Structural Properties of an Artificial Protein That Regulates the Nucleation of Inorganic and Organic Crystals

Technological advances have facilitated the generation of artificial proteins that possess the capabilities of recognizing and binding to inorganic solids and/or controlling nucleation processes that form inorganic solids. However, very little is known regarding the structure of these interesting po...

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Veröffentlicht in:Langmuir 2007-03, Vol.23 (7), p.3857-3863
Hauptverfasser: Kulp, John L, Minamisawa, Tamiko, Shiba, Kiyotaka, Tejani, Margaret, Evans, John Spencer
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container_end_page 3863
container_issue 7
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container_title Langmuir
container_volume 23
creator Kulp, John L
Minamisawa, Tamiko
Shiba, Kiyotaka
Tejani, Margaret
Evans, John Spencer
description Technological advances have facilitated the generation of artificial proteins that possess the capabilities of recognizing and binding to inorganic solids and/or controlling nucleation processes that form inorganic solids. However, very little is known regarding the structure of these interesting polypeptides and how their structure contributes to functionality. To address this deficiency, we report structural investigations of an artificial protein, p288, that self-assembles and controls the nucleation of simple salts and organic compounds into dendrite-like crystals. Under aqueous conditions at low pH and in the presence of high salt, p288 is conformationally labile and exists primarily as a random coil conformer in equilibrium with other undefined secondary structures, including polyproline type II and β turn. We note that p288 can fold into either a partial β strand (at neutral pH) or a predominantly α helical (in the presence of TFE) conformation. Solid-state 13C−15N NMR experiments also reveal that p288 in the lyophilized, hydrated state possesses some degree of nonrandom coil structure. These results indicate that p288 is conformationally labile but can undergo conformational transitions to a more stable structure when water solvent loss/displacement occurs and protein concentrations increase. We believe that conformational instability and the ability to adopt different structures as a function of different environmental conditions represent important molecular features that impact p288 supramolecular assembly and crystal nucleation processes.
doi_str_mv 10.1021/la062442f
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subjects Amino Acid Sequence
Chemistry
Exact sciences and technology
General and physical chemistry
Models, Molecular
Protein Folding
Protein Structure, Secondary
Proteins - chemistry
Salts - chemistry
title Structural Properties of an Artificial Protein That Regulates the Nucleation of Inorganic and Organic Crystals
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