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The Formation and Self‐Assembly of Long Prebiotic Oligomers Produced by the Condensation of Unactivated Amino Acids on Oxide Surfaces
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Citations
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References
2014
Year
Supramolecular AssemblyBioorganic ChemistryEngineeringMolecular Self-assemblyTio 2ChemistryPolymersSio 2Unactivated Amino AcidsBiochemistryBiopolymersCatalysisMolecular ModelingOxide SurfacesBiomolecular EngineeringSurface FunctionalizationSurface ChemistryNatural SciencesSelf-assemblyGlycine Oligomers
Abstract In situ IR and mass spectrometry evidence for the catalytic formation on SiO 2 and TiO 2 surfaces of glycine oligomers (poly‐Gly) up to 16 units long by successive feeding with monomers from the vapor phase is presented. Parallel experiments carried out on hydroxyapatite resulted in the unreactive adsorption of Gly, thus indicating that the oligomerization was specifically catalyzed by the surfaces of SiO 2 and TiO 2 . Furthermore, the poly‐Gly moved on the surface when contacted with H 2 O vapor and formed self‐assembled aggregates containing both helical and β‐sheet‐like structural motifs. These results indicate that polypeptides formed by the condensation of amino acids adsorbed on a mineral surface can evolve into structured supramolecular assemblies.
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