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In this work using dissipative particle dynamics simulations with explicit treatment of polar species we demonstrate that the molecular nature of dielectric media has a significant impact on swelling and collapse of a polyelectrolyte chain in a dilute solution. We show that the small-scale effects related to the presence of polar species lead to the intensification of the electrostatic interactions when the charges are close to each other and/or their density is high enough. As a result, the electrostatic strength , usually regarded as the main parameter governing the polyelectrolyte chain collapse, does not have a universal meaning: the value of at which the coil-to-globule transition occurs is found to be dependent on the specific fixed value of the solvent bulk permittivity while varying the monomer unit charge and . This effect is observed even when the backbone and the counterions have the same polarity as the solvent beads, no dielectric mismatch is present. The reason for such behavior is rationalized in terms of the "effective" dielectric permittivity which depends on the volume fraction of charged units inside the polymer chain volume; using instead of collapses all data onto one master curve describing the chain shrinking with . Furthermore, it is shown that a polar chain adopts less swollen conformations in the polyelectrolyte regime and collapses more easily compared to a non-polar chain.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1cp03167h | DOI Listing |
J Phys Chem B
September 2025
Institute of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Freie Universität Berlin, 14195 Berlin, Germany.
HMGB1, a nuclear DNA-binding protein, can be secreted by activated immune cells or passively released from damaged cells. In such cases, HMGB1 functions as an alarmin that activates the immune system. Excessive inflammation may lead to pathogenesis, whereas this response can be dampened by polyanion binding, which impedes further receptor recognition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoft Matter
September 2025
Department of Chemical Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305, USA.
Electrostatic correlation free energy (ECF) is the basis for modeling the thermodynamic behavior of polyelectrolyte solutions. In the past, it has mainly been estimated using the Edwards approximation, valid for infinite chains. Here, we show that the leading contribution due to finite molecular size is of order , regardless of the fractal dimension , where is proportional to molecular weight.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCommun Chem
August 2025
Polymer Science, Zernike Institute for Advanced Materials, University of Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands.
Spider silks are exceptional biomaterials: biocompatible, biodegradable, and with remarkable mechanical properties. Unfortunately, attempts to replicate them tend to fail due to the difficulty of synthesizing the proteins that constitute them, and to an incomplete understanding of their processing conditions. Here, we report a synthetic system inspired by spider silk, consisting of a synthetic polyelectrolyte with grafted oligoalanine chains.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPolymers (Basel)
August 2025
Department of Engineering and Technology of Chemical Processes, Faculty of Chemistry, Wroclaw University of Science and Technology, Gdanska 7/9, 50-344 Wroclaw, Poland.
Electrospun alginate nanofibers are emerging as versatile materials for biomedical, environmental, and packaging applications due to their biocompatibility, biodegradability, and functional tunability. However, the direct electrospinning of alginate remains a significant challenge, mainly due to its polyelectrolytic nature, rigid chain structure, and limited chain entanglement. This review provides a comprehensive analysis of recent strategies developed to overcome these limitations, including polymer blending, chemical modification, the addition of surfactants, multi-fluid techniques, and process optimization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPolymers (Basel)
August 2025
Institute of Biosciences, Humanities and Exact Sciences, São Paulo State University (UNESP), São José do Rio Preto 15054-000, Brazil.
A polyelectrolyte (PE) chain in the vicinity of an oppositely charged surface can exhibit a discontinuous transition from the adsorbed to the desorbed state once the electrostatic attractive interactions are not strong enough to overcome the entropic losses caused by the PE-surface adsorption. In the context of PE-protein interactions, the heterogeneity of the charge distribution and the effects of a low dielectric permittivity underneath the surface are crucial. Studies of the combined effects of these two properties are very sparse, especially in the spherical geometry; we thus fill this gap here.
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