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Control of peptide nanotube diameter by chemical modifications of an aromatic residue involved in a single close contact

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 16:52 authored by Christophe Tarabout, Stephane Roux, Frederic Gobeaux, Nicolas Fay, Emilie Pougete, Cristelle Meriadec, Melinda Ligeti, Daniel Thomas, Maarten Ijsselstijn, Francois Besselievre, David Buisson, Jean Marc Verbavatz, Michel Petitjean, Celine ValeryCeline Valery, Lionel Perrin, Bernard Rousseau, Franck Artzner, Maite Paternostre, Jean-Christophe Cintrat
Supramolecular self-assembly is an attractive pathway for bottom-up synthesis of novel nanomaterials. In particular, this approach allows the spontaneous formation of structures of well-defined shapes and monodisperse characteristic sizes. Because nanotechnology mainly relies on size-dependent physical phenomena, the control of monodispersity is required, but the possibility of tuning the size is also essential. For self-assembling systems, shape, size, and monodispersity are mainly settled by the chemical structure of the building block. Attempts to change the size notably by chemical modification usually end up with the loss of self-assembly. Here, we generated a library of 17 peptides forming nanotubes of monodisperse diameter ranging from 10 to 36 nm. A structural model taking into account close contacts explains how a modification of a few Å of a single aromatic residue induces a fourfold increase in nanotube diameter. The application of such a strategy is demonstrated by the formation of silica nanotubes of various diameters.

History

Journal

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (PNAS)

Volume

108

Issue

19

Start page

7679

End page

7684

Total pages

6

Publisher

National Academy of Sciences

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2011 National Academy of Sciences

Former Identifier

2006049244

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-01-16

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