Bottom-up synthesis of protein-based nanomaterials from engineered β-solenoid proteins.

Biomolecular self-assembly is an emerging bottom-up approach for the synthesis of novel nanomaterials. DNA and viruses have both been used to create scaffolds but the former lacks chemical diversity and the latter lack spatial control. To date, the use of protein scaffolds to template materials on t...

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Main Authors: Zeyu Peng, Maria D R Peralta, Daniel L Cox, Michael D Toney
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0229319
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spelling doaj-a627bb4a5f42475dba21b28ca85e04032021-03-03T21:30:59ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01152e022931910.1371/journal.pone.0229319Bottom-up synthesis of protein-based nanomaterials from engineered β-solenoid proteins.Zeyu PengMaria D R PeraltaDaniel L CoxMichael D ToneyBiomolecular self-assembly is an emerging bottom-up approach for the synthesis of novel nanomaterials. DNA and viruses have both been used to create scaffolds but the former lacks chemical diversity and the latter lack spatial control. To date, the use of protein scaffolds to template materials on the nanoscale has focused on amyloidogenic proteins that are known to form fibrils or two-protein systems where a second protein acts as a cross-linker. We previously developed a unique approach for self-assembly of nanomaterials based on engineering β-solenoid proteins (BSPs) to polymerize into micrometer-length fibrils. BSPs have highly regular geometries, tunable lengths, and flat surfaces that are amenable to engineering and functionalization. Here, we present a newly engineered BSP based on the antifreeze protein of the beetle Rhagium inquisitor (RiAFP-m9), which polymerizes into stable fibrils under benign conditions. Gold nanoparticles were used to functionalize the RiAFP-m9 fibrils as well as those assembled from the previously described SBAFP-m1 protein. Cysteines incorporated into the sequences provide site-specific gold attachment. Additionally, silver was deposited on the gold-labelled fibrils by electroless plating to create nanowires. These results bolster prospects for programable self-assembly of BSPs to create scaffolds for functional nanomaterials.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0229319
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zeyu Peng
Maria D R Peralta
Daniel L Cox
Michael D Toney
spellingShingle Zeyu Peng
Maria D R Peralta
Daniel L Cox
Michael D Toney
Bottom-up synthesis of protein-based nanomaterials from engineered β-solenoid proteins.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Zeyu Peng
Maria D R Peralta
Daniel L Cox
Michael D Toney
author_sort Zeyu Peng
title Bottom-up synthesis of protein-based nanomaterials from engineered β-solenoid proteins.
title_short Bottom-up synthesis of protein-based nanomaterials from engineered β-solenoid proteins.
title_full Bottom-up synthesis of protein-based nanomaterials from engineered β-solenoid proteins.
title_fullStr Bottom-up synthesis of protein-based nanomaterials from engineered β-solenoid proteins.
title_full_unstemmed Bottom-up synthesis of protein-based nanomaterials from engineered β-solenoid proteins.
title_sort bottom-up synthesis of protein-based nanomaterials from engineered β-solenoid proteins.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Biomolecular self-assembly is an emerging bottom-up approach for the synthesis of novel nanomaterials. DNA and viruses have both been used to create scaffolds but the former lacks chemical diversity and the latter lack spatial control. To date, the use of protein scaffolds to template materials on the nanoscale has focused on amyloidogenic proteins that are known to form fibrils or two-protein systems where a second protein acts as a cross-linker. We previously developed a unique approach for self-assembly of nanomaterials based on engineering β-solenoid proteins (BSPs) to polymerize into micrometer-length fibrils. BSPs have highly regular geometries, tunable lengths, and flat surfaces that are amenable to engineering and functionalization. Here, we present a newly engineered BSP based on the antifreeze protein of the beetle Rhagium inquisitor (RiAFP-m9), which polymerizes into stable fibrils under benign conditions. Gold nanoparticles were used to functionalize the RiAFP-m9 fibrils as well as those assembled from the previously described SBAFP-m1 protein. Cysteines incorporated into the sequences provide site-specific gold attachment. Additionally, silver was deposited on the gold-labelled fibrils by electroless plating to create nanowires. These results bolster prospects for programable self-assembly of BSPs to create scaffolds for functional nanomaterials.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0229319
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AT daniellcox bottomupsynthesisofproteinbasednanomaterialsfromengineeredbsolenoidproteins
AT michaeldtoney bottomupsynthesisofproteinbasednanomaterialsfromengineeredbsolenoidproteins
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