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1.
J Sep Sci ; 37(17): 2403-10, 2014 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24958616

ABSTRACT

In this work, we use coarse-grained modeling to study the free solution electrophoretic mobility of small highly charged peptides (lysine, arginine, and short oligos thereof (up to nonapeptides)) in NaCl and Na2SO4 aqueous solutions at neutral pH and room temperature. The experimental data are taken from the literature. A bead modeling methodology that treats the electrostatics at the level of the nonlinear Poisson Boltzmann equation developed previously in our laboratory is able to account for the mobility of all peptides in NaCl, but not Na2SO4. The peptide mobilities in Na2SO4 can be accounted for by including sulfate binding in the model and this is proposed as one possible explanation for the discrepancy. Oligo arginine peptides bind more sulfate than oligo lysines and sulfate binding increases with the oligo length.


Subject(s)
Peptides/chemistry , Electrophoresis , Models, Chemical
2.
J Phys Chem B ; 118(11): 3150-5, 2014 Mar 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24571708

ABSTRACT

The coarse-grained continuum primitive model is developed and used to characterize the titration and electrical conductance behavior of aqueous solutions of fullerene hexa malonic acid (FHMA). The spherical FHMA molecule, a highly charged electrolyte with an absolute valence charge as large as 12, is modeled as a dielectric sphere in Newtonian fluid, and electrostatics are treated numerically at the level of the non-linear Poisson-Boltzmann equation. Transport properties (electrophoretic mobilities and conductances) of the various charge states of FHMA are numerically computed using established numerical algorithms. For reasonable choices of the model parameters, good agreement between experiment (published literature) and modeling is achieved. In order to accomplish this, however, a moderate degree of specific binding of principal counterion and FHMA must be included in the modeling. It should be emphasized, however, that alternative explanations are possible. This comparison is made at 25 °C for both Na(+) and Ca(2+) principal counterions. The model is also used to characterize the different charge states and degree of counterion binding to those charge states as a function of pH.

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