posted on 2018-04-26, 00:00authored byM. Coleman Vaclaw, Patricia A. Sprouse, Neal T. Dittmer, Saba Ghazvini, C. Russell Middaugh, Michael R. Kanost, Stevin H. Gehrke, Prajnaparamita Dhar
The
interactions among biomacromolecules within insect cuticle
may offer new motifs for biomimetic material design. CPR27 is an abundant
protein in the rigid cuticle of the elytron from Tribolium
castaneum. CPR27 contains the Rebers–Riddiford (RR)
motif, which is hypothesized to bind chitin. In this study, active
magnetic microrheology coupled with microscopy and protein particle
analysis techniques were used to correlate alterations in the viscosity
of chitosan solutions with changes in solution microstructure. Addition
of CPR27 to chitosan solutions led to a 3-fold drop in viscosity.
This change was accompanied by the presence of micrometer-sized coacervate
particles in solution. Coacervate formation had a strong dependence
on chitosan concentration. Analysis showed the existence of a critical
CPR27 concentration beyond which a significant increase in particle
count was observed. These effects were not observed when a non-RR
cuticular protein, CP30, was tested, providing evidence of a structure–function
relationship related to the RR motif.