Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 20 de 77
Filter
Add more filters










Publication year range
1.
Langmuir ; 40(16): 8554-8561, 2024 Apr 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38651184

ABSTRACT

We investigate the depletion contributions to the self-assembly of microcolloids on solid substrates. The assembly is driven by the exclusion of nanoparticles and nonadsorbing polymers from the depletion zone between the microcolloids in the liquid and the underlying substrate. The model system consists of 1 µm polystyrene particles that we deposit on a flat glass slab in an electrolyte solution. Using polystyrene nanoparticles and poly(acrylic acid) polymers as depleting agents, we demonstrate in our experiments that nanoparticle concentrations of 0.5% (w/v) support well-ordered packing of microcolloids on glass, while the presence of polymers leads to irregular aggregate deposition structures. A mixture of nanoparticles and polymers enhances the formation of colloidal aggregate and particulate surface coverage compared to using the polymers alone as a depletion agent. Moreover, tuning the polymer ionization state from pH 4 to 9 modifies the polymer conformational state and radius of gyration, which in turn alters the microcolloid deposition from compact multilayers to flocculated structures. Our study provides entropic strategies for manipulating particulate assembly on substrates from dispersed to continuous coatings.

2.
Chem Rev ; 124(9): 5668-5694, 2024 May 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38635951

ABSTRACT

Faced with desiccation stress, many organisms deploy strategies to maintain the integrity of their cellular components. Amorphous glassy media composed of small molecular solutes or protein gels present general strategies for protecting against drying. We review these strategies and the proposed molecular mechanisms to explain protein protection in a vitreous matrix under conditions of low hydration. We also describe efforts to exploit similar strategies in technological applications for protecting proteins in dry or highly desiccated states. Finally, we outline open questions and possibilities for future explorations.


Subject(s)
Desiccation , Gels , Proteins , Proteins/chemistry , Proteins/metabolism , Gels/chemistry , Glass/chemistry , Humans , Water/chemistry
3.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(42): 23308-23320, 2023 10 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37845197

ABSTRACT

Solutes added to buffered solutions directly impact protein folding. Protein stabilization by cosolutes or crowders has been shown to be largely driven by protein-cosolute volume exclusion complemented by chemical and soft interactions. By contrast to previous studies that indicate the invariably destabilizing role of soft protein-sugar attractions, we show here that soft interactions with sugar cosolutes are protein-specific and can be stabilizing or destabilizing. We experimentally follow the folding of two model miniproteins that are only marginally stable but in the presence of sugars and polyols fold into representative and distinct secondary structures: ß-hairpin or α-helix. Our mean-field model reveals that while protein-sugar excluded volume interactions have a similar stabilizing effect on both proteins, the soft interactions add a destabilizing contribution to one miniprotein but further stabilize the other. Using molecular dynamics simulations, we link the soft protein-cosolute interactions to the weakening of direct protein-water hydrogen bonding due to the presence of sugars. Although these weakened hydrogen bonds destabilize both the native and denatured states of the two proteins, the resulting contribution to the folding free energy can be positive or negative depending on the amino acid sequence. This study indicates that the significant variation between proteins in their soft interactions with sugar determines the specific response of different proteins, even to the same sugar.


Subject(s)
Sugars , Water , Hydrogen Bonding , Proteins , Amino Acid Sequence , Protein Folding , Thermodynamics
4.
J Mol Biol ; 435(22): 168281, 2023 11 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37734431

