Skip to main content
Article
Conformational Changes of Peptides at Solid/Liquid Interfaces: A Monte Carlo Study
Biomacromolecules
  • Amol A. Mungikar
  • Daniel Forciniti, Missouri University of Science and Technology
Abstract

Monte Carlo simulations were performed to study the conformational changes of negatively charged model peptides dissolved in water adsorbed onto charged surfaces. 8-, 16-, and 20-residues peptides were used, each of them consisted of repeating diblock units of aspartic acid (ASP, polar amino acid) and isoleucine (ILE, nonpolar amino acid) residues. We found that a water patch was retained at the charged surface, separating the peptide from it. We believed that these water molecules were primarily responsible for giving a particular orientation to the peptide at the surface. Water did play a role to some extent in the structural stability of the 8-residues peptide. However, for higher chain lengths (16-residues and 20-residues), the intrinsic hydrogen-bonding network (or intrinsic structural stability) showed a predominant effect over hydrophobic dehydration for the stability of the peptide at the surface.

Department(s)
Chemical and Biochemical Engineering
Sponsor(s)
National Science Foundation (U.S.)
Keywords and Phrases
  • Aspartic Acid,
  • Diblock Units,
  • Hydrophobic Dehydration,
  • Peptides
Document Type
Article - Journal
Document Version
Citation
File Type
text
Language(s)
English
Rights
© 2004 American Chemical Society (ACS), All rights reserved.
Publication Date
9-25-2004
Publication Date
25 Sep 2004
Disciplines
Citation Information
Amol A. Mungikar and Daniel Forciniti. "Conformational Changes of Peptides at Solid/Liquid Interfaces: A Monte Carlo Study" Biomacromolecules (2004) ISSN: 1525-7797
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/daniel-forciniti/15/