Self-Assembled Monolayers As a Tool to Investigate the Effect of Surface Chemistry on Protein Nucleation
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteEditorial
American Chemical Society
Date
2023-03-31Referencia bibliográfica
Artusio, F. et al. Self-Assembled Monolayers As a Tool to Investigate the Effect of Surface Chemistry on Protein Nucleation. Cryst. Growth Des. 2023, 23, 3195−3201 [https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.cgd.2c01377]
Patrocinador
Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation/FEDER funds AEI/10.13039/501100011033 PID2020-116261GB-I00Résumé
Modified surfaces like siliconized glass are commonly used to support
protein crystallization and facilitate obtaining crystals. Over the years, various
surfaces have been proposed to decrease the energetic penalty required for
consistent protein clustering, but scarce attention has been paid to the underlying
mechanisms of interactions. Here, we propose self-assembled monolayers that are
surfaces exposing fine-tuned moieties with a very regular topography and
subnanometer roughness, as a tool to unveil the interaction between proteins and
functionalized surfaces. We studied the crystallization of three model proteins having
progressively narrower metastable zones, i.e., lysozyme, catalase, and proteinase K,
on monolayers exposing thiol, methacrylate, and glycidyloxy groups. Thanks to
comparable surface wettability, the induction or the inhibition of nucleation was
readily attributed to the surface chemistry. For example, thiol groups strongly
induced the nucleation of lysozyme thanks to electrostatic pairing, whereas
methacrylate and glycidyloxy groups had an effect comparable to unfunctionalized
glass. Overall, the action of surfaces led to differences in nucleation kinetics, crystal habit, and even crystal form. This approach can
support the fundamental understanding of the interaction between protein macromolecules and specific chemical groups, which is
crucial for many technological applications in the pharmaceutical and food industry.