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Peptide-mediated growth and dispersion of au nanoparticles in water via sequence engineering

Version 2 2024-06-03, 17:44
Version 1 2018-07-12, 16:02
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-03, 17:44 authored by MA Nguyen, ZE Hughes, Y Liu, Y Li, MT Swihart, MR Knecht, Tiffany WalshTiffany Walsh
The use of peptides to nucleate, grow, and stabilize nanoparticles in aqueous media via noncovalent interactions offers new possibilities for creating functional, water-dispersed inorganic/organic hybrid materials, particularly for Au nanoparticles. Numerous previous studies have identified peptide sequences that both possess a strong binding affinity for Au surfaces and are capable of supporting nanoparticle growth in water. However, recent studies have shown that not all such peptide sequences can produce stable dispersions of these nanoparticles. Here, via integrated experiments and molecular modeling, we provide new insights into the many factors that influence Au nanoparticle growth and stabilization in aqueous media. We define colloidal stability by the absence of visible precipitation at least 24 h after synthesis. We use binding affinity measurements, nanoparticle synthesis, characterization and stabilization assays, and molecular modeling to investigate a set of sequences based on two known peptides with a strong affinity for Au. This set of biomolecules is designed to probe specific sequence and context effects using both point mutations and global reorganization of the peptides. Our data confirm, for a broader range of sequences, that Au nanoparticle/peptide binding affinity alone is not predictive of peptide-mediated colloidal stability. By comparing nanoparticle stabilization assay outcomes with molecular simulations, we establish a correlation between the colloidal stability of the Au nanoparticles and the degree of conformational diversity in the surface-adsorbed peptides. Our findings suggest future routes to engineer peptide sequences for biobased growth and dispersion of functional nanoparticles in aqueous media.

History

Journal

Journal of physical chemistry C

Volume

122

Pagination

11532-11542

Location

Washington, D.C.

ISSN

1932-7447

eISSN

1932-7455

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2018, American Chemical Society

Issue

21

Publisher

ACS Publications

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