Publications by authors named "Francois Baneyx"

Circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy has emerged as a potent tool for probing chiral small-molecule ligand exchange on natively achiral quantum dots (QDs). In this study, we report a novel approach to identifying QD-biomolecule interactions by inducing chirality in CdS QDs using thermoresponsive elastin-like polypeptides (ELPs) engineered with C-terminal cysteine residues. Our method is based on a versatile two-step ligand exchange process starting from monodisperse oleate-capped QDs in nonpolar media and proceeding through an easily accessed achiral glycine-capped QD intermediate.

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High information content building blocks offer a path toward the construction of precision materials by supporting the organization and reconfiguration of organic and inorganic components through engineered functions. Here, we combine thermoresponsiveness with biomimetic mineralization by fusing the Car9 silica-binding dodecapeptide to the C-terminus of the (VPGVG) elastin-like polypeptide (ELP). Using small angle X-ray scattering, we show that the short Car9 cationic block is sufficient to promote the conversion of disordered unimers into 30 nm micelles comprising about 150 proteins, 5 °C above the transition temperature of the ELP.

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Thermoresponsive elastin-like peptides (ELPs) have been extensively investigated in biotechnology and medicine, but little attention has been paid to the process by which coacervation causes ELP-decorated particles to aggregate. Using gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) functionalized with a cysteine-terminated 96-repeat of the VPGVG sequence (V96-Cys), we show that the size of the clusters that reversibly form above the ELP transition temperature can be finely controlled in the 250 to 930 nm range by specifying the concentration of free V96-Cys in solution and using AuNPs of different sizes. We further find that the localized surface plasmon resonance peak of the embedded AuNPs progressively red-shifts with cluster size, likely due to an increase in particle-particle contacts.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study focuses on the reversible assembly of unmodified nanoparticles using non-covalently bound proteins, which is less explored compared to ligand-functionalized nanoparticles.
  • Researchers demonstrated that engineered green fluorescent protein can facilitate repeated assembly and disassembly of silica nanoparticles by altering pH levels.
  • The findings highlight the influence of solution conditions and protein sequence on the size of nanoparticle clusters, while also revealing that high electrolyte environments can limit the reversibility of these processes.
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Sequence-defined foldamers that self-assemble into well-defined architectures are promising scaffolds to template inorganic mineralization. However, it has been challenging to achieve robust control of nucleation and growth without sequence redesign or extensive experimentation. Here, peptoid nanotubes functionalized with a panel of solid-binding proteins are used to mineralize homogeneously distributed and monodisperse anatase nanocrystals from the water-soluble TiBALDH precursor.

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Hierarchical materials that exhibit order over multiple length scales are ubiquitous in nature. Because hierarchy gives rise to unique properties and functions, many have sought inspiration from nature when designing and fabricating hierarchical matter. More and more, however, nature's own high-information content building blocks, proteins, peptides, and peptidomimetics, are being coopted to build hierarchy because the information that determines structure, function, and interfacial interactions can be readily encoded in these versatile macromolecules.

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While bio-inspired synthesis offers great potential for controlling nucleation and growth of inorganic particles, precisely tuning biomolecule-particle interactions is a long-standing challenge. Herein, we used variations in peptoid sequence to manipulate peptoid-Au interactions, leading to the synthesis of concave five-fold twinned, five-pointed Au nanostars via a process of repeated particle attachment and facet stabilization. Ex situ and liquid-phase TEM observations show that a balance between particle attachment biased to occur near the star points, preferential growth along the [100] direction, and stabilization of (111) facets is critical to forming star-shaped particles.

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At-will tailoring of the formation and reconfiguration of hierarchical structures is a key goal of modern nanomaterial design. Bioinspired systems comprising biomacromolecules and inorganic nanoparticles have potential for new functional material structures. Yet, consequential challenges remain because we lack a detailed understanding of the temporal and spatial interplay between participants when it is mediated by fundamental physicochemical interactions over a wide range of scales.

