Vesicles to concentrate iron in low-iron media: an attempt to mimic marine siderophores.

2008 
Amphiphilic catechol-type iron chelators were studied with the aim of mimicking the properties of marine bacterial siderophores. The FeIII complexation constants and aqueous solution speciation of LS10, a sulfonated catechol unit that has a C10 lipophilic carbon chain connected by an amide linkage, were determined by spectrophotometric titration. The calculated value of pFe3+ is 18.1 at pH 7.4. Cryogenic transmission electron microscopy showed that the tris(catecholate) ferric complex formed at physiological pH initially assembles into micelles, in which the catecholate–iron units stay on the exterior of the micelle. The average diameter of these micelles was estimated to be 4.2 nm. The micelles then slowly rearrange into clusters of different sizes, which leads to the formation of unilamellar and bilamellar vesicles. The reorganization processes are comparable to those observed by Butler et al. for the marinobactin siderophores produced by marine bacteria, but in contrast to the marinobactins, vesicles of the Fe3+–LS10 complex form without an excess of iron relative to ligand concentration. The time-dependent micelle-to-vesicle transition is discussed herein.
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