4.8 Article Proceedings Paper

Exploring the recognized bio-mimicry materials for gas sensing

Journal

BIOSENSORS & BIOELECTRONICS
Volume 16, Issue 9-12, Pages 945-953

Publisher

ELSEVIER ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY
DOI: 10.1016/S0956-5663(01)00215-9

Keywords

synthetic peptide; olfactory receptor; docking; molecular recognition; gas sensing probe

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This study was undertaken to synthesize peptides that are partially similar to the binding sites of human olfactory receptor protein. First, a putative 3-D model structure of human olfactory receptor protein (P30953) was modeled using a molecular simulation method. The computer docking simulation was then performed to determine the most plausible binding sites between the model structure and target gases, trimethylamine, ammonia, acetic acid, and o-xylene. According to the simulation result, a series of polypeptide sequences, horp61 for TMA, horp103 for o-xylene, horp109 for ammonia, and horp193 for acetic acid as recognized molecules were designed for gas sensing purposes. Preparing these peptides as corresponding gas sensing probes, the results showed a high relative sensitivity response of 6.7 for TMA (probe horp61), 5.1 for o-xylene (probe horp103), 11 for ammonia (probe horp109), and 28 for acetic acid (probe horp193), respectively. These results indicate that peptide mimicking of binding domain on olfactory receptor opens a new window and offers a novel strategy for the further development of recognized materials for gas sensing. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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