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Exploiting Localized Surface Binding Effects to Enhance the Catalytic Reactivity of Peptide-Capped Nanoparticles

Year: 2013

Journal: J. Am. Chem. Soc., 2013, 135 (30), pp 11048–11054, 20131001

Authors: Ryan Coppage 1, Joseph M. Slocik 2, Hadi Ramezani-Dakhel 3, Nicholas M. Bedford 1 2, Hendrik Heinz 3, Rajesh R. Naik 2*, and Marc R. Knecht 1*

Last authors: Marc R. Knecht

Organizations: 1 Department of Chemistry, University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida 33146, United States 2 Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio 45433-7702, United States 3 Department of Polymer Engineering, University of Akron, Akron, Ohio, 44325, United States

Country: USA, US, United States, United States of America, America

Peptide-based methods represent new approaches to selectively produce nanostructures with potentially important functionality. Unfortunately, biocombinatorial methods can only select peptides with target affinity and not for the properties of the final material. In this work, we present evidence to demonstrate that materials-directing peptides can be controllably modified to substantially enhance particle functionality without significantly altering nanostructural morphology. To this end, modification of selected residues to vary the site-specific binding strength and biological recognition can be employed to increase the catalytic efficiency of peptide-capped Pd nanoparticles. These results represent a step toward the de novo design of materials-directing peptides that control nanoparticle structure/function relationships.