Functional and Selective Bacterial Interfaces Using Cross-Scaffold Gold Binding Peptides

We investigated the functional and selective activity of three phage-derived gold-binding peptides on the Escherichia coli ( E. coli ) bacterial cell surface display scaffold (eCPX) for the first time. Gold-binding peptides, p3-Au12 (LKAHLPPSRLPS), p8#9 (VSGSSPDS), and Midas-2 (TGTSVLIATPYV), were c...

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Veröffentlicht in:JOM (1989) 2015-11, Vol.67 (11), p.2483-2493
Hauptverfasser: Adams, Bryn L., Hurley, Margaret M., Jahnke, Justin P., Stratis-Cullum, Dimitra N.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We investigated the functional and selective activity of three phage-derived gold-binding peptides on the Escherichia coli ( E. coli ) bacterial cell surface display scaffold (eCPX) for the first time. Gold-binding peptides, p3-Au12 (LKAHLPPSRLPS), p8#9 (VSGSSPDS), and Midas-2 (TGTSVLIATPYV), were compared side-by-side through experiment and simulation. All exhibited strong binding to an evaporated gold film, with approximately a 4-log difference in binding between each peptide and the control sample. The increased affinity for gold was also confirmed by direct visualization of samples using Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM). Peptide dynamics in solution were performed to analyze innate structure, and all three were found to have a high degree of flexibility. Preferential binding to gold over silicon for all three peptides was demonstrated, with up to four orders of magnitude selectivity exhibited by p3-Au12. The selectivity was also clearly evident through SEM analysis of the boundary between the gold film and silicon substrate. Functional activity of bound E. coli cells was further demonstrated by stimulating filamentation and all three peptides were characterized as prolific relative to control samples. This work shows great promise towards functional and active bacterial–hybrid gold surfaces and the potential to enable the next generation living material interfaces.
ISSN:1047-4838
1543-1851
DOI:10.1007/s11837-015-1662-7