Ever
since the discovery of carbon nanotubes in the
early 1990s, scientists and engineers have been
fascinated by the possibilities for these little
tubes made of organic materials in the fields of
microelectronics, substance separation, and biomedicine.
Freiburg researchers have now produced novel nanotube
hybrids from peptides and polymers: nanotubes made
of cyclic peptides are coated with a soft polymeric
plastic shell.
Cyclic peptides are small molecules whose amino acid
chains form a ring. The amino and acid groups, as
well as the hydrogen atom can be arranged in two
ways around the first carbon atom (known as the "alpha
C-atom") of an amino
acid. This allows the molecule to have either a "left" or a "right" configuration.
While mother nature uses almost exclusively "left" amino acids in proteins,
the team headed by Markus Biesalski at IMTEK (Institute
of Microsystem Technology) are building up cyclic peptides according to the "one
right, one left" scheme, a technique that has been pioneered by Reza Ghadiri
( Scripps Institute , San Diego). Such
peptide rings organize themselves into a tiny tubular structure. All of the
peptide side chains stick out of the tube, leaving a cavity inside. The dimensions
of the tube are determined by the number of amino acid building blocks in the
peptide rings.
The special trick in this case is that some of the side chains selected are
of a type that can act as starting points for the growth of artificial polymer
chains. They can thus form a strongly bound shell of soft plastic around the
relatively hard peptide nanotube. In their initial experiments, the researchers
used N-isopropylacrylamide as the molecular building block for the polymer.
Images obtained with an atomic force microscope revealed solvent-free ("dry")
individual rod-shaped objects about 80 nm long and 12 nm high.
The plastic used is not toxic and has interesting physical properties. In a
certain temperature range, the polymer matrix collapses. This property could
be useful in biomedicine, for drug transport, as an example: an enclosed drug
could be released at a specific target in the body. Numerous other applications
can also be imagined for these hybrid materials.
This new principle is very versatile: "By varying the type of polymer, the
density of attachment points, and the chain length, we are able to produce
hybrid nanotubes with tunable properties," says Biesalski. "We are now carrying
out systematic studies to this end in our laboratory."
To view the abstract or full article ("Peptide-Polymer Hybrid Nanotubes"),
visit www.interscience.wiley.com
Contact:
Dr. M. Biesalski Institut für Mikrosystemtechnik
(IMTEK)
Albert-Ludwigs-Universität
Freiburg
Georges-Köhler-Allee 103
D-79110 Freiburg
Germany
Tel.: (+49) 761-203-7162
Fax: (+49) 761-203-7163
biesalsk@imtek.de
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