4.7 Article

Interference of Solvatochromic Twist in Amyloid Nanostructure for Light-Driven Biocatalysis

Journal

ACS APPLIED ENERGY MATERIALS
Volume 3, Issue 1, Pages 1215-+

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsaem.9b02303

Keywords

amyloid; diphenylalanine; self-assembly; solvatochromism; photobiocatalysis

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation (NRF) via the Creative Research Initiative Center, Republic of Korea [NRF-2015 R1A3A2066191]

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Amyloid self-assembly is a powerful bottom-up approach for the synthesis of sophisticated organic nanostructures that possess fascinating structural flexibility. This study adds a dimension to the research on amyloid self-assembly by expanding its scope to the field of photobiocatalysis. We demonstrate visible-light-driven regeneration of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD(+)) using solvatochromic Congo red (CR) hybridized with an amyloid-derived peptide (Fmoc-FF) nanostructure. In the course of an in situ self-assembly process of Fmoc-FF peptides, CR molecules were hybridized into a Fmoc-FF nanofiber network through pi-pi interactions between the nonpolar fluorenyl group of Fmoc-FF and the aromatic moieties of CR. This hybridization made dyes capable of photoredox catalysis planarization of CR induced by the Fmoc-FF degenerated the twisted intramolecular charge-transfer state of the dye; the incorporation of CR into the Fmoc-FF nanostructure increased CR's fluorescence intensity 9 times and generated a photocurrent by 400 nA cm(-2). The photocatalytic Fmoc-FF/CR hydrogel facilitated O-2 reduction-coupled NAD(+) regeneration under visible light. The NAD(+) regeneration yield of the Fmoc-FF/CR hybrid was 5 times higher than that of free CR Furthermore, the in situ regenerated NAD(+) activated NAD(+)-dependent redox enzymes for alcohol oxidation; the Fmoc-FF/CR hybrid achieved a substantially high total turnover number of enzymes of 42 953, which was 5.8 times larger than that with free CR.

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