Title of article
Favourable influence of hydrophobic surfaces on protein structure in porous organically-modified silica glasses
Author/Authors
Bouzid Menaa، نويسنده , , Mar Herrero، نويسنده , , Vicente Rives، نويسنده , , Mayya Lavrenko، نويسنده , , Daryl K. Eggers، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
9
From page
2710
To page
2718
Abstract
Organically-modified siloxanes were used as host materials to examine the influence of surface chemistry on protein conformation in a crowded environment. The sol–gel materials were prepared from tetramethoxysilane and a series of monosubstituted alkoxysilanes, RSi(OR′)3, featuring alkyl groups of increasing chain length in the R-position. Using circular dichroism spectroscopy in the far-UV region, apomyoglobin was found to transit from an unfolded state to a native-like helical state as the content of the hydrophobic precursor increased from 0 to 15%. At a fixed molar content of 5% RSi(OR′)3, the helical structure of apomyoglobin increased with the chain length of the R-group, i.e. methyl < ethyl < n-propyl < n-butyl < n-hexyl. This trend also was observed for the tertiary structure of ribonuclease A, suggesting that protein folding and biological activity are sensitive to the hydrophilic/hydrophobic balance of neighboring surfaces. The observed changes in protein structure did not correlate with total surface area or the average pore size of the modified glasses, but scanning electron microscopy images revealed an interesting relationship between surface morphology and alkyl chain length. The unexpected benefit of incorporating a low content of hydrophobic groups into a hydrophilic surface may lead to materials with improved biocompatibility for use in biosensors and implanted devices.
Keywords
Sol–gel encapsulationCircular dichroismHydrophobicityProtein stabilityMolecular confinementSurface morphology
Journal title
Biomaterials
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Biomaterials
Record number
483076
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