A 'random coil' is a
polymer conformation where the
monomer subunits are oriented
randomly while still being
bonded to
adjacent units. It is not one specific
shape, but a
statistical distribution of shapes for all the chains in a
population of
macromolecules. The
conformation's name is derived from the idea that, in the absence of specific, stabilizing interactions, a polymer backbone will "sample" all possible conformations randomly. Many linear,
unbranched homopolymers — in solution, or above their
melting temperatures — assume (
approximate) random coils. Even
copolymers with
monomers of unequal
length will distribute in random coils if the subunits lack any specific interactions. The parts of branched polymers may also assume random coils.
Below their melting temperatures, most
thermoplastic polymers (
polyethylene,
nylon, etc.) have
amorphous regions in which the chains approximate random coils, alternating with regions which are
crystalline. The amorphous regions contribute elasticity and the crystalline regions contribute strength and rigidity.
More complex polymers such as
proteins, with various interacting chemical groups attached to their backbones,
self-assemble into well-defined structures. But segments of proteins, and
polypeptides that lack
secondary structure, are often assumed to exhibit a random coil conformation in which the only fixed relationship is the joining of adjacent
amino acid residues by a
peptide bond. This is not actually the case, since the
ensemble will be
energy weighted due to interactions between amino acid
side chains, with lower-energy conformations being present more frequently. In addition, even arbitrary sequences of amino acids tend to exhibit some
hydrogen bonding and secondary structure. For this reason, the term "statistical coil" is occasionally preferred. The
conformational entropy associated with the random coil state significantly contributes to its energetic stabilization and accounts for much of the energy barrier to
protein folding.
A random coil conformation can be detected using spectroscopic techniques. The arrangement of the planar amide bonds results in a distinctive signal in
circular dichroism. The
chemical shift of amino acids in a random coil conformation is well known in
nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). Deviations from these signatures often indicates the presence of some secondary structure, rather than complete random coil. Furthermore, there are signals in multidimensional NMR experiments which indicate that stable, non-local amino acid interactions are absent for polypeptides in a random coil conformation. Likewise, in the images produced by
crystallography experiments, segments of random coil simply result in a reduction in "electron density" or contrast. A randomly coiled state for any polypeptide chain can be attained by
denaturing the system. However, there is evidence that proteins are perhaps never truly random coils, even when denatured (Shortle & Ackerman).
Random walk model: The Gaussian chain
There are an enormous number of different
ways in which a chain can be curled around in a relatively compact shape, like an unraveling ball of twine with lots of open
space, and comparatively few ways it can be more or less stretched out. So if each conformation has an equal
probability or
statistical weight, chains are much more likely to be ball-like than they are to be extended — a purely
entropic effect. In an
ensemble of chains, most of them will therefore be loosely
balled up. Or, equivalently, this is the kind of shape any one of them will have most of the time.
Consider a linear polymer to be a freely-jointed chain with ''N'' subunits, each of length ''l'', that occupy
zero volume, so that no part of the chain excludes another from any location. One can regard the segments of each such chain in an ensemble as performing a
random walk (or "random flight") in three
dimensions, limited only by the constraint that each segment must be joined to its neighbors. This is the ''
ideal chain''
mathematical model. The maximum, fully extended length ''L'' of the chain is clearly ''N'' x ''l''. If we assume that each possible chain conformation has an equal statistical weight, it can be
shown that the probability
of a polymer chain in the
population to have distance
between the ends will obey a characteristic
distribution described by the formula
The ''average'' (
root mean square) end-to-end distance for the chain,
, turns out to be ''l'' times the square root of ''N'' - in other words, the average distance scales with
.
Note that although this model is termed a "Gaussian chain", the distribution function is not a
gaussian (normal) distribution. The end-to-end distance probability distribution function of a Gaussian chain is non-zero only for
.
[1]
Real polymers
A real polymer is not freely-jointed. A -C-C- single
bond has a fixed
tetrahedral angle of 109.5 degrees. The value of ''L'' is well-defined for, say, a fully extended
polyethylene or
nylon, but it is less than ''N'' x ''l'' because of the zig-zag backbone. There is, however, free rotation about many chain bonds. The model above can be enhanced. A longer, "effective" unit length can be defined such that the chain can be regarded as freely-jointed, along with a smaller ''N'', such that the constraint ''L'' = ''N'' x ''l'' is still obeyed. It, too, gives a Gaussian distribution. However, specific cases can also be precisely calculated. The average end-to-end distance for ''freely-rotating'' (not freely-jointed) polymethylene (polyethylene with each -C-C- considered as a subunit) is ''l'' times the square root of 2''N'', an increase by a factor of about 1.4. Unlike the zero volume assumed in a random walk calculation, all real polymers' segments occupy space because of the
van der Waals radii of their atoms, including
bulky substituent groups which interfere with
bond rotations. This can also be taken into account in calculations. All such effects increase the mean end-to-end distance.
Because their polymerization is
stochastically driven, chain lengths in any real population of
synthetic polymers will obey a statistical distribution. In that case, we should take ''N'' to be an average value. Also, many polymers have random branching.
Even with corrections for local
constraints, the random walk model ignores steric interference between chains, and between distal parts of the same chain. A chain often can’t move from a given conformation to a closely related one by a small displacement because one part of it would have to pass through another part, or through a neighbor. We may still hope that the ideal-chain, random-coil model will be at least a qualitative indication of the shapes and
dimensions of real polymers in
solution, and in the amorphous state, so long as there are only weak
physicochemical interactions between the monomers. This model, and the
Flory-Huggins Solution Theory, for which
Paul Flory received the
Nobel Prize in Chemistry in
1974, ostensibly apply only to
ideal, dilute solutions. But there is reason to believe (e.g.,
neutron diffraction studies) that
excluded volume effects may cancel out, so that under certain conditions, chain dimensions in amorphous polymers have approximately the ideal, calculated size.
[1]
When separate chains interact cooperatively, notably in forming crystalline regions in
solid thermoplastics, a different mathematical approach must be used.
Stiffer polymers such as
helical polypeptides,
Kevlar, and double-stranded
DNA can be treated by the
worm-like chain model.
See also
★
protein folding
★
native state
★
molten globule
External links and references
1. In fact the Gaussian chain's distribution function is also unphysical for real chains, because it has a non-zero probability for lengths that are larger than the extended chain. This comes from the fact that, strictly speaking, the formula is only valid for the limiting case of an infinite long chain. However, it is not problematic since the probabilities are very small.
★
polymer statistical mechanics
★
A topological problem in polymer physics: configurational and mechanical properties of a random walk enclosing a constant are
★ Flory, P.J. (1953) ''Principles of Polymer Chemistry'', Cornell Univ. Press, ISBN 0-8014-0134-8
★ Flory, P.J. (1969) ''Statistical Mechanics of Chain Molecules'', Wiley, ISBN 0-470-26495-0; reissued 1989, ISBN 1-56990-019-1
★
D. Shortle and M. Ackerman, Persistence of native-like topology in a denatured protein in 8 M urea, Science 293 (2001), pp. 487–489
★
1. "Conformations, Solutions, and Molecular Weight" (book chapter)