On the liquid demixing of water + elastin-like polypeptide mixtures: bimodal re-entrant phase behaviour

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Abstract

Water + elastin-like polypeptides (ELPs) exhibit a transition temperature below which the chains transform from collapsed to expanded states, reminiscent of the cold denaturation of proteins. This conformational change coincides with liquid-liquid phase separation. A statistical-thermodynamics theory is used to model the fluid-phase behavior of ELPs in aqueous solution and to extrapolate the behavior at ambient conditions over a range of pressures. At low pressures, closed-loop liquid-liquid equilibrium phase behavior is found, which is consistent with that of other hydrogen-bonding solvent + polymer mixtures. At pressures evocative of deep-sea conditions, liquid-liquid immiscibility bounded by two lower critical solution temperatures (LCSTs) is predicted. As pressure is increased further, the system exhibits two separate regions of closed-loop of liquid-liquid equilibrium (LLE). The observation of bimodal LCSTs and two re-entrant LLE regions herald a new type of binary global phase diagram: Type XII. At high-ELP concentrations the predicted phase diagram resembles a protein pressure denaturation diagram; possible “molten-globule”-like states are observed at low concentration.

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Lindeboom, T., Zhao, B., Jackson, G., Hall, C. K., & Galindo, A. (2021). On the liquid demixing of water + elastin-like polypeptide mixtures: bimodal re-entrant phase behaviour. Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics, 23(10), 5936–5944. https://doi.org/10.1039/d0cp05013j

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