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High Molecular Weight Polyproline as a Potential Biosourced Ice Growth Inhibitor: Synthesis, Ice Recrystallization Inhibition, and Specific Ice Face Binding

[Image: see text] Ice-binding proteins (IBPs) from extremophile organisms can modulate ice formation and growth. There are many (bio)technological applications of IBPs, from cryopreservation to mitigating freeze–thaw damage in concrete to frozen food texture modifiers. Extraction or expression of IB...

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Autores principales: Judge, Nicola, Georgiou, Panagiotis G., Bissoyi, Akalabya, Ahmad, Ashfaq, Heise, Andreas, Gibson, Matthew I.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2023
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10265654/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37303170
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.biomac.2c01487
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author Judge, Nicola
Georgiou, Panagiotis G.
Bissoyi, Akalabya
Ahmad, Ashfaq
Heise, Andreas
Gibson, Matthew I.
author_facet Judge, Nicola
Georgiou, Panagiotis G.
Bissoyi, Akalabya
Ahmad, Ashfaq
Heise, Andreas
Gibson, Matthew I.
author_sort Judge, Nicola
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Ice-binding proteins (IBPs) from extremophile organisms can modulate ice formation and growth. There are many (bio)technological applications of IBPs, from cryopreservation to mitigating freeze–thaw damage in concrete to frozen food texture modifiers. Extraction or expression of IBPs can be challenging to scale up, and hence polymeric biomimetics have emerged. It is, however, desirable to use biosourced monomers and heteroatom-containing backbones in polymers for in vivo or environmental applications to allow degradation. Here we investigate high molecular weight polyproline as an ice recrystallization inhibitor (IRI). Low molecular weight polyproline is known to be a weak IRI. Its activity is hypothesized to be due to the unique PPI helix it adopts, but it has not been thoroughly investigated. Here an open-to-air aqueous N-carboxyanhydride polymerization is employed to obtain polyproline with molecular weights of up to 50000 g mol(–1). These polymers were found to have IRI activity down to 5 mg mL(–1), unlike a control peptide of polysarcosine, which did not inhibit all ice growth at up to 40 mg mL(–1). The polyprolines exhibited lower critical solution temperature behavior and assembly/aggregation observed at room temperature, which may contribute to its activity. Single ice crystal assays with polyproline led to faceting, consistent with specific ice-face binding. This work shows that non-vinyl-based polymers can be designed to inhibit ice recrystallization and may offer a more sustainable or environmentally acceptable, while synthetically scalable, route to large-scale applications.
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spelling pubmed-102656542023-06-15 High Molecular Weight Polyproline as a Potential Biosourced Ice Growth Inhibitor: Synthesis, Ice Recrystallization Inhibition, and Specific Ice Face Binding Judge, Nicola Georgiou, Panagiotis G. Bissoyi, Akalabya Ahmad, Ashfaq Heise, Andreas Gibson, Matthew I. Biomacromolecules [Image: see text] Ice-binding proteins (IBPs) from extremophile organisms can modulate ice formation and growth. There are many (bio)technological applications of IBPs, from cryopreservation to mitigating freeze–thaw damage in concrete to frozen food texture modifiers. Extraction or expression of IBPs can be challenging to scale up, and hence polymeric biomimetics have emerged. It is, however, desirable to use biosourced monomers and heteroatom-containing backbones in polymers for in vivo or environmental applications to allow degradation. Here we investigate high molecular weight polyproline as an ice recrystallization inhibitor (IRI). Low molecular weight polyproline is known to be a weak IRI. Its activity is hypothesized to be due to the unique PPI helix it adopts, but it has not been thoroughly investigated. Here an open-to-air aqueous N-carboxyanhydride polymerization is employed to obtain polyproline with molecular weights of up to 50000 g mol(–1). These polymers were found to have IRI activity down to 5 mg mL(–1), unlike a control peptide of polysarcosine, which did not inhibit all ice growth at up to 40 mg mL(–1). The polyprolines exhibited lower critical solution temperature behavior and assembly/aggregation observed at room temperature, which may contribute to its activity. Single ice crystal assays with polyproline led to faceting, consistent with specific ice-face binding. This work shows that non-vinyl-based polymers can be designed to inhibit ice recrystallization and may offer a more sustainable or environmentally acceptable, while synthetically scalable, route to large-scale applications. American Chemical Society 2023-02-21 /pmc/articles/PMC10265654/ /pubmed/37303170 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.biomac.2c01487 Text en © 2023 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Judge, Nicola
Georgiou, Panagiotis G.
Bissoyi, Akalabya
Ahmad, Ashfaq
Heise, Andreas
Gibson, Matthew I.
High Molecular Weight Polyproline as a Potential Biosourced Ice Growth Inhibitor: Synthesis, Ice Recrystallization Inhibition, and Specific Ice Face Binding
title High Molecular Weight Polyproline as a Potential Biosourced Ice Growth Inhibitor: Synthesis, Ice Recrystallization Inhibition, and Specific Ice Face Binding
title_full High Molecular Weight Polyproline as a Potential Biosourced Ice Growth Inhibitor: Synthesis, Ice Recrystallization Inhibition, and Specific Ice Face Binding
title_fullStr High Molecular Weight Polyproline as a Potential Biosourced Ice Growth Inhibitor: Synthesis, Ice Recrystallization Inhibition, and Specific Ice Face Binding
title_full_unstemmed High Molecular Weight Polyproline as a Potential Biosourced Ice Growth Inhibitor: Synthesis, Ice Recrystallization Inhibition, and Specific Ice Face Binding
title_short High Molecular Weight Polyproline as a Potential Biosourced Ice Growth Inhibitor: Synthesis, Ice Recrystallization Inhibition, and Specific Ice Face Binding
title_sort high molecular weight polyproline as a potential biosourced ice growth inhibitor: synthesis, ice recrystallization inhibition, and specific ice face binding
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10265654/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37303170
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.biomac.2c01487
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