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Effect of Acidity on Chitin-Protein Interface: A Molecular Dynamics Study

Zechuan Yu, Zhiping Xu, Denvid Lau*

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 22 - Publication in policy or professional journal

    Abstract

    Chitin-protein interfaces exist in many biological materials such as cuticles of insects and crustaceans, which are main commercial sources of chitin fiber. In industrial processing, the extraction of chitin from these sources is achieved via acidic and alkaline treatments. As the acidity changes, the ionizable groups of protein undergo protonation/deprotonation, which may vary the mechanical properties of chitin-protein interface. In order to study the effect of acidity on this interface, we perform a series of molecular dynamics simulations and measure the adhesion strength between chitin and a short peptide sequence under both acidic and alkaline conditions, where the two termini are modified to accommodate the environment. The results indicate that the protonation state of terminus has a significant influence on the adhesion with chitin. Based on our simple model and its results, we analyze the roles of termini in the formation of hydrogen bonds and elucidate some atomistic mechanisms behind the acidity effect on chitin-protein interface, which may spotlight the engineering on biological materials with similar interfaces. © 2014 Springer Science+Business Media New York.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)207-215
    JournalBioNanoScience
    Volume4
    Issue number3
    Online published9 May 2014
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Sept 2014

    Research Keywords

    • Acidity effect
    • Adhesion strength
    • Chitin
    • Molecular dynamics
    • Protein

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