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To emulate the control that biomineralizing organisms exert over reactant transport, we construct a countercurrent reaction-diffusion chamber in which an agarose hydrogel regulates the fluxes of inorganic precursor and precipitating solid-binding protein. We show that the morphology of the bioprecipitated titania can be changed from monolithic to interconnected particle networks and dispersed nanoparticles either by decreasing reaction time or by increasing agarose weight percentage at constant precursor and protein concentrations. More strikingly, protein variants with one or two substitutions in their metal oxide-binding domain yield unique peripheral morphologies (needles, threads, plates, and peapods) with distinct crystallography and photocatalytic activity.

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There is considerable interest in the development of hybrid organic-inorganic materials because of the potential for harvesting the unique capabilities that each system has to offer. Proteins are an especially attractive organic component owing to the high amount of chemical information encoded in their amino acid sequence, their amenability to molecular and computational (re)design, and the many structures and functions they specify. Genetic installation of solid-binding peptides (SBPs) within protein frameworks affords control over the position and orientation of adhesive and morphogenetic segments, and a path toward predictive synthesis and assembly of functional materials and devices, all while harnessing the built-in properties of the host scaffold.

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The fabrication of ordered architectures that intimately integrate polymer, protein, and inorganic components remains difficult. Two promising building blocks to tackle this challenge are peptoids, peptide mimics capable of self-assembly into well-defined structures, and solid-binding peptides, which offer a biological path to controlled inorganic assembly. Here, we report on the synthesis of 3.

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The biomimetic route to inorganic synthesis presents an opportunity to produce complex materials with superior properties under ambient conditions and from nontoxic precursors. While there has been significant progress in using solid-binding peptides (SBPs), proteins, and organisms to produce a variety of inorganic and hybrid structures, it has been more challenging to understand the interplay of solution conditions and solid-binding peptide (SBP) sequence, structure, and self-association on synthetic outcomes. Here, we show that fusing the Car9 silica-binding peptide-but not the silaffin-derived R5 peptide-to superfolder green fluorescent protein (sfGFP) enhances the ability of micromolar concentrations of protein to induce rapid titania (TiO) precipitation from acidified solutions of tetrakis(di-lactato)-oxo-titanate (TiBALDH).

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The Car9 affinity tag is a dodecameric silica-binding peptide that can be fused to the N- and C-termini of proteins of interest to enable their rapid and inexpensive purification on underivatized silica in a process that typically relies on l-lysine as an eluent. Here, we show that silica paper spin columns and borosilicate multi-well plates used for plasmid DNA purification are suitable for recovering Car9-tagged proteins with high purity in a workflow compatible with high-throughput experiments. Spin columns typically yield 100 μg of biologically active material that can be recovered in minutes with low concentrations of lysine.

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Solid-binding peptides (SBPs) recognizing inorganic and synthetic interfaces have enabled a broad range of materials science applications and hold promise as adhesive or morphogenetic control units that can be genetically encoded within desirable or designed protein frameworks. To date, the underlying relationships governing both SBP-surface and SBP-SBP interactions and how they give rise to different adsorption mechanisms remain unclear. Here, we combine protein engineering, surface plasmon resonance characterization, and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations initiated from Rosetta predictions to gain insights on the interplay of amino acid composition, structure, self-association, and adhesion modality in a panel of variants of the Car9 silica-binding peptide (DSARGFKKPGKR) fused to the C-terminus of superfolder green fluorescent protein (sfGFP).

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Combinatorially selected solid-binding peptides (SBPs) provide a versatile route for synthesizing advanced materials and devices, especially when they are installed within structurally or functionally useful protein scaffolds. However, their promise has not been fully realized because we lack a predictive understanding of SBP-material interactions. Thermodynamic and kinetic binding parameters obtained by fitting quartz crystal microbalance and surface plasmon resonance (SPR) data with the Langmuir model whose assumptions are rarely satisfied provide limited information on underpinning molecular interactions.

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Simple and robust strategies for the noncovalent functionalization of carbon nanostructures with proteins are of considerable interest in hybrid nanomaterials synthesis, part-to-part assembly, and biosensor development. Here, we show that fusion of the Car9 and Car15 carbon-binding peptides to the C-termini of the sfGFP and mCherry fluorescent proteins enables selective labeling of the ends or the sidewalls of single walled carbon nanotubes. By installing a gold-binding peptide or a single cysteine residue in carbon-binding variants of sfGFP, we further produce heterobifunctional solid-binding proteins that support the decoration of nanotubes sidewalls or termini with gold nanoparticles.