ABSTRACT

Amyloid aggregation is a key process in amyloidoses and neurodegenerative diseases. Hydrophobicity is one of the major driving forces for this type of aggregation, as an increase in hydrophobicity generally correlates with aggregation susceptibility and rate. However, most experimental systems in vitro and prediction tools in silico neglect the contribution of protective osmolytes present in the cellular environment. Here, we assessed the role of hydrophobic mutations in amyloid aggregation in the presence of osmolytes. To achieve this goal, we used the model protein human muscle acylphosphatase (mAcP) and mutations to leucine that increased its hydrophobicity without affecting its thermodynamic stability. Osmolytes significantly slowed down the aggregation kinetics of the hydrophobic mutants, with an effect larger than that observed on the wild-type protein. The effect increased as the mutation site was closer to the middle of the protein sequence. We propose that the preferential exclusion of osmolytes from mutation-introduced hydrophobic side-chains quenches the aggregation potential of the ensemble of partially unfolded states of the protein by inducing its compaction and inhibiting its self-assembly with other proteins. Our results suggest that including the effect of the cellular environment in experimental setups and predictive softwares, for both mechanistic studies and drug design, is essential in order to obtain a more complete combination of the driving forces of amyloid aggregation.


Subject(s)
Acylphosphatase , Amyloid , Protein Aggregates , Humans , Amino Acid Sequence , Amyloid/chemistry , Amyloid/genetics , Leucine/chemistry , Leucine/genetics , Protein Folding , Protein Aggregates/genetics , Acylphosphatase/chemistry , Acylphosphatase/genetics , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Solubility , Osmotic Pressure , Urea/chemistry
5.
Pharmaceutics ; 15(5)2023 May 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37242704

ABSTRACT

Deep eutectic solvents (DESs) show promise in pharmaceutical applications, most prominently as excellent solubilizers. Yet, because DES are complex multi-component mixtures, it is challenging to dissect the contribution of each component to solvation. Moreover, deviations from the eutectic concentration lead to phase separation of the DES, making it impractical to vary the ratios of components to potentially improve solvation. Water addition alleviates this limitation as it significantly decreases the melting temperature and stabilizes the DES single-phase region. Here, we follow the solubility of ß-cyclodextrin (ß-CD) in DES formed by the eutectic 2:1 mole ratio of urea and choline chloride (CC). Upon water addition to DES, we find that at almost all hydration levels, the highest ß-CD solubility is achieved at DES compositions that are shifted from the 2:1 ratio. At higher urea to CC ratios, due to the limited solubility of urea, the optimum composition allowing the highest ß-CD solubility is reached at the DES solubility limit. For mixtures with higher CC concentration, the composition allowing optimal solvation varies with hydration. For example, ß-CD solubility at 40 wt% water is enhanced by a factor of 1.5 for a 1:2 urea to CC mole ratio compared with the 2:1 eutectic ratio. We further develop a methodology allowing us to link the preferential accumulation of urea and CC in the vicinity of ß-CD to its increased solubility. The methodology we present here allows a dissection of solute interactions with DES components that is crucial for rationally developing improved drug and excipient formulations.

6.
ACS Nano ; 17(6): 5852-5860, 2023 Mar 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36893308

ABSTRACT

Binary compositions of surface ligands are known to improve the colloidal stability and fluorescence quantum yield of nanocrystals (NCs), due to ligand-ligand interactions and surface organization. Herein, we follow the thermodynamics of a ligand exchange reaction of CdSe NCs with alkylthiol mixtures. The effects of ligand polarity and length difference on ligand packing were investigated using isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC). The thermodynamic signature of the formation of mixed ligand shells was observed. Correlating the experimental results with thermodynamic mixing models has allowed us to calculate the interchain interactions and to infer the final ligand shell configuration. Our findings demonstrate that, in contrast to macroscopic surfaces, the small dimensions of the NCs and the subsequent increased interfacial region between dissimilar ligands allow the formation of a myriad of clustering patterns, controlled by the interligand interactions. This work provides a fundamental understanding of the parameters determining the ligand shell structure and should help guide smart surface design toward NC-based applications.

