PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Exploration of polymer cononsolvency mechanism through soft X-ray absorption spectroscopy

Exploration of polymer cononsolvency mechanism through soft X-ray absorption spectroscopy
2024-05-17
(Press-News.org) This study investigates the cononsolvency mechanism of poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM), which is soluble in pure methanol (MeOH) and water but insoluble in aqueous MeOH solutions. Combining oxygen K-edge X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) with theoretical calculations executed in molecular dynamics (MD) simulations and inner-shell calculations, it was found that hydrophobic interactions between PNIPAM and MeOH clusters play a key role in PNIPAM aggregation and cononsolvency emergence.

PNIPAM is a stimuli-responsive polymer showing sensitivity to various chemical environments such as temperature and pH. PNIPAM dissolves in pure MeOH and H2O at room temperature but is insoluble in mixtures of MeOH and H2O, a phenomenon known as cononsolvency. Understanding the mechanism of cononsolvency is important for comprehending the phase transition dynamics not only of polymers but also of biomolecules, which undergo dynamics such as protein folding, DNA packing, and interchain complexation. In this study, we investigated the cononsolvency mechanism of PNIPAM in aqueous MeOH solutions from the oxygen K-edge XAS of PNIPAM along with theoretical calculations implemented in MD simulations and inner-shell calculations.
The oxygen K-edge XAS spectra of PNIPAM were measured in a transmission-type liquid cell at the soft X-ray beamline BL-7A of the Photon Factory (KEK-PF). XAS enables the element-selective analysis of light elements such as carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen. However, XAS measurements in transmission mode are difficult because soft X-rays are strongly absorbed by air and liquids. Our developed liquid cell allows XAS measurements of liquid samples in transmission mode under precise thickness control. The C=O π* peaks in the PNIPAM spectrum were observed after separating the contributions of the MeOH and H2O solvents. Figure 1 plots the energy shift of the C=O π* peaks in PNIPAM as a function of MeOH molar fraction at 25°C. n the MeOH-rich region, the energy shifts of the C=O π* peaks are higher in the mixed solvent than in pure MeOH. This energy shift is assigned to simple substitution of the hydrogen bond (HB) structure of the PNIPAM C=O group from MeOH to H2O. In contrast, the energy shift of the C=O π* peak of PNIPAM is much higher in pure H2O than in pure MeOH. Although the dissolution behaviors of PNIPAM in H2O and MeOH are identical on the macroscopic scale, the molecular interactions of PNIPAM with H2O and MeOH are very different on the microscopic scale. For this reason, cononsolvency of PNIPAM emerges in aqueous MeOH solutions.
To reveal the origin of the energy shift of the C=O π* peak in the PNIPAM XAS spectrum, we investigated the structures of PNIPAM chains in aqueous MeOH solutions through MD simulations. The model structures of the HBs between PNIPAM and the MeOH and H2O solvents were determined from the radial distribution functions in the MD simulations and were utilized in the inner-shell calculations. Comparing the inner-shell spectra with the experimentally obtained XAS spectra of PNIPAM, we found that PNIPAM forms rounded structures in pure H2O but chain structures in pure MeOH. This finding explains the much higher energy shift of the C=O π* peak of PNIPAM in pure H2O than in pure MeOH. In the rounded form in pure H2O, the isopropyl group in PNIPAM undergoes hydrophobic hydration. The cononsolvency in aqueous MeOH solutions emerges from hydrophobic interactions between PNIPAM and MeOH clusters, which disrupt the hydrophobic hydration of PNIPAM and induce PNIPAM aggregation. The present study confirmed the applicability of element-selective XAS analysis to phase transition dynamics of both polymers and biomolecules, where the latter include protein folding, DNA packing, and interchain complexation. 

