| Literature DB >> 27151830 |
Mark B van Eldijk1, Lise Schoonen1, Jeroen J L M Cornelissen2, Roeland J M Nolte1, Jan C M van Hest1.
Abstract
Protein cages are an interesting class of biomaterials with potential applications in bionanotechnology. Therefore, substantial effort is spent on the development of capsule-forming designer polypeptides with a tailor-made assembly profile. The expanded assembly profile of a triblock copolypeptide consisting of a metal ion chelating hexahistidine-tag, a stimulus-responsive elastin-like polypeptide block, and a pH-responsive morphology-controlling viral capsid protein is presented. The self-assembly of this multi-responsive protein-based block copolymer is triggered by the addition of divalent metal ions. This assembly process yields monodisperse nanocapsules with a 20 nm diameter composed of 60 polypeptides. The well-defined nanoparticles are the result of the emergent properties of all the blocks of the polypeptide. These results demonstrate the feasibility of hexahistidine-tags to function as supramolecular cross-linkers. Furthermore, their potential for the metal ion-mediated encapsulation of hexahistidine-tagged proteins is shown.Entities:
Keywords: block copolypeptides; elastin-like polypeptides; protein nanocapsules; self-assembly; virus-like particles
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27151830 DOI: 10.1002/smll.201503889
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Small ISSN: 1613-6810 Impact factor: 13.281