7.
J Chem Theory Comput ; 19(4): 1360-1369, 2023 Feb 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36724052

ABSTRACT

Lipid nanodiscs are nanometric bilayer patches enveloped by confining structures, commonly composed of membrane scaffolding proteins (MSPs). To resolve the interplay between MSP geometry, lipid confinement, and membrane material properties on the nanodisc shape, we apply a continuum elastic theory accounting for lipid bending, tilting, and area deformations. The equilibrium nanodisc shape is then determined by minimizing the elastic free energy functional. Analytic expressions derived under simplifying assumptions demonstrate that the nanodisc shape is sensitive to its size, lipid density, and the lipid tilt and thickness imposed at the contact with the MSP. Under matching physical parameters, these expressions quantitatively reproduce the shape of nanodiscs seen in molecular dynamics simulations, but only if lipid tilt is explicitly considered. We further demonstrate how the bending rigidity can be extracted from the membrane shape profile by fitting the numerically minimized full elastic functional to the membrane shape found in simulations. This fitting procedure faithfully informs on the bending rigidity of nanodiscs larger than ca. 5 nm in radius. The fitted profiles accurately reproduce the increase in bending modulus found using real-space fluctuation analysis of simulated nanodiscs and, for large nanodiscs, also accurately resolve its spatial variations. Our study shows how deformations in lipid patches confined in nanodiscs can be well described by a continuum elastic theory and how this fit can be used to determine local material properties from shape analysis of nanodiscs in simulations. This methodology could potentially allow direct determination of lipid properties from experiments, for example cryo-electron microscopy images of lipid nanodiscs, thereby allowing to guide the development of future nanodisc formulations with desired properties.

8.
Protein Sci ; 32(3): e4573, 2023 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36691735

ABSTRACT

Proteins in the cellular milieu reside in environments crowded by macromolecules and other solutes. Although crowding can significantly impact the protein folded state stability, most experiments are conducted in dilute buffered solutions. To resolve the effect of crowding on protein stability, we use 19 F nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy to follow the reversible, two-state unfolding thermodynamics of the N-terminal Src homology 3 domain of the Drosophila signal transduction protein drk in the presence of polyethylene glycols (PEGs) of various molecular weights and concentrations. Contrary to most current theories of crowding that emphasize steric protein-crowder interactions as the main driving force for entropically favored stabilization, our experiments show that PEG stabilization is accompanied by significant heat release, and entropy disfavors folding. Using our newly developed model, we find that stabilization by ethylene glycol and small PEGs is driven by favorable binding to the folded state. In contrast, for larger PEGs, chemical or soft PEG-protein interactions do not play a significant role. Instead, folding is favored by excluded volume PEG-protein interactions and an exothermic nonideal mixing contribution from release of confined PEG and water upon folding. Our results indicate that crowding acts through molecular interactions subtler than previously assumed and that interactions between solution components with both the folded and unfolded states must be carefully considered.


Subject(s)
Polyethylene Glycols , Proteins , Animals , Proteins/chemistry , Macromolecular Substances/chemistry , Thermodynamics , Polyethylene Glycols/chemistry , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Drosophila , Protein Folding
9.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 629(Pt A): 165-172, 2023 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36063634

ABSTRACT

To cope with stress induced by high salinity and hydrostatic pressure, some marine animals accumulate small organic solutes called osmolytes. Most notable among these osmolytes are the denaturant urea, and trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) that is known to stabilize proteins. Although their effects on proteins and nucleic acids have been extensively studied, osmolytes are less commonly studied in the context of lipids, which are a crucial component in many cellular processes. Here we resolve the mechanism for urea's action on the forces acting between lipid membranes, in the presence and absence of TMAO. We find that unlike the way urea denatures proteins, and by contrast to TMAO, urea does not preferentially interact with net-neutral lipid membranes. Instead, urea modulates the interactions between membranes mainly by weakening the van der Waals attraction between bilayers. Interestingly, regardless of concentration, the effects of urea and TMAO appear to be additive to a large extent, so that the presence of one osmolyte hardly changes the interaction of the other with lipid. Weak non-additive effects are likely due to structural changes in the lipid membrane induced by the osmolytes. Finally, we comment on the potential role of osmolytes acting together in the modification of lipid adhesion and fusion.


