Refractive index matching to develop transparent polyaphrons: Characterization of immobilized proteins

July 28, 2017

Title

Refractive index matching to develop transparent polyaphrons: Characterization of immobilized proteins

Author

Keeran Ward, David C. Stuckey

Year

2016

Journal

Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces

Abstract

Refractive index matching was used to create optically transparent polyaphrons to enable proteins adsorbed to the aphron surface to be characterized. Due to the significant light scattering created by polyaphrons, refractive index matching allowed for representative circular dichroism (CD) spectra and acceptable structural characterization. The method utilized n-hexane as the solvent phase, a mixture of glycerol and phosphate buffer (30% [w/v]) as the aqueous phase, and the non-ionic surfactants, Laureth-4 and Kolliphor P-188. Deconvolution of CD spectra revealed that the immobilized protein adapted its native conformation, showing that the adsorbed protein interacted only with the bound water layer (“soapy shell”) of the aphron. Isothermal calorimetry further demonstrated that non-ionic surfactant interactions were virtually non-existent, even at the high concentrations used (5% [w/v]), proving that non-ionic surfactants can preserve protein conformation.

Instrument

J-715

Keywords

Circular dichroism, Secondary structure, Ligand binding, Biochemistry