Valeria Italia, Amanda Jons, Bhavika Kaparthi, Britt Faulk, Marco Maccarini, Paolo Bertoncello, Ken Meissner, Donald K Martin, Sarah E Bondos
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The Drosophila intrinsically disordered protein Ultrabithorax (Ubx) undergoes a series of phase transitions, beginning with noncovalent interactions between apparently randomly organized monomers, and evolving over time to form increasingly ordered coacervates. This assembly process ends when specific dityrosine covalent bonds lock the monomers in place, forming macroscale materials. Inspired by this hierarchical, multistep assembly process, we analyzed the impact of protein concentration, assembly time, and subphase composition on the early, noncovalent stages of Ubx assembly, which are extremely sensitive to their environment. We discovered that in low salt buffers, we can generate a new type of Ubx material from early coacervates using 5-fold less protein, and 100-fold less assembly time. Comparison of the new materials with standard Ubx fibers also revealed differences in the extent of wrinkling on the fiber surface. A new image analysis technique based on autocorrelation of scanning electron microscopy (SEM) images was developed to quantify these structural differences. These differences extend to the molecular level: new materials form more dityrosine covalent cross-links per monomer, but without requiring the specific tyrosine residues necessary for crosslinking previously established materials. We conclude that varying the assembly conditions represents a facile and inexpensive process for creating new materials. Most new biopolymers are created by changing the composition of the monomers or the method used to drive assembly. In contrast, in this study we used the same monomers and assembly approach, but altered the assembly time and chemical environment to create a new material with unique properties.
期刊介绍:
Protein Science, the flagship journal of The Protein Society, is a publication that focuses on advancing fundamental knowledge in the field of protein molecules. The journal welcomes original reports and review articles that contribute to our understanding of protein function, structure, folding, design, and evolution.
Additionally, Protein Science encourages papers that explore the applications of protein science in various areas such as therapeutics, protein-based biomaterials, bionanotechnology, synthetic biology, and bioelectronics.
The journal accepts manuscript submissions in any suitable format for review, with the requirement of converting the manuscript to journal-style format only upon acceptance for publication.
Protein Science is indexed and abstracted in numerous databases, including the Agricultural & Environmental Science Database (ProQuest), Biological Science Database (ProQuest), CAS: Chemical Abstracts Service (ACS), Embase (Elsevier), Health & Medical Collection (ProQuest), Health Research Premium Collection (ProQuest), Materials Science & Engineering Database (ProQuest), MEDLINE/PubMed (NLM), Natural Science Collection (ProQuest), and SciTech Premium Collection (ProQuest).