Carbon-13 NMR relaxation studies demonstrate an inverse temperature transition in the elastin polypentapeptide
- 1 September 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Biochemistry
- Vol. 24 (19) , 5182-5189
- https://doi.org/10.1021/bi00340a034
Abstract
Carbon-13 NMR longitudinal relaxation time and line-width studies are reported on the coacervate concentration (about 60% water by weight) of singly carbonyl carbon enriched polypentapeptides of elastin: specifically, (L-Val1-L-[1-13C]Pro2-Gly3-L-Val4-Gly5)n and (L-Val1-L-Pro2-Gly3-L-Val4-[1-13C]Gly5)n. On raising the temperature from 10 to 25.degree. C and from 40 to 70.degree. C, carbonyl mobility increases, but over the temperature interval from 25 to 40.degree. C, the mobility decreases. The results characterize an inverse temperature transition in the most fundamental sense of temperature being a measure of molecular motion. This transition in the state of the polypentapeptide indicates an increase in order of polypeptide on raising the temperature from 25.degree. C to physiological temperature. This fundamental NMR characterization corresponds with the results of numerous other physical methods, e.g., circular dichroism, dielectric relaxation, and electron microscopy, that correspondingly indicate an increase in order of the polypentapeptide both intramolecularly and intermolecularly for the same temperature increase from 25 to 40.degree. C. Significantly with respect to elastomeric function, thermoelasticity studies on .gamma.-irradiation cross-linked polypentapeptide coacervate show a dramatic increase in elastomeric force over the same interval that is here characterized by NMR as an inverse temperature transition. The temperature dependence of mobility above 40.degree. C indicates an activation energy of the order of 1.2 kcal/mol, which is the magnitude of barrier expected for elasticity.This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit: