Supramolecular Assembly of Molecularly Engineered Protein and Polymer

2019 
: Programmable assembly of biomolecules is a fast growing research area that aims to emulate nature's elegance in creating numerous hierarchical self-assembled structures, which are responsible for unimaginably difficult biological functions. Protein assembly is a particularly challenging task, owing to their structural diversity, conformational heterogeneity, and high molecular weight. This article reveals the ability of a supramolecular structure-directing unit (SSDU) to regulate the entropically favourable supramolecular assembly of a covalently conjugated protein (bovine serum albumin (BSA)) to produce well-defined protein-decorated micelles with remarkably high thermal stability, suppression of the thermal denaturation of the protein, and retention of enzymatic activity. Furthermore, a SSDU-appended thermo-responsive poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM) co-assembles with the SSDU-BSA conjugate because, in both cases, assembly was primarily driven by specific molecular recognition between the SSDUs. However, the resulting supramolecular protein-polymer conjugate exhibits distinctly different polymersome structure to that of the micellar particle produced by the protein-SSDU conjugate. In this case, the enzymatic activity can be significantly suppressed above the lower critical solution temperature of supramolecularly conjugated PNIPAM, possibly due to collapse of the de-solvated polymer chains on the protein surface.
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