Role of Intermolecular Forces in Defining Material Properties of Protein Nanofibrils
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Abstract
Protein molecules have the ability to form a rich variety of natural and artificial structures and materials. We show that amyloid fibrils, ordered supramolecular nanostructures that are self-assembled from a wide range of polypeptide molecules, have rigidities varying over four orders of magnitude, and constitute a class of high-performance biomaterials. We elucidate the molecular origin of fibril material properties and show that the major contribution to their rigidity stems from a generic interbackbone hydrogen-bonding network that is modulated by variable side-chain interactions.
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7Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Rigidity (electromagnetism)
- Fibril
- Intermolecular force
- Hydrogen bond
- Supramolecular chemistry
- Molecule
- Amyloid fibril
- Structural rigidity
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