Optometry Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about Optometry, including details on myopia, optometric practice, therapy. | ||||||||
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Anomalous thermal denaturing of proteins adsorbed to nanoparticles.Teichroeb JH, Forrest JA, Ngai V, Jones LW Department of Physics, Department of Optometry, and Guelph-Waterloo Physics Institute, University of Waterloo, 200 University Ave. W., N2L 3G1, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, jforrest@uwaterloo.ca. We have used localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) to monitor the structural changes that accompany thermal denaturing of bovine serum albumin (BSA) adsorbed onto gold nanospheres of size 5nm-60nm. The effect of the protein on the LSPR was monitored by visible extinction spectroscopy. The position of the resonance is affected by the conformation of the adsorbed protein layer, and as such can be used as a very sensitive probe of thermal denaturing that is specific to the adsorbed protein. The results are compared to detailed calculations and show that full calculations can lead to significant increases in knowledge where gold nanospheres are used as biosensors. Thermal denaturing on spheres with diameter > 20 nm show strong similarity to bulk calorimetric studies of BSA in solution. BSA adsorbed on nanospheres with d [Symbol: see text] 15nm shows a qualitative difference in behavior, suggesting a sensitivity of denaturing characteristics on local surface curvature. This may have important implications for other protein-nanoparticle interactions. Published 10 November 2006 in Eur Phys J E Soft Matter, 21(1): 19-24.
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