Absorption spectra indicate conformational alteration of myoglobin adsorbed on polydimethylsiloxane.
To assess the effects of adsorption on protein structure, ultraviolet optical absorption spectra of myoglobin ( Mb) bound to polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) were measured. A flow cell, which enabled adsorption under controlled hydrodynamic conditions, was used in conjunction with a conventional spectrophotometer to obtain the spectra. Adsorption to PDMS reduced significantly the absorbance in the Soret region of the Mb spectrum, whereas the spectrum in the region near 280 nm was essentially unaffected. This result showed that disruption of the native structure of Mb occurs following interaction with PDMS. Furthermore, the change in the absorption spectrum may indicate loss of heme from the heme pocket of the adsorbed protein. Mb structure was altered from its solution configuration within fifteen min of contact with the surface. Exchange of adsorbed Mb with Mb in solution had little or no effect on the absorption spectrum of the surface-confined protein, indicating that exchange occurs only between conformationally altered species or between native species.[1]References
- Absorption spectra indicate conformational alteration of myoglobin adsorbed on polydimethylsiloxane. Anderson, A.B., Robertson, C.R. Biophys. J. (1995) [Pubmed]
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