the sequentially formed layers differ from those formed simultaneously, which can be explained by the different locations of complex formation.


Soft Matter | 2010

Internal structure and colloidal behaviour of covalent whey protein microgels obtained by heat treatment

Christophe Schmitt; Christian Moitzi; Claudine Bovay; Martine Rouvet; Lionel Bovetto; Laurence Donato; Martin E. Leser; Peter Schurtenberger; Anna Stradner

Covalently cross-linked whey protein microgels (WPM) were produced without the use of a chemical cross-linking agent. The hierarchical structure of WPM is formed by a complex interplay of heat denaturation, aggregation, electrostatic repulsion, and formation of disulfide bonds. Therefore, well-defined spherical particles with a diameter of several hundreds of nanometers and with relatively low polydispersity are formed in a narrow pH regime (5.8–6.2) only. WPM production was carried out on large scale by heating a protein solution in a plate-plate heat exchanger. Thereafter, the microgels were concentrated by microfiltration and spray dried into a powder. The spherical structure of the WPM was conserved in the powder. After re-dispersion, the microgel dispersions fully recovered their initial structure and size distribution. Due to the formation of disulfide bonds the particles were internally covalently cross-linked and were remarkably stable in a large pH range. Because of the pH dependent charge of the constituents the particles underwent significant size changes upon shifting the pH. Small angle X-ray scattering experiments were used to reveal their internal structure, and we report on the pH-induced structural changes occurring on different length scale. Our experiments showed that close analogies could be drawn to internally cross-linked and pH-responsive microgels based on weak polyelectrolytes. WPM also exhibited a pronounced swelling at pH values below the isoelectric point (IEP), and a collapse at the IEP. However, in contrast to classical microgels, WPM are not build up by simple polymer chains but possess a complex hierarchical structure consisting of strands formed by clusters of aggregated denatured proteins that act as primary building blocks. They were flexible enough to respond to changes of the environment, and were stable enough to tolerate pH values where the proteins were highly charged and the strands were stretched.


Food Biophysics | 2008

Influence of Surfactants on Lipase Fat Digestion in a Model Gastro-intestinal System

Pedro Reis; Thomas Raab; Jean Y. Chuat; Martin E. Leser; R. Miller; Heribert Watzke; Krister Holmberg

In the present study, we use a model gastro-intestinal system to study the influence of different food-grade surface-active molecules (Sn-2 monopalmitin, β-lactoglobulin, or lysophosphatodylcholine) on lipase activity. The interfacial activity of lipase and surfactants are assessed with the pendant drop technique, a commonly used tensiometry instrument. A mathematical model is adopted which enables quantitative determination of the composition of the water–oil interface as a function of bulk surfactant concentration in the water–oil mixtures. Our results show a decrease in gastric lipolysis when interfacially active molecules are incorporated into a food matrix. However, only the Sn-2 monopalmitin caused a systematic decrease in triglyceride hydrolysis throughout the gastro-intestinal tract. This effect is most likely due to exclusion of both lipase and triglyceride from the water–oil interface together with a probable saturation of the solubilization capacity of bile with monoglycerides. Addition of β-lactoglobulin or lysophopholipids increased the hydrolysis of fat after the gastric phase. These results can be attributed to an increasing interfacial area with lipase and substrate present at the interface. Otherwise, β-lactoglobulin, or lysophopholipids reduced fat hydrolysis in the stomach. From the mathematical modeling of the interface composition, we can conclude that Sn-2 monopalmitin can desorb lipase from the interface, which, together with exclusion of substrate from the interface, explains the gradually decreased triglyceride hydrolysis that occurs during the digestion. Our results provide a biophysics approach on lipolysis that can bring new insights into the problem of fat uptake.


Journal of Molecular Liquids | 1999

Sucrose Ester Microemulsions

Nissim Garti; Veronique Clement; Martin E. Leser; A. Aserin; Monzer Fanun

Abstract Sucrose esters are biodegradable surfactants that can be manufactured in various hydrophilic-lipophilic properties using different fatty acids varying in their lipophilic chain length. These surfactants are used in different industries including pharmaceutical, food processing, detergents, agricultural and others. Few number of works had been done using sucrose esters in microemulsions. In this review we tried to introduce the relevant works that enlighten the behavior of sucrose esters in phase diagrams prepared using different oils and medium chain alcohols. We hope that this review article can be an aid to those researchers interested in microemulsions based on sucrose esters and their applications.


