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We are studying the destructuration of canola protein gels, as a solid food model, during in situ gastrointestinal digestion using synchrotron small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS). Digestion of two gels, prepared by heating pH 8 and pH 11 solutions, was carried out by diffusion of enzymatic juices into the gel from the top of the capillary and monitored for several tens of hours. Very similar time evolutions of SAXS curves occur at different positions of the gel in the capillary, with a delay determined by the distance from the surface initially in contact with the digestive juice. The main phenomena observed are (i) at the scale of the protein conformation (1-5 nm). The scattering curve is a power law, the exponent of which measures the compactness (related to the degree of unfolding). It can be plotted as a function of the characteristic size of proteins/and interprotein distances and as a function of the scattering intensity. Such diagrams clearly show successive digestion processes. For the pH 11 gel, in which proteins are initially hardly unfolded, the digestive processes are unfolding (1st step), recompaction-aggregation phenomena (2nd step) due to gastrointestinal pH conditions and enzymatic cleavage, further unfolding-disaggregation (3rd step), and final protein cleavage (4th step) down to small peptides. For the pH 8 gel, proteins are initially unfolded, and only the last three steps are observed, showing the influence of easier access for the enzymes. (ii) At the scale of large aggregates (10-50 nm), we observe for both gels a decrease in the size and/or number of these aggregates during digestion and alteration of their interfaces. (iii) At the scale of the secondary protein structure, wide-angle X-ray scattering is very useful for detecting the degradation of the secondary protein structure at different steps of digestion.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.langmuir.4c01341 | DOI Listing |
Biomacromolecules
September 2025
Division of Pharmacy and Optometry, Manchester Institute of Biotechnology, School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health, The University of Manchester, Oxford Road, M13 9PL Manchester, U.K.
This study investigates how hydrophobic and hydrophilic modifications at the C-terminus of the base peptide, KFEFEFKFK (KbpK), affect the hydrogel macroscopic properties. By the incorporation of phenylalanine (F, hydrophobic) and lysine (K, hydrophilic) residues, four variants, KbpK-K, KbpK-F, KbpK-KF, and KbpK-FK, were designed and evaluated. pH-concentration phase diagrams and Fourier transform infrared confirmed clear links showing how peptide hydrophobicity and charge influence β-sheet formation and macroscopic phase behavior.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Chem Soc
September 2025
Department of Chemistry, National Taiwan University, Taipei 106319, Taiwan.
The exclusive formation of artificial multicomponent assemblies remains a significant challenge, in contrast to the well-established organization observed in natural systems, due to intrinsic entropic constraints. To overcome this limitation, recent efforts have been focused on developing precision self-assembly strategies for the rational construction of such architectures. Here, we construct an ideal complementary pair of 2,2':6',2″-terpyridine (tpy)-based ligands by fine-tuning the substituent bulkiness, which enables the quantitative formation of robust nested cages through efficient dynamic heteroleptic complexation with multivalent coordination.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDalton Trans
September 2025
Faculty of Chemistry, Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń, Gagarina 7, 87-100 Toruń, Poland.
This study comprehensively analyses two new ruthenium(III) complexes, [RuCl(Nic)][(CH)NH]DMF, 1, and [RuCl(3-HPA)][3-HHPA](EtOH), 2, (where Nic = nicotinic acid (vitamin B3), 3-HPA = anion of a 3-hydroxypicolinic acid), as potential antimicrobial agents, highlighting their physicochemical properties, nanoparticle formation, and cytotoxic activity. The complexes were fully characterised by a single crystal X-ray diffraction technique, Fourier-transform infrared, energy-dispersive X-ray, and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopies. The synthesis of micro- and nanoparticles (NPs) of these complexes was performed using the liquid anti-solvent crystallisation method.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAngew Chem Int Ed Engl
September 2025
College of Chemistry, Zhengzhou University, 100 Kexue Street, Zhengzhou, 450001, China.
Achieving quantitative control over interlayer spacing in multilayer two-dimensional (2D) supramolecular organic frameworks (SOFs) remains a fundamental challenge. Here, we report a molecular pillar engineering strategy enabling programmable vertical expansion of bilayer architectures. By designing elongated bipyridine pillars L2/L3 (3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLangmuir
September 2025
Centre québécois sur les matériaux fonctionnels/Quebec Centre for Advanced Materials (CQMF/QCAM), Chemistry Department, 801 Sherbrooke St. W., Montreal, Québec H3A 0B8, Canada.
Poly(γ-stearyl-l-glutamate) (PSLG) is a semiflexible synthetic polypeptide that forms both thermotropic and lyotropic liquid crystal (LC) phases. We previously showed that spherical nanoparticles (NPs) decorated with another semiflexible helical polymer, poly(hexyl isocyanate), form lyotropic nematic rather than cubic LC phases. In this work, PSLG ligands for functionalizing 4 nm ZrO NPs were prepared via N-carboxyanhydride ring-opening polymerization.
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