Pressure effect on inverse temperature transitions: biological implications
โ Scribed by Dan W. Urry; Larry C. Hayes; D. Channe Gowda; Timothy M. Parker
- Book ID
- 103029533
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1991
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 545 KB
- Volume
- 182
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0009-2614
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Elastic protein-based polymers of the form poly&(VPGXG),f,(VPGVG) 1, where& and,& are mole fractions with& tfv= 1, exhibit inverse temperature transitions in the form of a phase separation in which folding and aggregation of polymer chains into more-ordered states of the condensed (coacervate) phase occurs on raising the temperature. When X=Trp, Phe or Tyr, an increase in pressure causes a substantial increase in the temperature ofthe transition. The data arc interpreted to indicate that water molecules surrounding the aromatic side chains of Trp(W), Phe( F) or Tyr( Y) occupy less volume than water molecules in bulk water. The calculated volume change for poly [ 0.8( GVGVP), 0.2 (GFGVP ) 1, for example, on going from coacervate phase, where hydrophobic associations have largely eliminated waters of hydrophobic hydration, to be dispersed in water where the hydrophobic moieties are surrounded by water is 80 cm'/mol ofmean pentamers or some 400 cm3/mol of (GFGVP). The results provide an understanding of the source of pressure effects in biological systems and for the capacity to design materials capable of exhibiting baromechanical transduction.
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