The interactions between a series of oppositely charged polypeptide pairs are probed using isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) in combination with turbidity measurements and optical microscopy. Polypeptide complex coacervation is described as a sequence of two distinct binding steps using an empirical extension of a simple ITC binding model. The first step consists of the formation of soluble complexes from oppositely charged polypeptides (ion pairing), which in turn aggregate into insoluble interpolymer complexes in the second step (complex coacervation). Polypeptides have identical backbones and differ only in their charged side groups, making them attractive model systems for this work. The poly(l-ornithine hydrobromide) (PO)/poly(l-glutamic acid sodium salt) (PGlu) system is used to examine the effects of parameters such as the salt concentration, pH, temperature, degree of polymerization, and total polymer concentration on the thermodynamic characteristics of complexation. Complex coacervation in all probed systems is found to be endothermic, essentially an entropy-driven processes. Increasing the screening effect of the salt on the polyelectrolyte charges diminishes their propensity to interact, leading to a decrease in the observed energy change and coacervate quantity. The pH plays an important role in complex formation through its effect on the degree of ionization of the functional groups. Plotting the change in enthalpy with temperature allows the calculation of the heat capacity change (ΔC(p)) for the PO/PGlu interactions. Finally, ITC revealed that complex coacervation is promoted when higher total polymer concentrations or polypeptide chain lengths are used.
The alternate deposition of polyanions and polycations leads to the formation of films called polyelectrolyte multilayer films (PEMs). Two types of growth processes are reported in the literature, leading to films that grow either linearly or exponentially with the number of deposition steps. In this article we try to establish a correlation between the nature of the growth process and the heat of complexation between the polyanions and the polycations constituting the PEM film. Isothermal titration microcalorimetry experiments performed on several polyanion/polycation systems seem to indicate that an endothermic complexation process is characteristic of an exponential film growth, whereas a strongly exothermic process corresponds to a linear growth regime. Finally, weakly exothermic processes seem to be associated with weakly exponentially growing films. These results thus show that exponentially growing processes are mainly driven by entropy. This explains why the exponential growth processes are more sensitive to temperature than the linear growing processes. This temperature sensitivity is shown on the poly-L-glutamic acid/poly(allylamine) system which grows either linearly or exponentially depending on the ionic strength of the polyelectrolyte solutions.
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