| Insulin Particle Formation in Supersaturated Aqueous Solutions of Poly(Ethylene Glycol) Biophysical Journal, Volume 89, Issue 5, 1 November 2005, Pages 3424-3433 Lev Bromberg, Julia Rashba-Step and Terrence Scott Abstract Protein microspheres are of particular utility in the field of drug delivery. A novel, completely aqueous, process of microsphere fabrication has been devised based on controlled phase separation of protein from water-soluble polymers such as polyethylene glycols. The fabrication process results in the formation of spherical microparticles with narrow particle size distributions. Cooling of preheated human insulin-poly(ethylene glycol)-water solutions results in the facile formation of insulin particles. To map out the supersaturation conditions conducive to particle nucleation and growth, we determined the temperature- and concentration-dependent boundaries of an equilibrium liquid-solid phase separation. The kinetics of formation of microspheres were followed by dynamic and continuous-angle static light scattering techniques. The presence of PEG at a pH that was close to the protein’s isoelectric point resulted in rapid nucleation and growth. The time elapsed from the moment of creation of a supersaturated solution and the detection of a solid phase in the system (the induction period, ) ranged from tens to several hundreds of seconds. The dependence of on supersaturation could be described within the framework of classical nucleation theory, with the time needed for the formation of a critical nucleus (size <10nm) being much longer than the time of the onset of particle growth. The growth was limited by cluster diffusion kinetics. The interfacial energies of the insulin particles were determined to be 3.2–3.4 and 2.2mJ/m at equilibrium temperatures of 25 and 37°C, respectively. The insulin particles formed as a result of the process were monodisperse and uniformly spherical, in clear distinction to previously reported processes of microcrystalline insulin particle formation. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (262 kb) |
| Thermally Induced Aggregation of Human Transferrin Receptor Studied by Light-Scattering Techniques Biophysical Journal, Volume 77, Issue 2, 1 August 1999, Pages 1117-1125 Jens Schüler, Joachim Frank, Wolfram Saenger and Yannis Georgalis Abstract The thermal stability of transferrin receptor isolated from human placenta in detergent-free solution has been investigated by static light-scattering and photon correlation spectroscopy. In detergent-free solution at 293.2K, human transferrin receptor (hTfR) forms stable associates with a hydrodynamic radius of 16nm. With increasing temperature the particles get more compact, above 340K a phase transition takes, place and spontaneous aggregation of the receptor occurs. Under these conditions large clusters are formed that lead to fractal aggregates, coexisting with dendritic crystalline structures. The experimental findings are compatible with a model, which involves a reaction limited cluster-cluster aggregation mechanism in conjunction with a nucleation process. The molar enthalpy change associated with the phase transition was determined to be (1860±150) kJ/mol at a transition temperature of (341.3±0.2) K. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (355 kb) |
| pH-Dependent Self-Assembly of Polyalanine Peptides Biophysical Journal, Volume 92, Issue 1, 1 January 2007, Pages 293-302 Kalyan Giri, Nitai P. Bhattacharyya and Soumen Basak Abstract Polyalanine expansions in the nuclear RNA-binding protein PABP2 induce misfolding and aggregation of the protein into insoluble inclusions in muscle tissues and cell nuclei, leading to the disease oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy (OPMD). We have explored the effect of solvent conditions and alanine repeat number on the propensity of fibril formation in this protein deposition disease. Three peptides mimicking the N-terminal polyalanine segment of PABP2, having the generic sequence Ac-Lys-Met-(Ala)-Gly-Tyr with =7, 11, and 17 (referred to as 7-ala, 11-ala, and 17-ala, respectively), were synthesized and their conformational properties studied as a function of pH. In strongly alkaline medium (pH >10), the two longer peptides (11-ala and 17-ala, but not 7-ala) showed remarkable enhancement of -sheet content and formed fibrils after incubation for 1–2 weeks at room temperature. Fluorescence studies suggested that tyrosyl radicals produced at high pH cross-linked to form dityrosine, which provided added stabilization for fibril growth. The kinetic progress curves for fibril formation, obtained by ThT fluorescence assay, showed exponential increase with time after an initial quiescent period (lag time) and an eventual saturation phase, all of which are indicative of a nucleation-controlled polymerization mechanism for fibrillation. Hierarchical self-assembly of the peptides led to the formation of striking fractal-shaped growth patterns on substrates, raising the possibility of designing novel materials using these peptides. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (2792 kb) |
Copyright © 1995 The Biophysical Society. All rights reserved.
Biophysical Journal, Volume 69, Issue 6, 2720-2727, 1 December 1995
doi:10.1016/S0006-3495(95)80143-8
Research Article
F. Andreasi Bassi, G. Arcovito, M. De Spirito, A. Mordente and G.E. Martorana
Istituto di Fisica, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Roma, Italy.
The supramolecular aggregation of alpha-crystallin, the major protein of the eye lens, was investigated by means of static and dynamic light scattering. The aggregation was induced by generating heat-modified alpha-crystallin forms and by stabilizing the clusters with calcium ions. The kinetic pattern of the aggregation and the structural features of the clusters can be described according to the reaction limited cluster-cluster aggregation theory previously adopted for the study of colloidal particles aggregation systems. Accordingly, the average mass and the hydrodynamic radius of alpha-crystallin supramolecular aggregates grow exponentially in time. The structure factor of the clusters is typical of fractal aggregates. A fractal dimension df approximately 2.15 was determined, indicating a low probability of sticking together of the primitive aggregating particles. As a consequence, the slow-forming clusters assemble a rather compact structure. The basic units forming the fractal aggregates were found to have a radius about twice (approximately 17 nm) that of the native protein and 5.3 times its size, which is consistent with an intermediate molecular assembly corresponding to the already known high molecular weight forms of alpha-crystallin.