92 research outputs found
Order, Disorder, and Temperature-Driven Compaction in a Designed Elastin Protein
Artificial
minielastin constructs have been designed that replicate
the structure and function of natural elastins in a simpler context,
allowing the NMR observation of structure and dynamics of elastin-like
proteins with complete residue-specific resolution. We find that the
alanine-rich cross-linking domains of elastin have a partially helical
structure, but only when capped by proline-rich hydrophobic domains.
We also find that the hydrophobic domains, composed of prominent 6-residue
repeats VPGVGG and APGVGV found in natural elastins, appear random
coil by both NMR chemical shift analysis and circular dichroism. However,
these elastin hydrophobic domains exhibit structural bias for a dynamically
disordered conformation that is neither helical nor β sheet
with a degree of nonrandom structural bias which is dependent on residue
type and position in the sequence. Another nonrandom-coil aspect of
hydrophobic domain structure lies in the fact that, in contrast to
other intrinsically disordered proteins, these hydrophobic domains
retain a relatively condensed conformation whether attached to cross-linking
domains or not. Importantly, these domains and the proteins containing
them constrict with increasing temperature by up to 30% in volume
without becoming more ordered. This property is often observed in
nonbiological polymers and suggests that temperature-driven constriction
is a new type of protein structural change that is linked to elastin’s
biological functions of coacervation-driven assembly and elastic recoil
Water in cellulose : evidence and identification of immobile and mobile adsorbed phases by 2H MAS NMR
The organization of water molecules adsorbed onto cellulose and the supramolecular hydrated structure of microfibril aggregates represents, still today, one of the open and complex questions in the physical chemistry of natural polymers. Here, we investigate by 2H MAS NMR the mobility of water molecules in carefully 2H-exchanged, and thereafter re-dried, microcrystalline cellulose. By subtracting the spectral contribution of deuteroxyls from the spectrum of hydrated cellulose, we demonstrate the existence of two distinct 2H2O spectral populations associated with mobile and immobile water environments, between which the water molecules do not exchange at the NMR observation time scale. We conclude that those two water phases are located at differently-accessible adsorption sites, here assigned to the cellulose surfaces between and within the microfibril aggregates, respectively. The superior performance of 2H MAS NMR encourages further applications of the same method to other complex systems that expose heterogeneous hygroscopic surfaces, like wood cell walls
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