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Tripeptide Self-Assembled Monolayers as Biocompatible Surfaces for Cytochrome Electrochemistry. | LitMetric

Tripeptide Self-Assembled Monolayers as Biocompatible Surfaces for Cytochrome Electrochemistry.

Langmuir

Department of Chemistry, Saint Francis University, 169 Lakeview Drive, P.O. Box 600, Loretto, Pennsylvania15940, United States.

Published: January 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Biocompatible tripeptide self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) were engineered with a carboxylate group to attract lysine around the cytochrome heme site, forming a specialized electroactive structure on a gold electrode.
  • Exposure of the peptide/Au electrode to cytochrome led to a measured surface coverage of 11 ± 3 pmol/cm, and atomic force microscopy provided detailed images of the protein layer with minimal surface roughness.
  • Electrochemical analysis showed that the protein's surface charge impacts its redox behavior, with shifts in formal potential and accelerated electron transfer rates observed for cytochrome when bound to tripeptide/Au compared to traditional SAMs.

Article Abstract

Biocompatible tripeptide self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) are designed with a carboxylate group on the terminal amino acid (glutamate, aspartate, or amino adipate) to electrostatically attract the lysine groups around the heme crevice in horse heart cytochrome (cyt ), creating an electroactive protein/tripeptide/Au interfacial structure. Exposing the peptide/Au electrode to cyt resulted in an 11 ± 3 pmol/cm electroactive protein surface coverage. Topographical images of the interfacial structure are obtained down to single-protein resolution by atomic force microscopy. Uniform protein monolayer assemblies are formed on the Au electrode with no major surface roughness changes. The cyt /peptide/Au electrode systems were examined electrochemically to probe surface charge effects on the redox thermodynamics and kinetics of cyt . Neutralization of protein surface charge due to adsorption on anionic COOH-terminated SAMs was found to change the formal potential, as determined by cyclic voltammetry. The cyt /peptide/Au electrodes exhibit formal potentials shifted to more positive values, have a surface carboxylic acid p of 6 or higher, and produce effective cyt surface charges () of -6 to -14. The Marcus theory is utilized to determine the protein electron transfer rates, which are ∼5 times faster for cyt /tripeptide/Au compared to cyt /11-mercaptoundecanoic acid SAMs of similar chain lengths.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.langmuir.2c02682DOI Listing

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