Current synthetic elastomers suffer from the well‐known trade‐off between toughness and stiffness. By a combination of multiscale experiments and atomistic simulations, a transparent unfilled elastomer with simultaneously enhanced toughness and stiffness is demonstrated. The designed elastomer comprises homogeneous networks with ultrastrong, reversible, and sacrificial octuple hydrogen bonding (HB), which evenly distribute the stress to each polymer chain during loading, thus enhancing stretchability and delaying fracture. Strong HBs and corresponding nanodomains enhance the stiffness by restricting the network mobility, and at the same time improve the toughness by dissipating energy during the transformation between different configurations. In addition, the stiffness mismatch between the hard HB domain and the soft poly(dimethylsiloxane)‐rich phase promotes crack deflection and branching, which can further dissipate energy and alleviate local stress. These cooperative mechanisms endow the elastomer with both high fracture toughness (17016 J m−2) and high Young's modulus (14.7 MPa), circumventing the trade‐off between toughness and stiffness. This work is expected to impact many fields of engineering requiring elastomers with unprecedented mechanical performance.
Fundamental and applied studies of silkworms have entered the functional genomics era. Here, we report a multi-gene expression system (MGES) based on 2A self-cleaving peptide (2A), which regulates the simultaneous expression and cleavage of multiple gene targets in the silk gland of transgenic silkworms. First, a glycine-serine-glycine spacer (GSG) was found to significantly improve the cleavage efficiency of 2A. Then, the cleavage efficiency of six types of 2As with GSG was analyzed. The shortest porcine teschovirus-1 2A (P2A-GSG) exhibited the highest cleavage efficiency in all insect cell lines that we tested. Next, P2A-GSG successfully cleaved the artificial human serum albumin (66 kDa) linked with human acidic fibroblast growth factor (20.2 kDa) fusion genes and vitellogenin receptor fragment (196 kD) of silkworm linked with EGFP fusion genes, importantly, vitellogenin receptor protein was secreted to the outside of cells. Furthermore, P2A-GSG successfully mediated the simultaneous expression and cleavage of a DsRed and EGFP fusion gene in silk glands and caused secretion into the cocoon of transgenic silkworms using our sericin1 expression system. We predicted that the MGES would be an efficient tool for gene function research and innovative research on various functional silk materials in medicine, cosmetics, and other biomedical areas.
Dimensionality reduction methods are usually applied on molecular dynamics simulations of macromolecules for analysis and visualization purpose. It is normally desired that suitable dimensionality reduction methods could clearly distinguish functionally important states with different conformations for the systems of interest. However, common dimensionality reduction methods for macromolecules simulations, including pre-defined order parameters and collective variables (CVs), principal component analysis (PCA), and time-structure based independent component analysis (t-ICA), only have limited success due to significant key structural information loss. Here, we introduced t-distributed stochastic neighbor embedding (t-SNE) method as a dimensionality reduction method with minimum structural information loss widely used in bioinformatics for analyses of macromolecules, especially biomacromolecules simulations. It is demonstrated that both one-dimensional (1D) and two-dimensional (2D) models of t-SNE method are superior to distinguish important functional states of a model allosteric protein system for free energy and mechanistic analysis. Projections of the model protein simulations onto 1D and 2D t-SNE surfaces provide both clear visual cues and quantitative information, which is not readily available using other methods, regarding to the transition mechanism between two important functional states of this protein.
Vancomycin is a glycopeptide antibiotic used for the treatment of serious infections by Gram-positive pathogens. Vancomycin inhibits cell wall biosynthesis by targeting the d-Ala-d-Ala terminus of peptidoglycan (PG). The highly cross-linked heptapeptide aglycon structure of vancomycin is the d-Ala-d-Ala binding site. The first residue of vancomycin is N-methyl-leucine, which is crucial for the dipeptide binding. The removal of N-methyl-leucine by Edman degradation results in desleucyl-vancomycin devoid of antimicrobial activities. To investigate the function of N-methyl-leucine for the dipeptide binding in vancomycin, molecular dynamics simulations of vancomycin and three N-terminus-modified vancomycin derivatives: desleucyl-vancomycin, vancomycinNtoC, and vancomycinSar, binding to a PG unit of the sequence l-Ala-d-iso-Gln-l-Lys-d-Ala-d-Ala with an intact pentaglycine bridge structure attached to the bridge link of l-Lys were carried out. Glycopeptide–PG binding interactions were characterized by root-mean-square-deviation contour analysis of atomic positions in vancomycin and its three analogues bound to a PG unit. The overall sampling space for four glycopeptide–PG complexes shows four distinct distributions with a continuous change between the conformational spaces. The hydrogen bond analyses show that multiple hydrogen bonds between the d-Ala-d-Ala and the vancomycin aglycon structure strengthened the dipeptide binding. The simulations revealed that the removal or chemical modification of N-methyl-leucine significantly weakens the dipeptide binding to the aglycon structure and provides interesting structural insights into glycopeptide–PG binding interactions.