Subject(s)
Nucleic Acids , Urea , Animals , Urea/chemistry , Methylamines/chemistry , Proteins , Lipids
10.
Annu Rev Biophys ; 51: 267-300, 2022 05 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35239418

ABSTRACT

Cells are crowded, but proteins are almost always studied in dilute aqueous buffer. We review the experimental evidence that crowding affects the equilibrium thermodynamics of protein stability and protein association and discuss the theories employed to explain these observations. In doing so, we highlight differences between synthetic polymers and biologically relevant crowders. Theories based on hard-core interactions predict only crowding-induced entropic stabilization. However, experiment-based efforts conducted under physiologically relevant conditions show that crowding can destabilize proteins and their complexes. Furthermore, quantification of the temperature dependence of crowding effects produced by both large and small cosolutes, including osmolytes, sugars, synthetic polymers, and proteins, reveals enthalpic effects that stabilize or destabilize proteins.Crowding-induced destabilization and the enthalpic component point to the role of chemical interactions between and among the macromolecules, cosolutes, and water. We conclude with suggestions for future studies.


Subject(s)
Polymers , Proteins , Macromolecular Substances/chemistry , Protein Stability , Proteins/chemistry , Thermodynamics
11.
ACS Nano ; 16(3): 4308-4321, 2022 Mar 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35157440

ABSTRACT

Surface ligands of semiconductor nanocrystals (NCs) play key roles in determining their colloidal stability and physicochemical properties and are thus enablers also for the NCs flexible manipulation toward numerous applications. Attention is usually paid to the ligand binding group, while the impact of the ligand chain backbone structure is less discussed. Using isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC), we studied the effect of structural changes in the ligand chain on the thermodynamics of the exchange reaction for oleate coated CdSe NCs, comparing linear and branched alkylthiols. The investigated alkylthiol ligands differed in their backbone length, branching position, and branching group length. Compared to linear ligands, lower exothermicity and entropy loss were observed for an exchange with branched ligands, due to steric hindrance in ligand packing, thereby justifying their previous classification as "entropic ligands". Mean-field calculations for ligand binding demonstrate the contribution to the overall entropy originating from ligand conformational entropy, which is diminished upon binding mainly by packing of NC-bound ligands. Model calculations and the experimental ITC data both point to an interplay between the branching position and the backbone length in determining the entropic nature of the branched ligand. Our findings suggest that the most entropic ligand should be a short, branched ligand with short branching group located toward the middle of the ligand chain. The insights provided by this work also contribute to a future smarter NC surface design, which is an essential tool for their implementation in diverse applications.

12.
Nanoscale ; 13(48): 20462-20470, 2021 Dec 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34787624

ABSTRACT

Molecular self-assembly forms structures of well-defined organization that allow control over material properties, affording many advanced technological applications. Although the self-assembly of molecules is seemingly spontaneous, the structure into which they assemble can be altered by carefully modulating the driving forces. Here we study the self-assembly within the constraints of nanoconfined closed spherical volumes of polymeric nanocapsules, whereby a mixture of polyester-polyether block copolymer and methacrylic acid methyl methacrylate copolymer forms the entrapping capsule shell of nanometric dimensions. We follow the organization of the organic dye indigo carmine that serves as a model building unit due to its tendency to self-assemble into flat lamellar molecular sheets. Analysis of the structures formed inside the nanoconfined space using cryogenic-transmission electron microscopy (cryo-TEM) and cryogenic-electron tomography (cryo-ET) reveal that confinement drives the self-assembly to produce tubular scroll-like structures of the dye. Combined continuum theory and molecular modeling allow us to estimate the material properties of the confined nanosheets, including their elasticity and brittleness. Finally, we comment on the formation mechanism and forces that govern self-assembly under nanoconfinement.

