Issue 20, 2009

Micro-phase separation explains the abrupt structural change of denatured globular protein gels on varying the ionic strength or the pH

Abstract

Aqueous solutions of globular proteins gel after heat-induced denaturation. The structure of β-lactoglobulin gels was studied as a function of the pH (2–8) and the NaCl concentration (0–1 M) over a wide range of length scales (1 nm-100 µm) using a combination of scattering techniques and microscopy. The gel structure depended on the strength of the electrostatic interaction that was varied by changing the charge density of the proteins (pH) or the screening length (ionic strength). Homogeneous so-called finely stranded gels were formed at strong interaction, while more heterogeneous so-called particulate gels were formed at weak interaction. It is shown that phase separation of growing irreversibly bound protein aggregates explains the abrupt transition between the two structures for small changes of the ionic strength or the pH. Phase separation was limited to the formation of protein rich domains with a radius of several microns that associated into the particulate gels. The structure of homogeneous gels is shown to be determined by the amplitude of the (critical) concentration fluctuations of protein aggregates that were frozen-in by gelation. The characteristic length scales of the homogeneous gels varied between about 20 nm and 1 µm.

Graphical abstract: Micro-phase separation explains the abrupt structural change of denatured globular protein gels on varying the ionic strength or the pH

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
06 Apr 2009
Accepted
30 Jun 2009
First published
13 Aug 2009

Soft Matter, 2009,5, 4033-4041

Micro-phase separation explains the abrupt structural change of denatured globular protein gels on varying the ionic strength or the pH

K. Ako, T. Nicolai, D. Durand and G. Brotons, Soft Matter, 2009, 5, 4033 DOI: 10.1039/B906860K

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