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Melting properties of peptides and their solubility in water. Part 1: dipeptides based on glycine or alanine

Melting properties (melting temperature, melting enthalpy and heat capacity difference between liquid and solid phase) of biomolecules are indispensable for natural and engineering sciences. The direct determination of these melting properties by using conventional calorimeters for biological compou...

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Autores principales: Do, Hoang Tam, Chua, Yeong Zen, Habicht, Jonas, Klinksiek, Marcel, Hallermann, Moritz, Zaitsau, Dzmitry, Schick, Christoph, Held, Christoph
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9073158/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35529741
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9ra05730g
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author Do, Hoang Tam
Chua, Yeong Zen
Habicht, Jonas
Klinksiek, Marcel
Hallermann, Moritz
Zaitsau, Dzmitry
Schick, Christoph
Held, Christoph
author_facet Do, Hoang Tam
Chua, Yeong Zen
Habicht, Jonas
Klinksiek, Marcel
Hallermann, Moritz
Zaitsau, Dzmitry
Schick, Christoph
Held, Christoph
author_sort Do, Hoang Tam
collection PubMed
description Melting properties (melting temperature, melting enthalpy and heat capacity difference between liquid and solid phase) of biomolecules are indispensable for natural and engineering sciences. The direct determination of these melting properties by using conventional calorimeters for biological compounds is often not possible due to decomposition during slow heating. In the current study this drawback is overcome by using fast scanning calorimetry (FSC) to directly measure the melting properties of five dipeptides (glycyl-glycine, glycyl-l-alanine, l-alanyl-glycine, l-alanyl-l-alanine and cyclo(l-alanyl-glycine)). The experimental melting properties were used as inputs into a thermodynamic solid–liquid equilibrium relation to predict solubility of the dipeptides in water. The required activity coefficients were predicted with PC-SAFT using solubility-independent model parameters. PC-SAFT predicted different solubility profiles (solubility vs. temperature) of isomers. The predictions were validated by new experimental solubility data, and the crystal structure of the dipeptides in saturated solution was verified by X-ray diffraction. The different water solubility profiles of isomers (glycyl-l-alanine and l-alanyl-glycine) were found to be caused by the big difference in the melting enthalpy of the two dipeptides. To conclude, combining the PC-SAFT and FSC methods allows for accurate prediction of dipeptide solubility in water in a wide temperature range without the need to fit any model parameters to experimental solubility data.
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spelling pubmed-90731582022-05-06 Melting properties of peptides and their solubility in water. Part 1: dipeptides based on glycine or alanine Do, Hoang Tam Chua, Yeong Zen Habicht, Jonas Klinksiek, Marcel Hallermann, Moritz Zaitsau, Dzmitry Schick, Christoph Held, Christoph RSC Adv Chemistry Melting properties (melting temperature, melting enthalpy and heat capacity difference between liquid and solid phase) of biomolecules are indispensable for natural and engineering sciences. The direct determination of these melting properties by using conventional calorimeters for biological compounds is often not possible due to decomposition during slow heating. In the current study this drawback is overcome by using fast scanning calorimetry (FSC) to directly measure the melting properties of five dipeptides (glycyl-glycine, glycyl-l-alanine, l-alanyl-glycine, l-alanyl-l-alanine and cyclo(l-alanyl-glycine)). The experimental melting properties were used as inputs into a thermodynamic solid–liquid equilibrium relation to predict solubility of the dipeptides in water. The required activity coefficients were predicted with PC-SAFT using solubility-independent model parameters. PC-SAFT predicted different solubility profiles (solubility vs. temperature) of isomers. The predictions were validated by new experimental solubility data, and the crystal structure of the dipeptides in saturated solution was verified by X-ray diffraction. The different water solubility profiles of isomers (glycyl-l-alanine and l-alanyl-glycine) were found to be caused by the big difference in the melting enthalpy of the two dipeptides. To conclude, combining the PC-SAFT and FSC methods allows for accurate prediction of dipeptide solubility in water in a wide temperature range without the need to fit any model parameters to experimental solubility data. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2019-10-14 /pmc/articles/PMC9073158/ /pubmed/35529741 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9ra05730g Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Do, Hoang Tam
Chua, Yeong Zen
Habicht, Jonas
Klinksiek, Marcel
Hallermann, Moritz
Zaitsau, Dzmitry
Schick, Christoph
Held, Christoph
Melting properties of peptides and their solubility in water. Part 1: dipeptides based on glycine or alanine
title Melting properties of peptides and their solubility in water. Part 1: dipeptides based on glycine or alanine
title_full Melting properties of peptides and their solubility in water. Part 1: dipeptides based on glycine or alanine
title_fullStr Melting properties of peptides and their solubility in water. Part 1: dipeptides based on glycine or alanine
title_full_unstemmed Melting properties of peptides and their solubility in water. Part 1: dipeptides based on glycine or alanine
title_short Melting properties of peptides and their solubility in water. Part 1: dipeptides based on glycine or alanine
title_sort melting properties of peptides and their solubility in water. part 1: dipeptides based on glycine or alanine
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9073158/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35529741
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9ra05730g
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