Publications by authors named "Mounia Badis"

The two new crown ethers presented in this study were synthesized in order to investigate two important features of ionophores, namely metal cation complexation and interfacial properties, and the way in which they interrelate. The two derivatives were conceived as analogs of membrane phospholipids with respect to their amphiphilicity and geometry. They contain a hydrophilic 1,1'-dioxo-3,3'-dithio-14-crown ether headgroup and bear two myristoyl or stearoyl lateral chains.

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Griseofulvin (GF) is an oral antibiotic for widely occurring superficial mycosis in man and animals caused by dermaphyte fungi; it is also used in agriculture as a fungicide. The mechanism of the biological activity of GF is poorly understood. Here, the interactions of griseofulvin with lipid membranes were studied using 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC), 1,2-dilauroyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DLPC), and 1,2-myristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (DMPE) monolayers spread at the air/water interface.

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Seven new amphiphilic cyclodextrins bearing bipyridyl or bithiazolyl moieties at the narrow rim and free hydroxyl or methoxyl groups at the wide rim of the cyclooctaamylose crown were synthesized using a one step "phosphine imide" approach. These ligands form metal complexes that have fluorescence properties with potentials for optical applications. Here, the cyclodextrin derivatives were used as probes for evaluating the role of different moieties in the self-assembly process, providing crucial information in creating functional devices.

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The thermodynamic and surface properties of four structurally related thermotropic liquid crystals (LC) were investigated to understand their organization at gas-liquid and gas-solid interfaces. In this study, LC with a benzoyloxy azobenzene mesogenic core substituted with heptyloxy and/or dioxyethylene ether groups were used. The propensity of the LC to form self-assembled multilayers was demonstrated in the films spread at the air/aqueous interface using the Langmuir technique and Brewster angle microscopy and on the solid surfaces of Chromosorb WHP and silica, using differential scanning calorimetry.

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Four new chiral, amphiphilic crown ethers differing by the hydrophobic tailgroups were synthesized, and their capacity to recognize enantiomeric amino acids was examined using Langmuir films. Surface pressure and surface potential measurements performed on the subphases containing L or D enantiomers of alanine, valine, phenylglycine, and tryptophane indicate that the crown ethers forming the monolayer interact with the amino acids. The effects observed are ascribed to the formation of host-guest complexes.

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