Issue 8, 2013

Controlled biosilification using self-assembled short peptides A6K and V6K

Abstract

We report the molecular self-assembly of two amphiphilic peptides (A6K and V6K) and the application of their self-assemblies as organic templates to direct biosilica formation. Under ambient conditions, A6K self-assembled into nanotubes 2.7 nm tall and approximately 1 μm to 2 μm long. In contrast, V6K self-assembled into lamellar-stack nanostructures approximately 4 nm tall and under 100 nm long. The self-assembled peptide nanostructures were used as organic templates to direct biosilica formation. Comparing with the self-assembled structures formed by the peptide/anions system, novel silica morphologies can be obtained by changing the peptide composition, using different anions, and applying electrostatic/flow fields. We observed that the presence of anions is important but not enough to produce ordered silica structures with novel morphologies. This study provides further understanding of silica biomineralization tailored by assembled peptides, which offers a simple but efficient method to control the formation of inorganic material.

Graphical abstract: Controlled biosilification using self-assembled short peptides A6K and V6K

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
10 Sep 2012
Accepted
18 Dec 2012
First published
20 Dec 2012

RSC Adv., 2013,3, 2784-2793

Controlled biosilification using self-assembled short peptides A6K and V6K

Q. Wang, J. Yu, X. Zhang, D. Liu, J. Zheng, Y. Pan and Y. Lin, RSC Adv., 2013, 3, 2784 DOI: 10.1039/C2RA22099G

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