Silkworm silk has excellent mechanical properties, biocompatibility, and promising applications in the biomedical sector. Silkworms spin silk at the beginning and end of each of their five instar stages, as well as spinning mature silk after the fifth instar. We evaluated the mechanical properties and structure of 10 kinds of silk fibers from different stages. A tensile test showed that instar beginning silk, instar end silk, and mature silk possess distinct properties. Attenuated total reflectance Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy and X-ray diffraction results showed that the excellent mechanical properties of instar end silk are attributed to higher β-sheet content and suitable crystallinity. Liquid chromatography−tandem mass spectrometry showed that P25 protein content in IV-E silk is 2.9× higher than that of cocoon silk. This study can offer guidelines for further biomimetic investigations into the design and manufacture of artificial silk protein fibers with novel function.
Carbapenem-hydrolyzing class D β-lactamases (CHDLs) are an important source of resistance to these last resort β-lactam antibiotics. OXA-48 is a member of a group of CHDLs named OXA-48-like enzymes. On the basis of sequence similarity, OXA-163 can be classified as an OXA-48-like enzyme, but it has altered substrate specificity. Compared to OXA-48, it shows impaired activity for carbapenems but displays an enhanced hydrolysis of oxyimino-cephalosporins. Here, we address the mechanistic and structural basis for carbapenem hydrolysis by OXA-48-like enzymes. Pre-steady-state kinetic analysis indicates that the rate-limiting step for OXA-48 and OXA-163 hydrolysis of carbapenems is deacylation and that the greatly reduced carbapenemase activity of OXA-163 compared to that of OXA-48 is due entirely to a slower deacylation reaction. Furthermore, our structural data indicate that the positioning of the β5-β6 loop is necessary for carbapenem hydrolysis by OXA-48. A major difference between the OXA-48 and OXA-163 complexes with carbapenems is that the 214-RIEP-217 deletion in OXA-163 creates a large opening in the active site that is absent in the OXA-48/carbapenem structures. We propose that the larger active site results in less constraint on the conformation of the 6α-hydroxyethyl group in the acyl-enzyme. The acyl-enzyme intermediate assumes multiple conformations, most of which are incompatible with rapid deacylation. Consistent with this hypothesis, molecular dynamics simulations indicate that the most stable complex is formed between OXA-48 and imipenem, which correlates with the OXA-48 hydrolysis of imipenem being the fastest observed. Furthermore, the OXA-163 complexes with imipenem and meropenem are the least stable and show significant conformational fluctuations, which correlates with the slow hydrolysis of these substrates.
Natural hybridization can lead to various evolutionary outcomes in plants, including hybrid speciation and interspecific gene transfer. It can also cause taxonomic problems, especially in plant genera containing multiple species. In this study, the hybrid status of Melastoma affine, the most widespread taxon in this genus, and introgression between its putative parental species, M. candidum and M. sanguineum, were assessed on two sites, Hainan and Guangdong, using 13 SSR markers and sequences of a chloroplast intergenic spacer. Bayesian-based STRUCTURE analysis detected two most likely distinct clusters for the three taxa, and 76.0% and 73.9% of the morphologically identified individuals of M. candidum and M. sanguineum were correctly assigned, respectively. 74.5% of the M. affine individuals had a membership coefficient to either parental species between 0.1 and 0.9, suggesting admixture between M. candidum and M. sanguineum. Furthermore, NewHybrids analysis suggested that most individuals of M. affine were F2 hybrids or backcross hybrids to M. candidum, and that there was extensive introgression between M. candidum and M. sanguineum. These SSR data thus provides convincing evidence for hybrid origin of M. affine and extensive introgression between M. candidum and M. sanguineum. Chloroplast DNA results were consistent with this conclusion. Much higher hybrid frequency on the more disturbed Guangdong site suggests that human disturbance might offer suitable habitats for the survival of hybrids, a hypothesis that is in need of further testing.
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