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Article
Biomimetic interactions of proteins with functionalized nanoparticies: A thermodynamic study
Journal of the American Chemical Society (2007)
  • M De
  • CC You
  • S Srivastava
  • VM Rotello
Abstract

Gold nanoparticles (NPs) functionalized with L-amino acid-terminated monolayers provide an effective platform for the recognition of protein surfaces. Isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) was used to quantify the binding thermodynamics of these functional NPs with alpha-chymotrypsin (ChT), histone, and cytochrome c (CytC). The enthalpy and entropy changes for the complex formation depend upon the nanoparticle structure and the surface characteristics of the proteins, e.g., distributions of charged and hydrophobic residues on the surface. Enthalpy-entropy compensation studies on these NP-protein systems indicate an excellent linear correlation between DeltaH and TDeltaS with a slope (alpha) of 1.07 and an intercept (TDeltaS0) of 35.2 kJ mol(-1). This behavior is closer to those of native protein-protein systems (alpha = 0.92 and TDeltaS0 = 41.1 kJ mol(-1)) than other protein-ligand and synthetic host-guest systems.

Disciplines
Publication Date
August 2, 2007
Publisher Statement
doi:10.1021/ja071642q Copyright © 2007 American Chemical Society
Citation Information
M De, CC You, S Srivastava and VM Rotello. "Biomimetic interactions of proteins with functionalized nanoparticies: A thermodynamic study" Journal of the American Chemical Society Vol. 129 Iss. 35 (2007)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/vincent_rotello/83/