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Design, Synthesis, and Self-Assembly Studies of a Suite of Monodisperse, Facially Amphiphilic, Protein-Dendron Conjugates.

Britto S SandanarajPavankumar Janardhan BhandariMullapudi Mohan ReddyAkshay Bhagwan LohoteBankanidhi Sahoo
Published in: Chembiochem : a European journal of chemical biology (2019)
The custom design of protein-dendron amphiphilic macromolecules is at the forefront of macromolecular engineering. Macromolecules with this architecture are very interesting because of their ability to self-assemble into various biomimetic nanoscopic structures. However, to date, there are no reports on this concept due to technical challenges associated with the chemical synthesis. Towards that end, herein, a new chemical methodology for the modular synthesis of a suite of monodisperse, facially amphiphilic, protein-dendron bioconjugates is reported. Benzyl ether dendrons of different generations (G1-G4) are coupled to monodisperse cetyl ethylene glycol to form macromolecular amphiphilic activity-based probes (AABPs) with a single protein reactive functionality. Micelle-assisted protein labeling technology is utilized for site-specific conjugation of macromolecular AABPs to globular proteins to make monodisperse, facially amphiphilic, protein-dendron bioconjugates. These biohybrid conjugates have the ability to self-assemble into supramolecular protein nanoassemblies. Self-assembly is primarily mediated by strong hydrophobic interactions of the benzyl ether dendron domain. The size, surface charge, and oligomeric state of protein nanoassemblies could be systematically tuned by choosing an appropriate dendron or protein of interest. This chemical method discloses a new way to custom-make monodisperse, facially amphiphilic, protein-dendron bioconjugates.
Keyphrases
  • protein protein
  • amino acid
  • binding protein
  • drug delivery
  • electronic health record
  • cancer therapy
  • bone regeneration
  • adverse drug