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Thermal stability, mechanical properties and water content of bacterial protein layers recrystallized on polyelectrolyte multilayers

Year: 2008

Journal: Soft Matter, 2008, 4, 1414 - 1421, 20100827

Authors: Delcea M., Krastev R., Gutberlet T., Pum D., Sleytr U.B., Toca-Herrera J.L.

Last authors: José Luis Toca-Herrera

Organizations: Biosurfaces Unit, CIC BiomaGUNE, Paseo Miramo´n 182, 20009 San Sebastia´n, Spain. E-mail: jltocaherrera@cicbiomagune.es; Fax: +34 943 00 53 15; Tel: +34 943 00 53 13

Country: Spain

The influence of the temperature on the surface topology, layer thickness and density of recrystallized bacterial S-layers from Bacillus sphaericus CCM2177 on polyelectrolyte multilayers in contact with liquid water was investigated. A quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation (QCM-D) was used to monitor the build-up of the polyelectrolyte multilayer and the adsorption of S-layer protein (1600 ng cm-2). The critical temperature (55 °C) at which the S-layer loses its 2-D structure was obtained from atomic force microscopy (AFM) and confirmed by neutron reflectometry (NR) experiments. The process of S-layer denaturation was found to be irreversible. Aggregates of denatured S-proteins resist lower loads than the crystalline nanostructure formed from folded S-proteins.The combination of the QCM-D results with the scattering length density and film thickness (14 nm) obtained from neutron reflectometry studies permitted the estimation of the density of adsorbed S-protein together with the bound water (M = 1.16 g cm-3), the dry protein scattering length density (2.02 × 10-6-2) and the S-protein mass density (1.48 g cm-3). The results confirmed that S-proteins form very loosely packed layers on polyelectrolyte multilayers incorporating a water volume fraction of around 68%.