Assembly of Bacteriophage into Functional Materials

For the last decade, the fabrication of ordered structures of phage has been of great interest as a means of utilizing the outstanding biochemical properties of phage in developing useful materials. Combined with other organic/inorganic substances, it has been demonstrated that phage is a superior b...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemical record 2013-02, Vol.13 (1), p.43-59
Hauptverfasser: Yang, Sung Ho, Chung, Woo-Jae, McFarland, Sean, Lee, Seung-Wuk
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:For the last decade, the fabrication of ordered structures of phage has been of great interest as a means of utilizing the outstanding biochemical properties of phage in developing useful materials. Combined with other organic/inorganic substances, it has been demonstrated that phage is a superior building block for fabricating various functional devices, such as the electrode in lithium‐ion batteries, photovoltaic cells, sensors, and cell‐culture supports. Although previous research has expanded the utility of phage when combined with genetic engineering, most improvements in device functionality have relied upon increases in efficiency owing to the compact, more densely packable unit size of phage rather than on the unique properties of the ordered nanostructures themselves. Recently, self‐templating methods, which control both thermodynamic and kinetic factors during the deposition process, have opened up new routes to exploiting the ordered structural properties of hierarchically organized phage architectures. In addition, ordered phage films have exhibited unexpected functional properties, such as structural color and optical filtering. Structural colors or optical filtering from phage films can be used for optical phage‐based sensors, which combine the structural properties of phage with target‐specific binding motifs on the phage‐coat proteins. This self‐templating method may contribute not only to practical applications, but also provide insight into the fundamental study of biomacromolecule assembly in in vivo systems under complicated and dynamic conditions. M13 phage are assembled into functional materials by using a self‐templating process. The hierarchical assembly of phage can be controlled by competing interfacial forces at the meniscus where liquid‐crystalline phase‐transition occurs.
ISSN:1527-8999
1528-0691
DOI:10.1002/tcr.201200012