posted on 2019-04-05, 00:00authored byTyler
K. Lytle, Li-Wei Chang, Natalia Markiewicz, Sarah L. Perry, Charles E. Sing
Charged polymers
are ubiquitous in biological systems because electrostatic
interactions can drive complicated structure formation and respond
to environmental parameters such as ionic strength and pH. In these
systems, function emerges from sophisticated molecular design; for
example, intrinsically disordered proteins leverage specific sequences
of monomeric charges to control the formation and function of intracellular
compartments known as membraneless organelles. The role of a charged
monomer sequence in dictating the strength of electrostatic interactions
remains poorly understood despite extensive evidence that sequence
is a powerful tool biology uses to tune soft materials. In this article,
we use a combination of theory, experiment, and simulation to establish
the physical principles governing sequence-driven control of electrostatic
interactions. We predict how arbitrary sequences of charge give rise
to drastic changes in electrostatic interactions and correspondingly
phase behavior. We generalize a transfer matrix formalism that describes
a phase separation phenomenon known as “complex coacervation”
and provide a theoretical framework to predict the phase behavior
of charge sequences. This work thus provides insights into both how
charge sequence is used in biology and how it could be used to engineer
properties of synthetic polymer systems.