Abstract

Streaming potential and quartz crystal microbalance measurements, combined with all-atom molecular dynamics simulations, were used to study the pH dependency of the adsorption of two basic homopolypeptides, poly-L-lysine (PLL) and poly-L-arginine (PARG), on α-quartz surface. We report that the observed adsorption behavior rises from an interplay of i) the change in the number of possible peptide-surface ion pairs between the charged moieties and ii) repulsive electrostatic interactions between the polypeptide molecules. For low pH values, polypeptide adsorption was strongest and stable monolayers were formed. However, electrostatic repulsion between the polypeptides led to a relatively low maximum surface coverage. On the other hand, higher pH led to more weakly bound, but significantly denser, peptide films with limited stability. Simulations indicate that electrostatic interactions are the main driving force for adsorption, while hydrogen bonding and non-specific interactions also contribute. Additionally, the important role of the counterions of the negatively charged quartz surface that form a positively charged ion adlayer is highlighted. Ion release of the condensed sodium ions at the charged surface occurs via displacement by polypeptide adsorption. The mechanisms revealed by this work provide systematic guidelines to engineering active surfaces of charged peptides with controlled surface coverage and reversible binding.

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