| Literature DB >> 31246354 |
Jerry A Fereiro1, Ben Kayser1, Carlos Romero-Muñiz2, Ayelet Vilan1, Dmitry A Dolgikh3, Rita V Chertkova3, Juan Carlos Cuevas2, Linda A Zotti2, Israel Pecht4, Mordechai Sheves5, David Cahen1.
Abstract
A sample-type protein monolayer, that can be a stepping stone to practical devices, can behave as an electrically driven switch. This feat is achieved using a redox protein, cytochrome C (CytC), with its heme shielded from direct contact with the solid-state electrodes. Ab initio DFT calculations, carried out on the CytC-Au structure, show that the coupling of the heme, the origin of the protein frontier orbitals, to the electrodes is sufficiently weak to prevent Fermi level pinning. Thus, external bias can bring these orbitals in and out of resonance with the electrode. Using a cytochrome C mutant for direct S-Au bonding, approximately 80 % of the Au-CytC-Au junctions show at greater than 0.5 V bias a clear conductance peak, consistent with resonant tunneling. The on-off change persists up to room temperature, demonstrating reversible, bias-controlled switching of a protein ensemble, which, with its built-in redundancy, provides a realistic path to protein-based bioelectronics.Entities:
Keywords: bioelectronic junction; electron transfer; on-off switching; resonant tunneling
Year: 2019 PMID: 31246354 DOI: 10.1002/anie.201906032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ISSN: 1433-7851 Impact factor: 15.336