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Flat Solenoidal Ice-Binding Proteins as Scaffolds for Solid-Binders

Authors :
Robbert J. de Haas
Jannick van Ossenbruggen
Jeffrey van der Hoeven
Roel J. Timmermans
Roderick P. Tas
Ilja K. Voets
Renko de Vries
Macro-Organic Chemistry
Self-Organizing Soft Matter
ICMS Core
Source :
Advanced Materials Interfaces, 10(14):2300001. Wiley, Advanced Materials Interfaces 10 (2023) 14
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Wiley, 2023.

Abstract

Solid interfacing biomaterials is a crucial aspect of bionanotechnology and important for applications such as biosensing. Because of their potentially large contact area, flat solenoidal proteins are ideal scaffolds for designing proteins binding to surfaces of man-made solids such as minerals, metals, and plastics. To explore this opportunity, a naturally occurring flat solenoidal protein: the Rhagium inquistor Antifreeze Protein from the insect Rhagium inquisitor is re-designed. By mutating 4, 6, and 10 out of its 4 × 5 arrays of threonines into arginines, it have arrived at the silica-binding proteins RiSiBP-4, RiSiBP-6, and RiSiBP-10. Variants with increasing numbers of arginines bind stronger to silica, but are also less stable and increasingly difficult to produce. It is found that the RiSiBP-6 variant binds strongly to silica yet still has good stability and easy production. It is shown that sfGFP-RiSiBP-6 fusions allow for the functional display of a monolayer of sfGFP cargo on silica surfaces, suggesting the general usefulness of flat solenoidal proteins as scaffolds for designing solid-binding proteins.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21967350
Volume :
10
Issue :
14
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Advanced Materials Interfaces
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5a50ae81d13b1e475f70d559a58be478
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/admi.202300001