 

Information of the paper: 
Authors: Masanari Nagasaka, Fumitoshi Kumaki, Yifeng Yao, Jun-ichi Adachi and Kenji Mochizuki
Journal Name: Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics
Journal Title: “Mechanism of poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) cononsolvency in aqueous methanol solutions explored via oxygen K-edge X-ray absorption spectroscopy”
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/D4CP00676C

 

Financial Supports:
JSPS, KAKENHI, Fostering Joint International Research (B): JP19H02680
National Natural Science Foundation of China: No. 22273083, 22250610195
KEK, Photon Factory Program Advisory Committee: No. 2021G047
NINS, Okazaki Research Facilitie, Research Center for Computational Science: 22-IMS-C187

 

Contact Person: 
Masanari Nagasaka
Institute for Molecular Science, NINS
The Graduate University for Advanced Studies, SOKENDAI
TEL/FAX: +81-564-55-7394 / +81-564-55-7493
E-mail: nagasaka_at_ims.ac.jp(Please replace the "_at_" with @)

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Exploration of polymer cononsolvency mechanism through soft X-ray absorption spectroscopy

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Researchers use machine-learning modeling tools to improve zinc-finger nuclease editing technology

Researchers use machine-learning modeling tools to improve zinc-finger nuclease editing technology
2024-05-17
Genome editing is making inroads into biomedical research and medicine. By employing biomolecule modeling tools, a Japanese research team is accelerating the pace and cutting the cost of zinc finger nuclease (ZFN) technology, a primary gene editing tool. In a recently published study, researchers from Hiroshima University and the Japanese National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology demonstrated how machine learning-driven modular assembly systems can improve gene editing. The study was published on April 10 in the journal Advanced Science. “Genome editing is ...

USC researcher awarded $3.1 million to study early brain development of babies born to mothers with diabetes in pregnancy

2024-05-17
It has long been understood that pregnant women with diabetes are more likely to have children with obesity than women who do not have diabetes during pregnancy. But scientists have not fully understood the cause or why babies born to mothers with diabetes are also more likely to develop obesity and associated metabolic disorders later in life. To help find answers, Keck School of Medicine of USC researcher Shan Luo, PhD, has been awarded $3.1 million in funding from the National Institutes of Health and the National Institute of Diabetes ...

Men at greater risk of major health effects of diabetes than women

2024-05-17
Men are at greater risk than women of the major health effects of diabetes (types 1 and 2), suggests a long term study published online in the Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health.   Rates of cardiovascular disease, leg, foot, and kidney complications, and the sight-threatening eye disease diabetic retinopathy are all higher in men, regardless of whether they had diabetes for more or less than 10 years, the findings show. The global prevalence of diabetes is similar in men and women, and is projected to rise to 783 million by 2045, note the researchers. But ...

Likelihood of kids and young people smoking and vaping linked to social media use

2024-05-17
The more time spent on social media, the greater the likelihood that children and young people will both smoke and/or vape, suggests research published online in the respiratory  journal Thorax.   Clocking up a weekday tally of 7 or more hours was associated with a more than a doubling in risk among 10 to 25 year olds, the findings indicate, reinforcing concerns about the marketing clout of these platforms, say the researchers. The existing body of research on social media use and smoking and ...

Global life expectancy to increase by nearly 5 years by 2050 despite geopolitical, metabolic, and environmental threats, reports new global study

2024-05-17
**Embargo: 23.30 [UK time], 6:30 p.m. [EDT] May 16, 2024** Global Burden of Disease  The latest findings from the Global Burden of Disease Study (GBD) 2021, published today in The Lancet, forecast that global life expectancy will increase by 4.9 years in males and 4.2 years in females between 2022 and 2050. Increases are expected to be largest in countries where life expectancy is lower, contributing to a convergence of increased life expectancy across geographies. The trend is largely driven by public health measures that ...

High primary health coverage significantly reduces child mortality in Latin America

2024-05-17
The implementation of primary health care (PHC) over the last two decades has prevented more than 300,000 child deaths in four Latin American countries, and could prevent more than 140,000 by 2030 in a scenario of economic crisis. This is the main conclusion of a study coordinated by the Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal), a centre supported by “la Caixa” Foundation, published in The Lancet Global Health. The 2018 Astana Declaration highlighted the critical role of PHC in ensuring that everyone enjoys the highest possible standard of health, and in achieving universal health coverage. The Declaration also stressed the ...

