Predicting the orientation of adsorbed proteins steered with electric fields using a simple electrostatic model
Sergio A. Urz\'ua, Perla Y. Sauceda-Olo\~no, Carlos D. Garc\'ia,, Christopher D. Cooper

TL;DR
This paper introduces a computational electrostatic model to predict and control protein orientation on surfaces under electric fields, aiding the design of catalytic interfaces with enhanced activity.
Contribution
It presents a simple, efficient electrostatic approach based on continuum electrostatics to predict protein orientation influenced by external electric fields.
Findings
Protein orientation can be controlled via external electric potential.
The model accurately predicts protein-surface affinity and orientation.
External potential influences catalytic activity by repositioning active sites.
Abstract
Under the most common experimental conditions, the adsorption of proteins to solid surfaces is an spontaneous process that leads to a rather compact layer of randomly oriented molecules. Due to the importance of this process for the development of catalytic surfaces, a number of existing computational and experimental approaches try to predict and control the orientation of such molecules. However, and despite their own advantages, these tend to be either too expensive computationally, or oversimplified, undermining their ability to predict the most appropriate experimental conditions to maximize the catalytic activity of adsorbed proteins. To address this current need, we present an efficient computational approach to model the behavior of proteins near surfaces in the presence of an external electric field, based on continuum electrostatics. Our model can not only estimate the overall…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPolymer Surface Interaction Studies · Microfluidic and Bio-sensing Technologies · Microfluidic and Capillary Electrophoresis Applications
