Seeding Induced Assembly of Ionic-Complementary Peptide EAK16-II

Seeding is an important variable in controlling or directing the assembly of peptides. The presence of impurities, responsible for creating a 'dip' in the surface tension versus peptide concentration profile, is used to determine the critical aggregation concentration (CAC). This pheno...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Dhadwar, Sukhdeep
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: University of Waterloo 2006
Subjects:
EAK
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10012/935
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spelling ndltd-WATERLOO-oai-uwspace.uwaterloo.ca-10012-9352013-01-08T18:49:01ZDhadwar, Sukhdeep2006-08-22T13:59:13Z2006-08-22T13:59:13Z20042004http://hdl.handle.net/10012/935Seeding is an important variable in controlling or directing the assembly of peptides. The presence of impurities, responsible for creating a 'dip' in the surface tension versus peptide concentration profile, is used to determine the critical aggregation concentration (CAC). This phenomenon is investigated to differentiate crude and high purity EAK16-II peptide. The purified peptide did not show this 'dip' and clearly indicated a critical aggregation concentration for EAK16-II at 0. 09 mg/mL by surface tension measurements. Conversely, a surface tension 'dip' is clearly observed for the crude EAK16-II peptide. Atomic Force Microscopy imaged the nanostructures of aggregates. The presence of impurities induces fibre formation below the CAC. This study provides information about the seeding effect of peptide assembly at low concentrations as well as the modification of surface activity of assembled peptide particles. Alanine, glutamic acid and lysine were used as model seeding agents to simulate the seeding phenomenon and better understand the nucleation mechanism of peptide assembly. All amino acid monomers were able to induce fibre formations at low peptide concentrations. However, only glutamic acid and lysine were able to produce the surface tension dip profile observed in the crude peptide. This information may be of importance in understanding fibrillogenesis occurring in conformational diseases and other biomedical applications including drug delivery.application/pdf3165822 bytesapplication/pdfenUniversity of WaterlooCopyright: 2004, Dhadwar, Sukhdeep. All rights reserved.Chemical EngineeringpeptideEAKSeedingself-assemblySeeding Induced Assembly of Ionic-Complementary Peptide EAK16-IIThesis or DissertationChemical EngineeringMaster of Applied Science
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Chemical Engineering
peptide
EAK
Seeding
self-assembly
spellingShingle Chemical Engineering
peptide
EAK
Seeding
self-assembly
Dhadwar, Sukhdeep
Seeding Induced Assembly of Ionic-Complementary Peptide EAK16-II
description Seeding is an important variable in controlling or directing the assembly of peptides. The presence of impurities, responsible for creating a 'dip' in the surface tension versus peptide concentration profile, is used to determine the critical aggregation concentration (CAC). This phenomenon is investigated to differentiate crude and high purity EAK16-II peptide. The purified peptide did not show this 'dip' and clearly indicated a critical aggregation concentration for EAK16-II at 0. 09 mg/mL by surface tension measurements. Conversely, a surface tension 'dip' is clearly observed for the crude EAK16-II peptide. Atomic Force Microscopy imaged the nanostructures of aggregates. The presence of impurities induces fibre formation below the CAC. This study provides information about the seeding effect of peptide assembly at low concentrations as well as the modification of surface activity of assembled peptide particles. Alanine, glutamic acid and lysine were used as model seeding agents to simulate the seeding phenomenon and better understand the nucleation mechanism of peptide assembly. All amino acid monomers were able to induce fibre formations at low peptide concentrations. However, only glutamic acid and lysine were able to produce the surface tension dip profile observed in the crude peptide. This information may be of importance in understanding fibrillogenesis occurring in conformational diseases and other biomedical applications including drug delivery.
author Dhadwar, Sukhdeep
author_facet Dhadwar, Sukhdeep
author_sort Dhadwar, Sukhdeep
title Seeding Induced Assembly of Ionic-Complementary Peptide EAK16-II
title_short Seeding Induced Assembly of Ionic-Complementary Peptide EAK16-II
title_full Seeding Induced Assembly of Ionic-Complementary Peptide EAK16-II
title_fullStr Seeding Induced Assembly of Ionic-Complementary Peptide EAK16-II
title_full_unstemmed Seeding Induced Assembly of Ionic-Complementary Peptide EAK16-II
title_sort seeding induced assembly of ionic-complementary peptide eak16-ii
publisher University of Waterloo
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/10012/935
work_keys_str_mv AT dhadwarsukhdeep seedinginducedassemblyofioniccomplementarypeptideeak16ii
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