bpod-mrc: Surf’s Up Coating our airways in a sea of shape-shifting molecules, our surfactant m
bpod-mrc: Surf’s Up Coating our airways in a sea of shape-shifting molecules, our surfactant mixtures of proteins and fats (lipids) changes how water behaves. Pushing back against water’s natural surface tension, surfactants balance the pressure along the wet surfaces of our lungs, so they can expand and contract more easily. Infections like COVID-19 interfere with these natural mixtures, so here researchers explore how they work. Applying pressure to the blob-like lipids (left to right, top row) squeezes them together, while adding increasing amounts of cholesterol to the mix (bottom two rows) causes a spectacular change. Commonly produced by our cells, cholesterol encourages the lipid blobs to extend curly wave shapes – similar to the crystal-like growth found in snowflakes – that may help surfactant mixtures spread out as we breath. Investigating these patterns, and how they’re disrupted in disease, may be the key to new treatments tackling disorders like atelectasis. Written by John Ankers Image adapted from work by Cain Valtierrez-Gaytan and colleagues Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA Image originally published with a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) Published in Sciences Advances, April 2022 You can also follow BPoD on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook -- source link