Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Protein-based materials repeating sequence

Finally, for medical applications, the extraordinary biocompatibility of these elastic protein-based materials, we believe, arises from the specific means whereby these elastic protein-based polymers exhibit their motion. Being composed of repeating peptide sequences that order into regular, nonrandom, dynamic structures, these elastic protein-based polymers exhibit mechanical resonances that present barriers to the approach of antibodies as required to be identified as foreign. In addition, we also believe that these mechanical resonances result in extraordinary absorption properties in the acoustic frequency range. [Pg.456]

Elastin-mimetic protein polymers have been fabricated into elastic networks primarily via y-radiation-induced, radical crosslinking of the material in the coacervate state [10]. Although effective, this method cannot produce polymers gels of defined molecular architecture, i.e., specific crosslink position and density, due to the lack of chemoselectivity in radical reactions. In addition, the ionizing radiation employed in this technique can cause material damage, and the reproducibility of specimen preparations may vary between different batches of material. In contrast, the e-amino groups of the lysine residues in polymers based on Lys-25 can be chemically crosslinked under controllable conditions into synthetic protein networks (vide infra). Elastic networks based on Lys-25 should contain crosslinks at well-defined position and density, determined by the sequence of the repeat, in the limit of complete substitution of the amino groups. [Pg.125]

Protein polymers based on Lys-25 were prepared by recombinant DNA (rDNA) technology and bacterial protein expression. The main advantage of this approach is the ability to directly produce high molecular weight polypeptides of exact amino acid sequence with high fidelity as required for this investigation. In contrast to conventional polymer synthesis, protein biosynthesis proceeds with near-absolute control of macromolecular architecture, i.e., size, composition, sequence, topology, and stereochemistry. Biosynthetic polyfa-amino acids) can be considered as model uniform polymers and may possess unique structures and, hence, materials properties, as a consequence of their sequence specificity [11]. Protein biosynthesis affords an opportunity to completely specify the primary structure of the polypeptide repeat and analyze the effect of sequence and structural uniformity on the properties of the protein network. [Pg.125]


See other pages where Protein-based materials repeating sequence is mentioned: [Pg.395]    [Pg.82]    [Pg.83]    [Pg.85]    [Pg.86]    [Pg.89]    [Pg.91]    [Pg.96]    [Pg.100]    [Pg.119]    [Pg.3543]    [Pg.325]    [Pg.85]    [Pg.86]    [Pg.94]    [Pg.97]    [Pg.3524]    [Pg.3531]    [Pg.3541]    [Pg.180]    [Pg.189]    [Pg.179]    [Pg.520]    [Pg.25]    [Pg.1104]    [Pg.463]    [Pg.386]    [Pg.314]    [Pg.80]    [Pg.80]    [Pg.87]    [Pg.3528]    [Pg.3532]    [Pg.3536]    [Pg.3537]    [Pg.3540]    [Pg.35]    [Pg.11]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.473 , Pg.477 ]




SEARCH



Base Sequence

Materials protein

Protein sequence

Protein sequencing

Protein-based

Protein-based materials

Repeat sequences

Repeated sequences

Sequencing, proteins sequencers

© 2024 chempedia.info