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Protein nanowires with tunable functionality and programmable self-assembly using sequence-controlled synthesis.

Authors :
Shapiro, Daniel Mark
Mandava, Gunasheil
Yalcin, Sibel Ebru
Arranz-Gibert, Pol
Dahl, Peter J.
Shipps, Catharine
Gu, Yangqi
Srikanth, Vishok
Salazar-Morales, Aldo I.
O'Brien, J. Patrick
Vanderschuren, Koen
Vu, Dennis
Batista, Victor S.
Malvankar, Nikhil S.
Isaacs, Farren J.
Source :
Nature Communications; 10/23/2022, Vol. 13 Issue 1, p1-10, 10p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Advances in synthetic biology permit the genetic encoding of synthetic chemistries at monomeric precision, enabling the synthesis of programmable proteins with tunable properties. Bacterial pili serve as an attractive biomaterial for the development of engineered protein materials due to their ability to self-assemble into mechanically robust filaments. However, most biomaterials lack electronic functionality and atomic structures of putative conductive proteins are not known. Here, we engineer high electronic conductivity in pili produced by a genomically-recoded E. coli strain. Incorporation of tryptophan into pili increased conductivity of individual filaments >80-fold. Computationally-guided ordering of the pili into nanostructures increased conductivity 5-fold compared to unordered pili networks. Site-specific conjugation of pili with gold nanoparticles, facilitated by incorporating the nonstandard amino acid propargyloxy-phenylalanine, increased filament conductivity ~170-fold. This work demonstrates the sequence-defined production of highly-conductive protein nanowires and hybrid organic-inorganic biomaterials with genetically-programmable electronic functionalities not accessible in nature or through chemical-based synthesis. Bacterial hairs called pili become highly-conductive electric wires upon addition of both natural and synthetic amino acids conjugated with gold nanoparticles. Here the authors use computationally-guided ordering further increasing their conductivity, thus yielding genetically-programmable materials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
13
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature Communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
159896746
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-28206-x