Soft Matter | 2011

Transitions in the internal structure of lipid droplets during fat digestion

Stefan Salentinig; Laurent Sagalowicz; Martin E. Leser; Concetta Tedeschi; Otto Glatter

This work focuses on colloidal transformations during the digestion of dietary triglyceride-lipids under physiological conditions present in the intestine. In vitrodigestion experiments with triglyceride emulsions and pancreatic lipase are monitored by time-resolved small-angle X-ray scattering, polarized and depolarized dynamic light scattering and cryogenic transmission electron microscopy as complementary methods. In the intestine, the interface-active pancreatic lipase–colipase complex adsorbs to the interface of the emulsified lipids and quantitatively hydrolyses the tri- and diglyceride to 2-monoglycerides and fatty acids as the final digestion products. Both products are amphiphilic under intestinal conditions and form a great variety of self-assembled structures, depending on composition and pH. With time of lipase action, the interior of the emulsion particles was found to self-assemble to oil continuous structures with increasing hydrophilicity of the interface. A transition from oil emulsion to emulsified microemulsion, micellar cubic, inverse hexagonal, and bicontinuous cubic liquid-crystalline droplets was found. Self-assembled structures formed during the in vitro lipid digestion process were investigated as a function of bile-juice concentration, pH and hydrophobic additives. Significant differences in structure formation and transition times (kinetics) could be observed when varying these crucial parameters. Vesicles were found to be the dominating final structures of the triglyceride digestion process.


Langmuir | 2009

Mixed layers of sodium caseinate + dextran sulfate: influence of order of addition to oil-water interface.

Laureline Jourdain; Christophe Schmitt; Martin E. Leser; Brent S. Murray; Eric Dickinson

We report on the interfacial properties of electrostatic complexes of protein (sodium caseinate) with a highly sulfated polysaccharide (dextran sulfate). Two routes were investigated for preparation of adsorbed layers at the n-tetradecane-water interface at pH = 6. Bilayers were made by the layer-by-layer deposition technique whereby polysaccharide was added to a previously established protein-stabilized interface. Mixed layers were made by the conventional one-step method in which soluble protein-polysaccharide complexes were adsorbed directly at the interface. Protein + polysaccharide systems gave a slower decay of interfacial tension and stronger dilatational viscoelastic properties than the protein alone, but there was no significant difference in dilatational properties between mixed layers and bilayers. Conversely, shear rheology experiments exhibited significant differences between the two kinds of interfacial layers, with the mixed system giving much stronger interfacial films than the bilayer system, i.e., shear viscosities and moduli at least an order of magnitude higher. The film shear viscoelasticity was further enhanced by acidification of the biopolymer mixture to pH = 2 prior to interface formation. Taken together, these measurements provide insight into the origin of previously reported differences in stability properties of oil-in-water emulsions made by the bilayer and mixed layer approaches. Addition of a proteolytic enzyme (trypsin) to both types of interfaces led to a significant increase in the elastic modulus of the film, suggesting that the enzyme was adsorbed at the interface via complexation with dextran sulfate. Overall, this study has confirmed the potential of shear rheology as a highly sensitive probe of associative electrostatic interactions and interfacial structure in mixed biopolymer layers.


Langmuir | 2008

Competition between lipases and monoglycerides at interfaces

Pedro Reis; Krister Holmberg; R. Miller; J. Krägel; Dmitri O. Grigoriev; Martin E. Leser; Heribert Watzke

