Sheila Khodadadi
National Institute of Standards and Technology
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Featured researches published by Sheila Khodadadi.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2008
Sheila Khodadadi; S. Pawlus; Alexei P. Sokolov
Combining dielectric spectroscopy and neutron scattering data for hydrated lysozyme powders, we were able to identify several relaxation processes and follow protein dynamics at different hydration levels over a broad frequency and temperature range. We ascribe the main dielectric process to proteins structural relaxation coupled to hydration water and the slowest dielectric process to a larger scale proteins motions. Both relaxations exhibit a smooth, slightly super-Arrhenius temperature dependence between 300 and 180 K. The temperature dependence of the slowest process follows the main dielectric relaxation, emphasizing that the same friction mechanism might control both processes. No signs of a proposed sharp fragile-to-strong crossover at T approximately 220 K are observed in temperature dependences of these processes. Both processes show strong dependence on hydration: the main dielectric process slows down by six orders with a decrease in hydration from h approximately 0.37 (grams of water per grams of protein) to h approximately 0.05. The slowest process shows even stronger dependence on hydration. The third (fastest) dielectric relaxation process has been detected only in samples with high hydration ( h approximately 0.3 and higher). We ascribe it to a secondary relaxation of hydration water. The mechanism of the protein dynamic transition and a general picture of the protein dynamics are discussed.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2012
Shin G. Chou; Alan K. Soper; Sheila Khodadadi; Joseph E. Curtis; Susan Krueger; Marcus T. Cicerone; Andrew N. Fitch; Evgenyi Y. Shalaev
In this study, the structure of concentrated d-sorbitol-water mixtures is studied by wide- and small-angle neutron scattering (WANS and SANS) as a function of temperature. The mixtures are prepared using both deuterated and regular sorbitol and water at a molar fraction of sorbitol of 0.19 (equivalent to 70% by weight of regular sorbitol in water). Retention of an amorphous structure (i.e., absence of crystallinity) is confirmed for this system over the entire temperature range, 100-298 K. The glass transition temperature, Tg, is found from differential scanning calorimetry to be approximately 200 K. WANS data are analyzed using empirical potential structure refinement, to obtain the site-site radial distribution functions (RDFs) and coordination numbers. This analysis reveals the presence of nanoscaled water clusters surrounded by (and interacting with) sorbitol molecules. The water clusters appear more structured compared to bulk water and, especially at the lowest temperatures, resemble the structure of low-density amorphous ice (LDA). Upon cooling to 100 K the peaks in the water RDFs become markedly sharper, with increased coordination number, indicating enhanced local (nanometer-scale) ordering, with changes taking place both above and well below the Tg. On the mesoscopic (submicrometer) scale, although there are no changes between 298 and 213 K, cooling the sample to 100 K results in a significant increase in the SANS signal, which is indicative of pronounced inhomogeneities. This increase in the scattering is partly reversed during heating, although some hysteresis is observed. Furthermore, a power law analysis of the SANS data indicates the existence of domains with well-defined interfaces on the submicrometer length scale, probably as a result of the appearance and growth of microscopic voids in the glassy matrix. Because of the unusual combination of small and wide scattering data used here, the present results provide new physical insight into the structure of aqueous glasses over a broad temperature and length scale, leading to an improved understanding of the mechanisms of temperature- and water-induced (de)stabilization of various systems, including proteins, pharmaceuticals, and biological objects.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2012
Joseph E. Curtis; Hirsh Nanda; Sheila Khodadadi; Marcus T. Cicerone; Hyojin Lee; Arnold McAuley; Susan Krueger
The structure, interactions, and interprotein configurations of the protein lysozyme were studied in a variety of phases. These properties have been studied under a variety of solution conditions before, during, and after freezing and after freeze-drying in the presence of glucose and trehalose. Contrast variation experiments have also been performed to determine which features of the scattering in the frozen solutions are from the protein and which are from the ice structure. Data from lysozyme at concentrations ranging from 1 to 100 mg/mL in solution and water ice with NaCl concentrations ranging from 0 to 0.4 mol/L are fit to model small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) intensity functions consisting of an ellipsoidal form factor and either a screened-Coulomb or hard-sphere structure factor. Parameters such as protein volume fraction and long dimension are followed as a function of temperature and salt concentration. The SANS results are compared to real space models of concentrated lysozyme solutions at the same volume fractions obtained from Monte Carlo simulations. A cartoon representation of the frozen lysozyme solution in 0 mol/L NaCl is presented based on the SANS and Monte Carlo results, along with those obtained from other complementary methods.
Soft Matter | 2013
Victoria García Sakai; Sheila Khodadadi; Marcus T. Cicerone; Joseph E. Curtis; Alexei P. Sokolov; Joon Ho Roh
In the context of biopreservation, we study the influence of water, glycerol and trehalose on the ps–ns dynamics of lyzosyme using neutron scattering. Results indicate that the choice of bioprotectant depends on the storage temperature; glycerol is the most effective for low temperatures and trehalose for high temperatures.
Soft Matter | 2018
Hirsh Nanda; Victoria García Sakai; Sheila Khodadadi; Madhu Sudan Tyagi; Edwin J. Schwalbach; Joseph E. Curtis
We present experimental measurements and analysis of the dynamics and the phase behaviour of saturated DMPC and unsaturated DOPC oriented multi-lamellar bilayers. Elastic and inelastic neutron scattering were used to directly probe the dynamical processes of these membrane systems on time and length scales relevant to the internal and localized motion of lipid monomers. Mobility in this regime can be informative in elucidating the local interactions responsible for material properties of these fluid lipid systems. DMPC and DOPC are structurally similar in terms of their membrane hydrophobic thickness; however, they exhibit different mechanical properties in terms of both elastic compressibility and bending moduli. The analyses suggest that the constraint imposed by the double bonds in DOPC acyl chains restricts atomic motion in both liquid and gel phases compared to DMPC. We discuss applications of molecular dynamics to further elucidate the atomic details of the dynamical processes. Such an understanding may suggest how membrane properties can be tuned using a variety of different lipid species.
Physical Review Letters | 2008
S. Pawlus; Sheila Khodadadi; Alexei P. Sokolov
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2013
Hailiang Zhang; Sheila Khodadadi; Steven L. Fiedler; Joseph E. Curtis
Archive | 2016
Sheila Khodadadi; Gabriel M. H. Meesters; George Biskos
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015
Susan Krueger; Sheila Khodadadi; Nicholas Clark; Arnold McAuley; Viviana Cristiglio; Narayanan Theyencheri; Joseph E. Curtis; Evgenyi Y. Shalaev
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015
Sheila Khodadadi; Kirsten Rovers; Gabriel M. H. Meesters