4.8 Article

Surface Dependence of Protein Nanocrystal Formation

Journal

SMALL
Volume 6, Issue 3, Pages 396-403

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/smll.200901169

Keywords

adsorption kinetics; nanocrystal formation; protein self-assembly; S-layers

Funding

  1. AFOSR Biomimetics, Biomaterials, and Biointerfacial Sciences Program [FA9550-07-0313, FA9550-09-1-0342]
  2. Spanish Government [CTQ2007-66541]

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The self-assembly kinetics and nanocrystal formation of the bacterial surface-layer-protein SbpA are studied with a combination of quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring (QCM-D) and atomic force microscopy (AFM). Silane coupling agents, aminopropyltriethoxysilane (APTS) and octadecyltrichlorosilane (OTS), are used to vary the protein-surface interaction in order to induce new recrystallization pathways. The results show that the final S-layer crystal lattice parameters (a = b = 14 nm, gamma = 90 degrees), the layer thickness (15 nm), and the adsorbed mass density (1700 ng cm(-2)) are independent of the surface chemistry. Nevertheless, the adsorption rate is five times faster on APTS and OTS than on SiO2. strongly affecting protein nucleation and growth. As a consequence, protein crystalline domains of 0.02 mu m(2) for APTS and 0.05 mu m(2) for OTS are formed, while for silicon dioxide the protein domains have a typical size of about 32 mu m(2). In addition, more-rigid crystalline protein layers are formed on hydrophobic substrates. In situ AFM experiments reveal three different kinetic steps: adsorption, self-assembly, and crystalline-domain reorganization. These steps are corroborated by frequency-dissipation curves. Finally, it is shown that protein adsorption is a diffusion-driven process. Experiments at different protein concentrations demonstrate that protein adsorption saturates at 0.05 mg mL(-1) on silane-coated substrates and at 0.07 mg mL(-1) on hydrophilic silicon dioxide.

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