Login / Signup

A Bioinspired Light Harvesting System in Aqueous Medium: Highly Efficient Energy Transfer through the Self Assembly of β-Sheet Nanostructures of Poly-d-Lysine.

Atanu NandySaptarshi Mukherjee
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2022)
Nature has beautifully assembled its light harvesting pigments within protein scaffolds, which ensures a very high energy transfer. Designing a highly efficient artificial bioinspired light harvesting system (LHS) thus requires the nanoscale spatial orientation and electronic control of the associated chromophores. Although DNA has been used as a scaffold to organize chromophores, proteins or polypeptides, however, are very rarely explored. Here, we have developed a highly efficient, artificial, bioinspired LHS using polypeptide (poly-d-lysine, PDL) nanostructures making use of their β-sheet structure in an aqueous alkaline medium. The chromophores used herein are compatible for an energy transfer process and are nonfluorescent in an aqueous medium but exhibit high fluorescence intensity when bound to the nanostructure of PDL. The close proximity of the chromophores results in an energy transfer efficiency of ∼92% besides generating white light emission at a particular molar ratio between the chromophores.
Keyphrases
  • energy transfer
  • highly efficient
  • quantum dots
  • ionic liquid
  • amino acid
  • tissue engineering
  • circulating tumor
  • single molecule
  • cell free
  • protein protein
  • binding protein