Publication | Open Access
Stable Formation of Gold Nanoparticles onto Redox‐Active Solid Biosubstrates Made of Squid Suckerin Proteins
14
Citations
31
References
2015
Year
NanoparticlesNanomedicineBiofunctional MaterialEngineeringMetallic NanoparticlesNanomaterialsNanotechnologyNanobiotechnologyGold NanoparticlesMetal NanoparticlesRedox-active TyrosineBiofabricationBio-based NanomaterialsBiomedical EngineeringStable FormationSquid Suckerin ProteinsProtein NanoparticlesBiomolecular Engineering
The use of biomolecules to synthesize inorganic nanomaterials, including metallic nanoparticles, offers the ability to induce controlled growth under mild environmental conditions. Here, recently discovered silk-like "suckerin" proteins are used to induce the formation of gold nanoparticles (AuNPs). Advantage is taken of the distinctive biological and physico-chemical characteristics of suckerins, namely their facile recombinant expression, their solubility in aqueous solutions, and their modular primary structure with high molar content of redox-active tyrosine (Tyr) residues to induce the formation of AuNPs not only in solution, but also from nanostructured solid substrates fabricated from suckerins.
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