13.
ACS Nano ; 15(8): 12880-12887, 2021 08 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34338519

ABSTRACT

Vesicles enriched in certain negatively charged lipids, such as phosphatidylserine and PIP2, are known to undergo fusion in the presence of calcium ions without assistance from protein assemblies. Other lipids do not exhibit this propensity, even if they are negatively charged. Using our recently developed methodology, we extract elastic properties of a representative set of lipids. This allows us to trace the origin of lipid-calcium selectivity in membrane fusion to the formation of lipid clusters with long-range correlations that induce negative curvature on the membrane surface. Furthermore, the clusters generate lateral tension in the headgroup region at the membrane surface, concomitantly also stabilizing negative Gaussian curvature. Finally, calcium binding also reduces the orientational polarization of water around the membrane head groups, potentially reducing the hydration force acting between membranes. Binding calcium only weakly increases membrane bending rigidity and tilt moduli, in agreement with experiments. We show how the combined effects of calcium binding to membranes lower the barriers along the fusion pathway that lead to the formation of the fusion stalk as well as the fusion pore.


Subject(s)
Lipid Bilayers , Membrane Fusion , Lipid Bilayers/chemistry , Calcium/chemistry , Water/chemistry , Proteins
14.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 12(32): 7659-7664, 2021 Aug 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34351767

ABSTRACT

From stem cell freeze-drying to organ storage, considerable recent efforts have been directed toward the development of new preservation technologies. A prominent protein stabilizing strategy involves vitrification in glassy matrices, most notably those formed of sugars such as the biologically relevant preservative trehalose. Here, we compare the folding thermodynamics of a model miniprotein in solution and in the glassy state of the sugars trehalose and glucose. Using synchrotron radiation circular dichroism (SRCD), we find that the same native structure persists in solution and glass. However, upon transition to the glass, a completely different, conformationally restricted unfolded state replaces the disordered denatured state found in solution, potentially inhibiting misfolding. Concomitantly, a large exothermic contribution is observed in glass, exposing the stabilizing effect of interactions with the sugar matrix on the native state. Our results shed light on the mechanism of protein stabilization in sugar glass and should aid in future preservation technologies.


Subject(s)
Protein Conformation/drug effects , Protein Stability/drug effects , Proteins/metabolism , Trehalose/chemistry , Amino Acid Sequence , Protein Folding/drug effects , Proteins/chemistry , Thermodynamics , Vitrification
15.
J Chem Phys ; 154(22): 224505, 2021 Jun 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34241212

ABSTRACT

By complexing with hydrophobic compounds, cyclodextrins afford increased solubility and thermodynamic stability to hardly soluble compounds, thereby underlining their invaluable applications in pharmaceutical and other industries. However, common cyclodextrins such as ß-cyclodextrin, suffer from limited solubility in water, which often leads to precipitation and formation of unfavorable aggregates, driving the search for better solvents. Here, we study the solvation of cyclodextrin in deep eutectic solvents (DESs), environmentally friendly media that possess unique properties. We focus on reline, the DES formed from choline chloride and urea, and resolve the mechanism through which its constituents elevate ß-cyclodextrin solubility in hydrated solutions compared to pure water or dry reline. Combining experiments and simulations, we determine that the remarkable solubilization of ß-cyclodextrin in hydrated reline is mostly due to the inclusion of urea inside ß-cyclodextrin's cavity and at its exterior surfaces. The role of choline chloride in further increasing solvation is twofold. First, it increases urea's solubility beyond the saturation limit in water, ultimately leading to much higher ß-cyclodextrin solubility in hydrated reline in comparison to aqueous urea solutions. Second, choline chloride increases urea's accumulation in ß-cyclodextrin's vicinity. Specifically, we find that the accumulation of urea becomes stronger at high reline concentrations, as the solution transitions from reline-in-water to water-in-reline, where water alone cannot be regarded as the solvent. Simulations further suggest that in dry DES, the mechanism of ß-cyclodextrin solvation changes so that reline acts as a quasi-single component solvent that lacks preference for the accumulation of urea or choline chloride around ß-cyclodextrin.