Tensiometry (the pendant drop technique), interfacial shear rheology, and ellipsometry have been used to study the effect of polar lipids that are generated during fat digestion on the behavior of lipases at the oil-water interface. Both Sn-1,3 regiospecific and nonregiospecific lipases have been used, and a noncatalytically active protein, beta-lacloglobulin, has been used as reference in the interfacial shear rheology experiments. The results from the pendant drop measurements and the interfacial rheology studies were in agreement with each other and demonstrated that the Sn-2 monoglyceride, which is one of the lipolysis products generated when a Sn-1,3 regiospecific lipase catalyzes triglyceride hydrolysis, is very interfacially active and efficiently expels the enzyme from the interface. Ellipsometry conducted at the liquid-liquid interface showed that the lipase forms a sublayer in the aqueous phase, just beneath the monoglyceride-covered interface. Sn-1/3 monoglycerides do not behave this way because they are rapidly degraded to fatty acid and glycerol and the fatty acid (or the fatty acid salt) does not have enough interfacial activity to expel the lipase from the interface. Since the lipases present in the gastrointestinal tract are highly Sn-1,3 regiospecific, we believe that the results obtained can be transferred to the in vivo situation. The formation of stable and amphiphilic Sn-2 monoglycerides can be seen as a self-regulatory process for fat digestion.


Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces | 2003

Dynamics of mixed protein–surfactant layers adsorbed at the water/air and water/oil interface

J. Krägel; M. O'Neill; A. V. Makievski; Martin Michel; Martin E. Leser; R. Miller

Abstract Drop and bubble shape tensiometry experiments are performed at the water/air and water/hexane interfaces in order to get more information about the differences in the adsorption layer structure of mixed protein/surfactant systems. For mixtures of β-lactoglobulin and sodium dodecyl sulphate the adsorption at the water/air interface is essentially a competitive process between protein/surfactant complexes and free surfactant molecules, while the water/oil interface is essentially covered by the complexes.


Langmuir | 2008

Equilibrium of Adsorption of Mixed Milk Protein/Surfactant Solutions at the Water/Air Interface

Cs. Kotsmar; D. O. Grigoriev; F. Xu; E.V. Aksenenko; V. B. Fainerman; Martin E. Leser; R. Miller

Ellipsometry and surface profile analysis tensiometry were used to study and compare the adsorption behavior of beta-lactoglobulin (BLG)/C10DMPO, beta-casein (BCS)/C10DMPO and BCS/C12DMPO mixtures at the air/solution interface. The adsorption from protein/surfactant mixed solutions is of competitive nature. The obtained adsorption isotherms suggest a gradual replacement of the protein molecules at the interface with increasing surfactant concentration for all studied mixed systems. The thickness, refractive index, and the adsorbed amount of the respective adsorption layers, determined by ellipsometry, decrease monotonically and reach values close to those for a surface covered only by surfactant molecules, indicating the absence of proteins from a certain surfactant concentration on. These results correlate with the surface tension data. A continuous increase of adsorption layer thickness was observed up to this concentration, caused by the desorption of segments of the protein and transforming the thin surface layer into a rather diffuse and thick one. Replacement and structural changes of the protein molecules are discussed in terms of protein structure and surface activity of surfactant molecules. Theoretical models derived recently were used for the quantitative description of the equilibrium state of the mixed surface layers.


Langmuir | 2010

Influence of the Stabilizer Concentration on the Internal Liquid Crystalline Order and the Size of Oil-Loaded Monolinolein-Based Dispersions

Samuel Guillot; Stefan Salentinig; Angela Chemelli; Laurent Sagalowicz; Martin E. Leser; Otto Glatter

The internal phase of monolinolein-based dispersions loaded with tetradecane or (R)-(+)-limonene was investigated as a function of the stabilizer content by small-angle X-ray scattering. Phase transitions at the colloidal scale were found in some of nanostructured aqueous dispersions by increasing the stabilizer content. For particles containing a bicontinuous cubic phase, a large increase of the stabilizer concentration promoted a liquid crystalline phase transition from the Pn3m to the Im3m cubic symmetry. The coexistence of both phases is observed in an intermediate stabilizer concentration range. For particles with an internal micellar cubic Fd3m symmetry, the internal structure changes in the isotropic fluid L(2) phase. In case of particles with an internal hexagonal phase (H(2) symmetry), the increasing amount of stabilizer did not alter the lattice parameter but decreased the size of the nanostructured domain. Moreover, we showed for hexagonal and emulsified micellar phase particles that the increase of the stabilizer content induced a strong decrease of the mean hydrodynamic size of the particles, allowing producing nanostructured lipid-based liquid crystalline particles down to a radius of 70 nm at the same energy input.

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