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Turn-on fluorescence detection of protein by molecularly imprinted hydrogels based on supramolecular assembly of peptide multi-functional blocks

Authors :
Paolo A. Netti
Nunzia Di Luise
Nadia Rega
Filippo Causa
Greta Donati
Umberto Raucci
Pasqualina Liana Scognamiglio
Edmondo Battista
Battista, Edmondo
Scognamiglio, Pasqualina L.
Di Luise, Nunzia
Raucci, Umberto
Donati, Greta
Rega, Nadia
Netti, Paolo A.
Causa, Filippo
Source :
Journal of Materials Chemistry B. 6:1207-1215
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC), 2018.

Abstract

Synthetic receptors for biomacromolecules lack the supramolecular self-assembly behavior typical of biological systems. Here we propose a new method for the preparation of protein imprinted polymers based on the specific interaction of a peptide multi-functional block with a protein target. This peptide block contains a protein-binding peptide domain, a polymerizable moiety at the C-terminus and an environment-sensitive fluorescent molecule at the N-terminus. The method relies on a preliminary step consisting of peptide/protein supramolecular assembly, followed by copolymerization with the most common acrylate monomers (acrylamide, acrylic acid and bis-acrylamide) to produce a protein imprinted hydrogel polymer. Such a peptide block can function as an active assistant recognition element to improve affinity, and guarantees its effective polymerization at the protein/cavity interface, allowing for proper placement of a dye. As a proof of concept, we chose Bovine Serum Albumin (BSA) as the protein target and built the peptide block around a BSA binding dodecapeptide, with an allyl group as the polymerizable moiety and a dansyl molecule as the responsive dye. Compared to conventional approaches these hydrogels showed higher affinity (more than 45%) and imprinted sensitivity (about twenty fold) to the target, with a great BSA selectivity with respect to ovalbumin (alpha = 1.25) and lysozyme (alpha = 6.02). Upon protein binding, computational and experimental observations showed a blue shift of the emission peak (down to 440 nm) and an increase of fluorescence emission (twofold) and average lifetime (Delta(tau) = 4.3 ns). Such an approach generates recognition cavities with controlled chemical information and represents an a priori method for self-responsive materials. Provided a specific peptide and minimal optimization conditions are used, such a method could be easily implemented for any protein target.

Details

ISSN :
20507518 and 2050750X
Volume :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Materials Chemistry B
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....abfd865c724dd0280f7a0bcbe93633a6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1039/c7tb03107f