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Mixed protein–polysaccharide interfacial layers : effect of polysaccharide charge distribution

Ettelaie, R; Akinshina, A; Maurer, S

Authors

R Ettelaie

S Maurer



Abstract

The influence of the polysaccharide charge distribution on the structure, thickness, and charge reversal of the interfacial layers, formed by adsorbed positively charged protein and oppositely charged polysaccharide, has been investigated using a lattice-based self-consistent field (SCF) approach. We compare the adsorption behaviour of a uniformly charged polysaccharide model with that consisting of a short and a long block carrying different charge densities. For homogeneously charged polysaccharide we observe a resulting interfacial layer that is closer to a mixed protein + polysaccharide film, rather than a multi-layer. We also find that the maximum adsorption of polysaccharide occurs at an optimal value of its charge, above and below which the adsorbed amount decreases. In contrast, for heterogeneously charged chains, as their charge is increasingly located on the shorter block, a much thicker interfacial layer results. In such cases the weakly charged longer blocks extend well away from the surface into the solution. The interfacial film begins to resemble a multi-layer with a primary protein and a distinct secondary polysaccharide layer. When the weakly charged long blocks still have a sufficient amount of negative charge, we also observe a reversal of the sign of surface potential from a positive to a negative value. Our SCF calculated values for the reversed surface potential are of the order of −25 mV, in good agreement with several experimental results involving ζ-potential measurements on particles covered with such protein + polysaccharide films.

Citation

Ettelaie, R., Akinshina, A., & Maurer, S. (2012). Mixed protein–polysaccharide interfacial layers : effect of polysaccharide charge distribution. Soft Matter, 8(29), 7582. https://doi.org/10.1039/C2SM25803J

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date May 14, 2012
Publication Date Jun 19, 2012
Deposit Date Mar 3, 2017
Journal Soft Matter
Print ISSN 1744-683X
Publisher Royal Society of Chemistry
Volume 8
Issue 29
Pages 7582
DOI https://doi.org/10.1039/C2SM25803J
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/C2SM25803J
Related Public URLs http://pubs.rsc.org/en/Journals/JournalIssues/SM#!recentarticles&adv