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American Chemical Society, Langmuir, 21(13), p. 5570-5576, 1997

DOI: 10.1021/la970136j

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Stabilization of Hydrophobic Colloidal Dispersions in Water with Amphiphilic Polymers:  Application to Integral Membrane Proteins

Journal article published in 1997 by C. Tribet, R. Audebert, J.-L. Popot
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Stabilization of aqueous dispersions of highly hydrophobic colloidal particleshere three integral membrane proteins of nanometric dimensionswere obtained by substituting the classical protective layer of surfactant with low molecular weight amphiphilic polymers (“amphipols”). These polymers, derived from poly(acrylic acid), adsorb onto the particle despite the presence of residual surfactant from the initial stock solutions of proteins. Unbound amphipols and surfactants can be subsequently removed without dissociation of the complex or precipitation. As a consequence of multipoint attachment between the partners, complexation appears irreversible on the time scale of a few hours to a few days. Protein/amphipol complexes contain a much lower number of alkyl groups per particle as compared with classical protein/surfactant complexes. The density of coverage (≈100−200 alkyl groups per particle) increases with the salt concentration of the medium but is not sensitive to pH.