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Probing the relevance of synergistic lipid membrane disruption to the eye irritation of binary mixed nonionic surfactants.

Authors :
Wei, Feng
Qi, Hao
Li, Bin
Cai, Rongsheng
Liao, Mingrui
Li, Peixun
Zhan, Xiaozhi
Zhu, Tao
Xu, Hai
Hu, Xuzhi
Lu, Jian Ren
Zhou, Feng
Source :
Journal of Colloid & Interface Science. Jan2025:Part C, Vol. 678, p854-863. 10p.
Publication Year :
2025

Abstract

[Display omitted] Nonionic surfactant aerosols play a crucial role in many industries, but they can cause acute irritation to users' eyes during spraying. This cytotoxic process is associated with corneal cell necrosis causing cell membrane disruption. Industrial grade surfactants are typically polydisperse mixtures described by their nominal chemical structure but how the polydispersity affects their interactions with cell membrane, remains largely unexplored. A better understanding could benefit product formulations to maximise their efficiency whilst minimising their toxicity to the users. In this study, poly - oxyethylene glycol monododecyl ethers (C 12 E 4 , C 12 E 23) were used to form ideal binary surfactant mixtures. The cytotoxicities of mono and polydispersed surfactants towards human corneal epithelial cells were examined, followed by a series of biophysical characterisations of interactions between surfactants and model cell membranes. Notably, to probe the journey of individual C 12 E 4 and C 12 E 23 surfactant molecules across the cell membrane from a binary surfactant mixture, "two-colour" neutron reflection measurements were achieved via Hydrogen/Deuterium substitution. The relative distributions of C 12 E 4 and C 12 E 23 across cell membranes and their nanostructural conformations revealed a synergistic membrane-lytic ability initiated by surfactant mixing, with the more hydrophobic C 12 E 4 exhibiting stronger membrane binding potency than the hydrophilic C 12 E 23. The exact molar ratio of C 12 E 4 against C 12 E 23 in the mixture determined how the mixed surfactant interacted with the cell membrane, and how the process directly impacted cytotoxicity and eye irritation. Thus, the cytotoxicity of polydisperse surfactants is not the same as monodisperse surfactant of the same average structure. This work provides a useful basis for the assessment of surfactant mixing by balancing their efficiency and toxicity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219797
Volume :
678
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Colloid & Interface Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
180408420
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcis.2024.09.159