凝聚                        
                
                                
                        
                            海水                        
                
                                
                        
                            盐(化学)                        
                
                                
                        
                            水下                        
                
                                
                        
                            胶粘剂                        
                
                                
                        
                            材料科学                        
                
                                
                        
                            电子                        
                
                                
                        
                            卤化物                        
                
                                
                        
                            化学                        
                
                                
                        
                            化学工程                        
                
                                
                        
                            无机化学                        
                
                                
                        
                            纳米技术                        
                
                                
                        
                            有机化学                        
                
                                
                        
                            色谱法                        
                
                                
                        
                            物理                        
                
                                
                        
                            地质学                        
                
                                
                        
                            海洋学                        
                
                                
                        
                            工程类                        
                
                                
                        
                            量子力学                        
                
                                
                        
                            图层(电子)                        
                
                        
                    
            作者
            
                Sangsik Kim,Hee Young Yoo,Jun Huang,Yongjin Lee,Sohee Park,Yeonju Park,Sila Jin,Young Mee Jung,Hongbo Zeng,Dong Soo Hwang,YongSeok Jho            
         
                    
            出处
            
                                    期刊:ACS Nano
                                                         [American Chemical Society]
                                                        日期:2017-06-14
                                                        卷期号:11 (7): 6764-6772
                                                        被引量:202
                                 
         
        
    
            
            标识
            
                                    DOI:10.1021/acsnano.7b01370
                                    
                                
                                 
         
        
                
            摘要
            
            Adhesive systems in many marine organisms are postulated to form complex coacervates (liquid-liquid phase separation) through a process involving oppositely charged polyelectrolytes. Despite this ubiquitous speculation, most well-characterized mussel adhesive proteins are cationic and polyphenolic, and the pursuit of the negatively charged proteins required for bulk complex coacervation formation internally remains elusive. In this study, we provide a clue for unraveling this paradox by showing the bulky fluid/fluid separation of a single cationic recombinant mussel foot protein, rmfp-1, with no additional anionic proteins or artificial molecules, that is triggered by a strong cation-π interaction in natural seawater conditions. With the similar condition of salt concentration at seawater level (>0.7 M), the electrostatic repulsion between positively charged residues of mfp-1 is screened significantly, whereas the strong cation-π interaction remains unaffected, which leads to the macroscopic phase separation (i.e., bulky coacervate formation). The single polyelectrolyte coacervate shows interesting mechanical properties including low friction, which facilitates the secretion process of the mussel. Our findings reveal that the cation-π interaction modulated by salt is a key mechanism in the mussel adhesion process, providing new insights into the basic understanding of wet adhesion, self-assembly processes, and biological phenomena that are mediated by strong short-range attractive forces in water.
         
            
 
                 
                
                    
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