16.
Biophys J ; 120(16): 3455-3469, 2021 08 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34087214

ABSTRACT

Protein aggregation is involved in a variety of diseases, including neurodegenerative diseases and cancer. The cellular environment is crowded by a plethora of cosolutes comprising small molecules and biomacromolecules at high concentrations, which may influence the aggregation of proteins in vivo. To account for the effect of cosolutes on cancer-related protein aggregation, we studied their effect on the aggregation of the cancer-related L106R mutant of the Axin protein. Axin is a key player in the Wnt signaling pathway, and the L106R mutation in its RGS domain results in a native molten globule that tends to form native-like aggregates. This results in uncontrolled activation of the Wnt signaling pathway, leading to cancer. We monitored the aggregation process of Axin RGS L106R in vitro in the presence of a wide ensemble of cosolutes including polyols, amino acids, betaine, and polyethylene glycol crowders. Except myo-inositol, all polyols decreased RGS L106R aggregation, with carbohydrates exerting the strongest inhibition. Conversely, betaine and polyethylene glycols enhanced aggregation. These results are consistent with the reported effects of osmolytes and crowders on the stability of molten globular proteins and with both amorphous and amyloid aggregation mechanisms. We suggest a model of Axin L106R aggregation in vivo, whereby molecularly small osmolytes keep the protein as a free soluble molecule but the increased crowding of the bound state by macromolecules induces its aggregation at the nanoscale. To our knowledge, this is the first systematic study on the effect of osmolytes and crowders on a process of native-like aggregation involved in pathology, as it sheds light on the contribution of cosolutes to the onset of cancer as a protein misfolding disease and on the relevance of aggregation in the molecular etiology of cancer.


Subject(s)
Neoplasms , Polyethylene Glycols , Amyloid , Axin Protein/genetics , Mutation , Neoplasms/genetics , Signal Transduction
17.
Langmuir ; 36(36): 10715-10724, 2020 09 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32787004

ABSTRACT

The interaction between lipid membranes and ions is associated with a range of key physiological processes. Most earlier studies have focused on the interaction of lipids with cations, while the specific effects of the anions have been largely overlooked. Owing to dissolved atmospheric carbon dioxide, bicarbonate is an important ubiquitous anion in aqueous media. In this paper, we report on the effect of bicarbonate anions on the interactions between dipolar lipid membranes in the presence of previously adsorbed calcium cations. Using a combination of solution X-ray scattering, osmotic stress, and molecular dynamics simulations, we followed the interactions between 1,2-didodecanoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DLPC) lipid membranes that were dialyzed against CaCl2 solutions in the presence and absence of bicarbonate anions. Calcium cations adsorbed onto DLPC membranes, charge them, and lead to their swelling. In the presence of bicarbonate anions, however, the calcium cations can tightly couple one dipolar DLPC membrane to the other and form a highly condensed and dehydrated lamellar phase with a repeat distance of 3.45 ± 0.02 nm. Similar tight condensation and dehydration has only been observed between charged membranes in the presence of multivalent counterions. Bridging between bilayers by calcium bicarbonate complexes induced this arrangement. Furthermore, in this condensed phase, lipid molecules and adsorbed ions were arranged in a two-dimensional oblique lattice.

18.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 59(36): 15575-15579, 2020 Sep 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32627307

ABSTRACT

Electrofreezing experiments of super-cooled water (SCW) with different ions, performed directly on the charged hemihedral faces of pyroelectric LiTaO3 and AgI crystals, in the presence and in the absence of pyroelectric charge are reported. It is demonstrated that bicarbonate (HCO3 - ) ions elevate the icing temperature near the positively charged faces. In contrast, the hydronium (H3 O+ ) slightly reduces the icing temperature. Molecular dynamics simulations suggest that the hydrated trigonal planar HCO3 - ions self-assemble with water molecules near the surface of the AgI crystal as clusters of slightly different configuration from those of the ice-like hexagons. These clusters, however, have a tendency to serve as embryonic nuclei for ice crystallization. Consequently, we predicted and experimentally confirmed that the trigonal planar ions of NO3 - and guanidinium (Gdm+ ), at appropriate concentrations, elevate the icing temperature near the positive and negative charged surfaces, respectively. On the other hand, the Cl- and SO4 2- ions of different configurations reduce the icing temperature.

