| Literature DB >> 1704813 |
C J van Oss1, K Arnold, W T Coakley.
Abstract
At dextran (Mw approximately 500,000) concentrations from 2 to approximately 10%, suspensions of normal human erythrocytes flocculate in small convex agglutinates. At dextran concentrations greater than 10%, the erythrocytes resegregate in a stable monodisperse suspension. At all these dextran concentrations, the erythrocytes are coated with considerable amounts of dextran. It can be argued that at dextran concentrations from 2 to 10%, as well as at dextran concentrations greater than 10%, there is a thin layer, which is depleted of dextran, between the dextran layer adsorbed onto the erythrocytes and the bulk dextran solution. It can also be shown that there is a repulsive interaction between the two layers of dextran: one adsorbed and one free. When the adsorbed dextran layer is the most concentrated, stability must ensue, and when the dextran in free solution is the most concentrated, flocculation should occur. Below 7% dextran, the concentration of free dextran is higher than the adsorbed concentration; above 10% dextran that situation is reversed. These data correlate well with the depletion flocculation predicted for the lower concentration and the depletion stabilization predicted for the higher dextran concentration.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 1990 PMID: 1704813 DOI: 10.1007/bf02989801
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Biophys ISSN: 0163-4992