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Modular Design for Proteins Assembling into Antifouling Coatings: Case of Gold Surfaces.

Chuanbao ZhengNicolò AlvisiRobbert Jan de HaasZhisen ZhangHan ZuilhofRenko de Vries
Published in: Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids (2023)
We analyze modularity for a B-M-E triblock protein designed to self-assemble into antifouling coatings. Previously, we have shown that the design performs well on silica surfaces when B is taken to be a silica-binding peptide, M is a thermostable trimer domain, and E is the uncharged elastin-like polypeptide (ELP), E = (GSGVP) 40 . Here, we demonstrate that we can modulate the nature of the substrate on which the coatings form by choosing different solid-binding peptides as binding domain B and that we can modulate antifouling properties by choosing a different hydrophilic block E . Specifically, to arrive at antifouling coatings for gold surfaces, as binding block B we use the gold-binding peptide GBP1 (with the sequence MHGKTQATSGTIQS), while we replace the antifouling blocks E by zwitterionic ELPs of different lengths, E Z n = (GDGVP-GKGVP) n /2 , with n = 20, 40, or 80. We find that even the B-M-E proteins with the shortest E blocks make coatings on gold surfaces with excellent antifouling against 1% human serum (HS) and reasonable antifouling against 10% HS. This suggests that the B - M - E triblock protein can be easily adapted to form antifouling coatings on any substrate for which solid-binding peptide sequences are available.
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