19.
J Phys Chem B ; 124(33): 7166-7175, 2020 08 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32697588

ABSTRACT

Lipid nanodiscs are small synthetic lipid bilayer structures that are stabilized in solution by special circumscribing (or scaffolding) proteins or polymers. Because they create native-like environments for transmembrane proteins, lipid nanodiscs have become a powerful tool for structural determination of this class of systems when combined with cryo-electron microscopy or nuclear magnetic resonance. The elastic properties of lipid bilayers determine how the lipid environment responds to membrane protein perturbations, and how the lipid in turn modifies the conformational state of the embedded protein. However, despite the abundant use of nanodiscs in determining membrane protein structure, the elastic material properties of even pure lipid nanodiscs (i.e., without embedded proteins) have not yet been quantitatively investigated. A major hurdle is due to the inherently nonlocal treatment of the elastic properties of lipid systems implemented by most existing methods, both experimental and computational. In addition, these methods are best suited for very large "infinite" size lipidic assemblies, or ones that contain periodicity, in the case of simulations. We have previously described a computational analysis of molecular dynamics simulations designed to overcome these limitations, so it allows quantification of the bending rigidity (KC) and tilt modulus (κt) on a local scale even for finite, nonperiodic systems, such as lipid nanodiscs. Here we use this computational approach to extract values of KC and κt for a set of lipid nanodisc systems that vary in size and lipid composition. We find that the material properties of lipid nanodiscs are different from those of infinite bilayers of corresponding lipid composition, highlighting the effect of nanodisc confinement. Nanodiscs tend to show higher stiffness than their corresponding macroscopic bilayers, and moreover, their material properties vary spatially within them. For small-size MSP1 nanodiscs, the stiffness decreases radially, from a value that is larger in their center than the moduli of the corresponding bilayers by a factor of ∼2-3. The larger nanodiscs (MSP1E3D1 and MSP2N2) show milder spatial changes of moduli that are composition dependent and can be maximal in the center or at some distance from it. These trends in moduli correlate with spatially varying structural properties, including the area per lipid and the nanodisc thickness. Finally, as has previously been reported, nanodiscs tend to show deformations from perfectly flat circular geometries to varying degrees, depending on size and lipid composition. The modulations of lipid elastic properties that we find should be carefully considered when making structural and functional inferences concerning embedded proteins.


Subject(s)
Lipid Bilayers , Nanostructures , Cryoelectron Microscopy , Membrane Proteins , Molecular Dynamics Simulation
20.
J Chem Theory Comput ; 16(5): 3335-3342, 2020 May 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32223260

ABSTRACT

Deep eutectic mixtures are a promising sustainable and diverse class of tunable solvents that hold great promise for various green chemical and technological processes. Many deep eutectic solvents (DES) are hygroscopic and find use in applications with varying extents of hydration, hence urging a profound understanding of changes in the nanostructure of DES with water content. Here, we report on molecular dynamics simulations of the quintessential choline chloride-urea mixture, using a newly parametrized force field with scaled charges to account for physical properties of hydrated DES mixtures. These simulations indicate that water changes the nanostructure of solution even at very low hydration. We present a novel approach that uses convex constrained analysis to dissect radial distribution functions into base components representing different modes of local association. Specifically, DES mixtures can be deconvoluted locally into two dominant competing nanostructures, whose relative prevalence (but not their salient structural features) change with added water over a wide concentration range, from dry up to ∼30 wt % hydration. Water is found to be associated strongly with several DES components but remarkably also forms linear bead-on-string clusters with chloride. At high water content (beyond ∼50 wt % of water), the solution changes into an aqueous electrolyte-like mixture. Finally, the structural evolution of the solution at the nanoscale with extent of hydration is echoed in the DES macroscopic material properties. These changes to structure, in turn, should prove important in the way DES acts as a solvent and to its interactions with additive components.

SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...