Ubiquitin trailblazer elected Fellow of prestigious Royal Society

Ubiquitin trailblazer elected Fellow of prestigious Royal Society
2024-05-17
WEHI division head and pioneer of ubiquitination Professor David Komander has been elected a Fellow of the esteemed Royal Society, the UK’s national science academy.   Prof Komander was recognised for his significant research contributions towards understanding ubiquitin, the ‘kiss of death’ protein which tells our cells which proteins to break down or recycle – a vital process that helps cells stay healthy and function correctly. Prof Komander’s work has helped unravel the ‘ubiquitin code’ that enables ubiquitin to perform many ...

A new ‘rule of biology’ may have come to light, expanding insight into evolution and aging

A new ‘rule of biology’ may have come to light, expanding insight into evolution and aging
2024-05-17
By Darrin S. Joy A molecular biologist at the USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences may have found a new “rule of biology.” A rule of biology, sometimes called a biological law, describes a recognized pattern or truism among living organisms. Allen’s rule, for example, states that among warm-blooded animals, those found in colder areas have shorter, thicker limbs (to conserve body heat) than those in hotter regions, which need more body surface area to dissipate heat.  Zoologist Joel Allen formulated this idea in 1877, and though he wasn’t the first or the last to present a rule of biology, his ...

Scripps Research chemists develop new method for making gamma chiral centers on simple carboxylic acids

Scripps Research chemists develop new method for making gamma chiral centers on simple carboxylic acids
2024-05-17
LA JOLLA, CA—Scripps Research chemists have accomplished a long elusive feat in synthetic chemistry: the invention of a broadly useful method for constructing “gamma chiral centers” on simple starting compounds called carboxylic acids. The method, published on May 16, 2024 in Science, significantly extends the ability of chemists to build and modify complex pharmaceutical molecules and other valuable chemical products. The term chiral refers to a type of asymmetry that allows some chemical compounds to exist in left-handed and right-handed forms. Often, only one of these forms has the ...

2024 SIAM Annual Meeting (AN24) with online component including SIAM Conference on Discrete Mathematics (DM24) and the SIAM Conference on Applied Mathematics in Education (ED24)

2024-05-16
The SIAM Annual Meeting provides a broad view of the state of the art in applied mathematics, computational and data science, and their applications through invited presentations, prize lectures, minitutorials, minisymposia, contributed presentations, and posters. END ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

UC San Diego Health ends negotiations with Tri-City Medical Center Healthcare District

MLB add lifesavers to the chain of survival in New York City

ISU studies explore win-win potential of grass-powered energy production

Study identifies biomarker that could predict whether colon cancer patients benefit from chemotherapy

Children are less likely to have type 1 diabetes if their mother has the condition than if their father is affected

Two shark species documented in Puget Sound for first time by Oregon State researchers

AI method radically speeds predictions of materials’ thermal properties

Study: When allocating scarce resources with AI, randomization can improve fairness

Wencai Liu earns 2024 IUPAP Early Career Scientist Prize in Mathematical Physics

Outsourcing conservation in Africa

Study finds big disparities in stroke services across the US

Media Tip Sheet: Urban Ecology at #ESA2024

Michigan Plasma prize honors University of Illinois professor

Atomic 'GPS' elucidates movement during ultrafast material transitions

UMBC scientists work to build “wind-up” sensors

Researchers receive McKnight award to study the evolution of deadly brain cancer

Heather Dyer selected as the 2024 ESA Regional Policy Award Winner

New study disputes Hunga Tonga volcano’s role in 2023-24 global warm-up

Climate is most important factor in where mammals choose to live, study finds

New study highlights global disparities in activity limitations and assistive device use

Study finds targeting inflammation may not help reduce liver fibrosis in MAFLD

Meet Insilico in Singapore: Alex Zhavoronkov PhD shares insights into various aspects of AI-powered drug discovery

Insilico Medicine introduces Science42: DORA, the intelligent writing assistant for accelerated research

A deep dive into polyimides for high-frequency wireless telecommunications

Green hydrogen from direct seawater electrolysis- experts warn against hype

Thousands of birds and fish threatened by mining for clean energy transition

Medical and educational indebtedness among health care workers

US state restrictions and excess COVID-19 pandemic deaths

Posttraumatic stress disorder among adults in communities with mass violence incidents

New understanding of fly behavior has potential application in robotics, public safety

[Press-News.org] Exploration of polymer cononsolvency mechanism through soft X-ray absorption spectroscopy