Spatial structure and composition of polysaccharide-protein complexes from Small Angle Neutron Scattering
Isabelle Schmidt (BIA), Fabrice Cousin (LLB), Christophe Huchon (LLB),, Fran\c{c}ois Bou\'e (LLB), Monique A.V. Axelos (BIA)

TL;DR
This study uses Small Angle Neutron Scattering with a novel analysis to characterize the size and composition of lysozyme-pectin complexes, revealing how charge density influences their structure and protein stacking within globules.
Contribution
It introduces an original SANS analysis method to determine the size and internal composition of polysaccharide-protein complexes based on charge density variations.
Findings
Complexes form spherical globules of 10-50 nm radius.
Protein stacking increases with pectin charge density.
Globule size correlates with pectin linear charge density.
Abstract
We use Small Angle Neutron Scattering (SANS), with an original analysis method, to obtain both the characteristic sizes and the inner composition of lysozyme-pectin complexes depending on the charge density. Lysozyme is a globular protein and pectin a natural anionic semiflexible polysaccharide with a degree of methylation (DM) 0, 43 and 74. For our experimental conditions (buffer ionic strength I = 2.5 10-2 mol/L and pH between 3 and 7), the electrostatic charge of lysozyme is always positive (from 8 to 17 depending on pH). The pectin charge per elementary chain segment is negative and can be varied from almost zero to one through the change of DM and pH. The weight molar ratio of lysozyme on pectin monomers is kept constant. The ratio of negative charge content per volume to positive charge content per volume, -/+, is varied between 10 and 0.007. On a local scale, for all charged…
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