4.7 Article

The Proof Is in the Pidan: Generalizing Proteins as Patchy Particles

Journal

ACS CENTRAL SCIENCE
Volume 4, Issue 7, Pages 840-853

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acscentsci.8b00187

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Funding

  1. Packard Foundation Fellowship for Science and Engineering
  2. Sloan Foundation [NSF-1351935]
  3. Kaufman Foundation
  4. University of Pennsylvania

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The Chinese century egg, or pidan, is a traditional preparation of duck eggs that can be stored for months at room temperature without degradation. Raw eggs are soaked in a strong alkaline and salt solution, and the albumin gradually forms a stable, transparent gel. Here, we show that pidan gels belong to the class of materials formed from patchy particles. We found that the beta-sheet structure of ovalbumin, the major protein constituent of egg white, is preserved during gelation, while alpha-helical regions undergo a degree of unfolding into unstructured random coils that may form attractive patches. Upon dilution in additional strong base, the phase behavior of pidan gels is consistent with patchy-particle thermodynamics. This protein gel is also physically and structurally similar to the protein gels that form the squid lens. Both systems exhibit patchy thermodynamics, and the constituent proteins share physical features including a structured, charged core, and polar, unstructured arms that form attractive patches. Our work provides a path toward rational design of proteins for precisely structured, volume-spanning materials.

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