화학공학소재연구정보센터
Langmuir, Vol.30, No.24, 7152-7161, 2014
Silica Morphogenesis by Lysine-Leucine Peptides with Hydrophobic Periodicity
The use of biomimetic approaches in the production of inorganic nanostructures is of great interest to the scientific and industrial community due to the relatively moderate physical conditions needed. In this vein, taking cues from silaffin proteins used by unicellular diatoms, several studies have identified peptide candidates for the production of silica nanostructures. In the current article, we study intensively one such silica-precipitating peptide, LK alpha 14 (Ac-LKKLLICLLKKLLKL-c), an amphiphilic lysine/leucine repeat peptide that self-organizes into an alpha-helical secondary structure under appropriate concentration and buffer conditions. The suggested mechanism of precipitation is that the sequestration of hydrophilic lysines on one side of this helix allows interaction with the negatively charged surface of silica nanoparticles, which in turn can aggregate further into larger structures. To investigate the process, we carry out 1D and 2D solid-state NMR (ssNMR) studies on samples with one or two uniformly C-13- and N-15-labeled residues to determine the backbone and side-chain chemical shifts. We also further study the dynamics of two leucine residues in the sequence through C-13 spin-lattice relaxation times (T-1) to determine the impact of silica coprecipitation on their mobility. Our results confirm the alpha-helical secondary structure in both the neat and silica-complexed states of the peptide, and the patterns of chemical shift and relaxation time changes between the two states suggest possible mechanisms of self-aggregation and silica precipitation.