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Merging biological systems with electronic components requires converting biological ionic currents into electrical signals. Previously, we coupled green-light-activated transport of protons by a palladium-binding version of deltarhodopsin (HtdR) with electronic signal generation by exploiting palladium hydride (PdHx) formation on palladium (Pd) electrodes. Here, we broaden the scope of these devices by showing that blue proteorhodopsin (BPR) from marine bacteria is a suitable proton pump for expanding their spectral range.

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Blue-absorbing proteorhodopsin (BPR) from marine bacteria is a retinal-bound, light-activated, outwards proton transporter containing seven α-helical transmembrane segments (TMS). It is synthesized as a precursor species (pre-BPR) with a predicted N-terminal signal sequence that is cleaved to yield the mature protein. While optimizing the production of BPR in Escherichia coli to facilitate the construction of bioprotonic devices, we observed significant pre-BPR accumulation in the inner membrane and explored signal sequence requirements and export pathway.

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Rationally designed two-dimensional (2D) arrays that support the assembly of nanoscale components are of interest for catalysis, sensing, and biomedical applications. The computational redesign of a protein called TTM that undergoes calcium-induced self-assembly into nanostructured lattices capable of growing to dozens of micrometers are previously reported. The work demonstrates here that the N- and C-termini of the constituent monomers are solvent-accessible and that they can be modified with a hexahistidine extension, a gold-binding peptide, or a biotinylation tag to decorate nickel-nitriloacetic acid beads with self-assembled protein islands, conjugate gold nanoparticles to planar arrays, or control the immobilization density of avidin molecules onto 2D lattices through co-polymerization of biotinylated and wild type TTM monomers.

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Car9, a dodecapeptide identified by cell surface display for its ability to bind to the edge of carbonaceous materials, also binds to silica with high affinity. The interaction can be disrupted with l-lysine or l-arginine, enabling a broad range of technological applications. Previously, we reported that C-terminal Car9 extensions support efficient protein purification on underivatized silica.

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Combining bioorthogonal chemistry with the use of proteins engineered with adhesive and morphogenetic solid-binding peptides is a promising route for synthesizing hybrid materials with the economy and efficiency of living systems. Using optical sensing of chloramphenicol as a proof of concept, we show here that a GFP variant engineered with zinc sulfide and silica-binding peptides on opposite sides of its β-barrel supports the fabrication of protein-capped ZnS:Mn nanocrystals that exhibit the combined emission signatures of organic and inorganic fluorophores. Conjugation of a chloramphenicol-specific DNA aptamer to the protein shell through strain-promoted azide-alkyne cycloaddition and spontaneous concentration of the resulting nanostructures onto SiO particles mediated by the silica-binding sequence enables visual detection of environmentally and clinically relevant concentrations of chloramphenicol through analyte-mediated inner filtering of sub-330 nm excitation light.

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Protein entrapment within silica matrices during sol-gel formation is an effective way of producing biocatalysts with high load, activity retention, and minimal leaching. On the other hand, mesoporous silica materials have been favored for diffusional control of protein delivery because of their regular pore size and morphology and in spite of the drawback of requiring post-synthesis loading with cargo proteins. Here, we describe a hybrid technology in which fusion of the silica-binding Car9 dodecapeptide to model fluorescent proteins allows for their simultaneous entrapment and surface immobilization within sol-gel monoliths that can be fabricated in air and oil phases.

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In biological systems, intercellular communication is mediated by membrane proteins and ion channels that regulate traffic of ions and small molecules across cell membranes. A bioelectronic device with ion channels that control ionic flow across a supported lipid bilayer (SLB) should therefore be ideal for interfacing with biological systems. Here, we demonstrate a biotic-abiotic bioprotonic device with Pd contacts that regulates proton (H) flow across an SLB incorporating the ion channels Gramicidin A (gA) and Alamethicin (ALM).

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Fusion of a palladium-binding peptide to an archaeal rhodopsin promotes intimate integration of the lipid-embedded membrane protein with a palladium hydride protonic contact. Devices fabricated with the palladium-binding deltarhodopsin enable light-activated conversion of protonic currents to electronic currents with on/off responses complete in seconds and a nearly tenfold increase in electrical signal relative to those made with the wild-type protein.

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