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Hard sphere-like glass transition in eye lens α-crystallin solutions.

Foffi, Giuseppe ; Savin, Gabriela ; Bucciarelli, Saskia LU ; Dorsaz, Nicolas ; Thurston, George M ; Stradner, Anna LU and Schurtenberger, Peter LU orcid (2014) In Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 111(47). p.16748-16753
Abstract
We study the equilibrium liquid structure and dynamics of dilute and concentrated bovine eye lens α-crystallin solutions, using small-angle X-ray scattering, static and dynamic light scattering, viscometry, molecular dynamics simulations, and mode-coupling theory. We find that a polydisperse Percus-Yevick hard-sphere liquid-structure model accurately reproduces both static light scattering data and small-angle X-ray scattering liquid structure data from α-crystallin solutions over an extended range of protein concentrations up to 290 mg/mL or 49% vol fraction and up to ca. 330 mg/mL for static light scattering. The measured dynamic light scattering and viscosity properties are also consistent with those of hard-sphere colloids and show... (More)
We study the equilibrium liquid structure and dynamics of dilute and concentrated bovine eye lens α-crystallin solutions, using small-angle X-ray scattering, static and dynamic light scattering, viscometry, molecular dynamics simulations, and mode-coupling theory. We find that a polydisperse Percus-Yevick hard-sphere liquid-structure model accurately reproduces both static light scattering data and small-angle X-ray scattering liquid structure data from α-crystallin solutions over an extended range of protein concentrations up to 290 mg/mL or 49% vol fraction and up to ca. 330 mg/mL for static light scattering. The measured dynamic light scattering and viscosity properties are also consistent with those of hard-sphere colloids and show power laws characteristic of an approach toward a glass transition at α-crystallin volume fractions near 58%. Dynamic light scattering at a volume fraction beyond the glass transition indicates formation of an arrested state. We further perform event-driven molecular dynamics simulations of polydisperse hard-sphere systems and use mode-coupling theory to compare the measured dynamic power laws with those of hard-sphere models. The static and dynamic data, simulations, and analysis show that aqueous eye lens α-crystallin solutions exhibit a glass transition at high concentrations that is similar to those found in hard-sphere colloidal systems. The α-crystallin glass transition could have implications for the molecular basis of presbyopia and the kinetics of molecular change during cataractogenesis. (Less)
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author
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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
volume
111
issue
47
pages
16748 - 16753
publisher
National Academy of Sciences
external identifiers
  • pmid:25385638
  • wos:000345662700035
  • scopus:84912562512
  • pmid:25385638
ISSN
1091-6490
DOI
10.1073/pnas.1406990111
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
bd290540-ac13-4779-8658-129d811d50aa (old id 4817023)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 09:50:07
date last changed
2022-04-11 23:17:19
@article{bd290540-ac13-4779-8658-129d811d50aa,
  abstract     = {{We study the equilibrium liquid structure and dynamics of dilute and concentrated bovine eye lens α-crystallin solutions, using small-angle X-ray scattering, static and dynamic light scattering, viscometry, molecular dynamics simulations, and mode-coupling theory. We find that a polydisperse Percus-Yevick hard-sphere liquid-structure model accurately reproduces both static light scattering data and small-angle X-ray scattering liquid structure data from α-crystallin solutions over an extended range of protein concentrations up to 290 mg/mL or 49% vol fraction and up to ca. 330 mg/mL for static light scattering. The measured dynamic light scattering and viscosity properties are also consistent with those of hard-sphere colloids and show power laws characteristic of an approach toward a glass transition at α-crystallin volume fractions near 58%. Dynamic light scattering at a volume fraction beyond the glass transition indicates formation of an arrested state. We further perform event-driven molecular dynamics simulations of polydisperse hard-sphere systems and use mode-coupling theory to compare the measured dynamic power laws with those of hard-sphere models. The static and dynamic data, simulations, and analysis show that aqueous eye lens α-crystallin solutions exhibit a glass transition at high concentrations that is similar to those found in hard-sphere colloidal systems. The α-crystallin glass transition could have implications for the molecular basis of presbyopia and the kinetics of molecular change during cataractogenesis.}},
  author       = {{Foffi, Giuseppe and Savin, Gabriela and Bucciarelli, Saskia and Dorsaz, Nicolas and Thurston, George M and Stradner, Anna and Schurtenberger, Peter}},
  issn         = {{1091-6490}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{47}},
  pages        = {{16748--16753}},
  publisher    = {{National Academy of Sciences}},
  series       = {{Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences}},
  title        = {{Hard sphere-like glass transition in eye lens α-crystallin solutions.}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1406990111}},
  doi          = {{10.1073/pnas.1406990111}},
  volume       = {{111}},
  year         = {{2014}},
}