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Achieving regioselective materials binding using multidomain peptides.

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The ability to integrate two disparate materials-binding domains into a single ligand to achieve regiospecific binding would be powerful to direct material assembly; however, this has proven challenging to achieve… Click to show full abstract

The ability to integrate two disparate materials-binding domains into a single ligand to achieve regiospecific binding would be powerful to direct material assembly; however, this has proven challenging to achieve due to cross-materials binding. Accomplishing this goal might be achieved by harnessing the precision of biology to exploit the recognition between peptides and specific nanomaterials. Here, a designed bifunctional molecule termed Biomolecular Exfoliant and Assembly Motifs (BEAM) is introduced, featuring two different materials-binding peptide domains, one for graphene and one for hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN), at each end of the molecule, separated by a fatty acid spacer. The BEAM is demonstrated to bind strongly to both graphene and h-BN surfaces, and in each case the materials-binding peptide domain is shown to preferentially bind its target material. Critically, the two materials-binding domains exhibited limited cross-domain interaction. The BEAM design concept shows substantial potential to eventually guide self-organization of a range of materials in aqueous media.

Keywords: materials binding; binding using; using multidomain; achieving regioselective; multidomain peptides; regioselective materials

Journal Title: Nanoscale
Year Published: 2022

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