Ion-Induced Volume Transition in Gels and Its Role in Biology

Incremental changes in ionic composition, solvent quality, and temperature can lead to reversible and abrupt structural changes in many synthetic and biopolymer systems. In the biological milieu, this nonlinear response is believed to play an important functional role in various biological systems,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Matan Mussel, Peter J. Basser, Ferenc Horkay
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-02-01
Series:Gels
Subjects:
DNA
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2310-2861/7/1/20
Description
Summary:Incremental changes in ionic composition, solvent quality, and temperature can lead to reversible and abrupt structural changes in many synthetic and biopolymer systems. In the biological milieu, this nonlinear response is believed to play an important functional role in various biological systems, including DNA condensation, cell secretion, water flow in xylem of plants, cell resting potential, and formation of membraneless organelles. While these systems are markedly different from one another, a physicochemical framework that treats them as polyelectrolytes, provides a means to interpret experimental results and make in silico predictions. This article summarizes experimental results made on ion-induced volume phase transition in a polyelectrolyte model gel (sodium polyacrylate) and observations on the above-mentioned biological systems indicating the existence of a steep response.
ISSN:2310-2861