2 resultados para Prism Yearbooks
em QSpace: Queen's University - Canada
Resumo:
The main success of my thesis has been to establish the mechanism by which antifreeze proteins (AFPs) bind irreversibly to ice crystals, and hence prevent their growth. AFPs organize ice-like water on their ice-binding site, which then merges and freezes with the quasi-liquid layer of ice. This was revealed from studying the exceptionally large (ca. 1.5-MDa) Ca 2+-dependent AFP from the Antarctic bacterium Marinomonas primoryensis (MpAFP). The 34-kDa antifreeze- active region of MpAFP was predicted to fold as a novel Ca 2+-binding β-helix. Site-directed mutagenesis confirmed the model and demonstrated that its ice-binding site (IBS) consisted of solvent-exposed Thr and Asx parallel arrays on the Ca 2+-binding turns. The X-ray crystal structure of the antifreeze region was solved to a resolution of 1.7 Å. Two of the four molecules within the unit cell of the crystal had portions of their IBSs freely exposed to solvent. Identical clathrate-like cages of water molecules were present on each IBS. These waters were organized by the hydrophobic effect and anchored to the protein via hydrogen bonds. They matched the spacing of water molecules in an ice lattice, demonstrating that anchored clathrate waters bind AFPs to ice. This mechanism was extended to other AFPs including the globular type III AFP from fishes. Site-directed mutagenesis and a modified ice-etching technique demonstrated this protein uses a compound ice-binding site, comprised of two flat and relatively hydrophobic surfaces, to bind at least two planes of ice. Reinvestigation of several crystal structures of type III AFP identified anchored clathrate waters on the solvent-exposed portion of its compound IBS that matched the spacing of waters on the primary prism plane of ice. Ice nucleation proteins (INPs), which can raise the temperature at which ice forms in solution to just slightly below 0oC, have the opposite effect to AFPs. A novel dimeric β-helical model was proposed for the INP produced by the bacterium Pseudomonas borealis. Molecular dynamics simulations showed that INPs are also capable of ordering water molecules into an ice- like lattice. However, their multimerization brings together sufficient ordered waters to form an ice nucleus and initiate freezing.
Resumo:
Sensors for real-time monitoring of environmental contaminants are essential for protecting ecosystems and human health. Refractive index sensing is a non-selective technique that can be used to measure almost any analyte. Miniaturized refractive index sensors, such as silicon-on-insulator (SOI) microring resonators are one possible platform, but require coatings selective to the analytes of interest. A homemade prism refractometer is reported and used to characterize the interactions between polymer films and liquid or vapour-phase analytes. A camera was used to capture both Fresnel reflection and total internal reflection within the prism. For thin-films (d = 10 μm - 100 μm), interference fringes were also observed. Fourier analysis of the interferogram allowed for simultaneous extraction of the average refractive index and film thickness with accuracies of ∆n = 1-7 ×10-4 and ∆d < 3-5%. The refractive indices of 29 common organic solvents as well as aqueous solutions of sodium chloride, sucrose, ethylene glycol, glycerol, and dimethylsulfoxide were measured at λ = 1550 nm. These measurements will be useful for future calibrations of near-infrared refractive index sensors. A mathematical model is presented, where the concentration of analyte adsorbed in a film can be calculated from the refractive index and thickness changes during uptake. This model can be used with Fickian diffusion models to measure the diffusion coefficients through the bulk film and at the film-substrate interface. The diffusion of water and other organic solvents into SU-8 epoxy was explored using refractometry and the diffusion coefficient of water into SU-8 is presented. Exposure of soft baked SU-8 films to acetone, acetonitrile and methanol resulted in rapid delamination. The diffusion of volatile organic compound (VOC) vapours into polydimethylsiloxane and polydimethyl-co-polydiphenylsiloxane polymers was also studied using refractometry. Diffusion and partition coefficients are reported for several analytes. As a model system, polydimethyl-co-diphenylsiloxane films were coated onto SOI microring resonators. After the development of data acquisition software, coated devices were exposed to VOCs and the refractive index response was assessed. More studies with other polymers are required to test the viability of this platform for environmental sensing applications.