16 research outputs found

    Charge Crowding Promotes Self-Assembly of Collagen Hetrotrimers

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    Chemiluminescence based immunoassay for the detection of heroin and its metabolites

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    Introduction: Continuous use of opiates causes drug-related illnesses, which poses an alarming situation to develop sensitive detection platform. In this study, a highly sensitive and reliable chemiluminescence immunoassay (CI) has been developed for the detection of heroin and its major metabolites in spiked urine samples. Methods: To develop robust immunoassay, monoacetyl morphine-bovine serum albumin (MAM-BSA) conjugate was synthesized and characterized thoroughly by physicochemical techniques. The anti-MAM antibodies were developed, labeled with horseradish peroxidase (HRP) and immunoassay was developed to detect the presence of target drug in spiked urine samples. Results: A competitive CI was developed, where heroin, MAM, morphine, and codeine concentration were ranged from 0-1000 ng/ mL in spiked urine samples and limit of detection were 80, 95, 90, 75 pg/ mL. Conclusion: The developed CI is highly sensitive, specific, point of care, cost-effective and can be used as a routine technique for quantitative analysis for screening of narcotic drugs

    Investigations on tailoring physical properties of RF magnetron sputtered Cadmium Sulphide thin films

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    The effect of nitrogen (N2) partial pressure on the structure and bandgap tunability of RF magnetron sputtered Cadmium Sulphide (CdS) thin films is investigated by varying N2 partial pressure in Ar/N2 mixture. In presence of N2, films have a polycrystalline structure with (002) preferential orientation, which leads to defect-free, continuous, dense, and fibrous structures with increased roughness. The average optical transmittance increased to > 80 at 500–2500 nm for 30 % N2 partial pressure, whereas the band gap decreases from 2.45 eV to 2.30 eV with increasing N2 concentration. This work shows that the bandgap of sputtered CdS thin films can be tuned with the variation of N2 concentration for customized applications

    Dissecting Electrostatic Contributions to Folding and Self-Assembly Using Designed Multicomponent Peptide Systems

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    We investigate formation of nano- to microscale peptide fibers and sheets where assembly requires association of two distinct collagen mimetic peptides (CMPs). The multicomponent nature of these designs allows the decoupling of amino acid contributions to peptide folding versus higher-order assembly. While both arginine and lysine containing CMP sequences can favor triple-helix folding, only arginine promotes rapid supramolecular assembly in each of the three two-component systems examined. Unlike lysine, the polyvalent guanidyl group of arginine is capable of both intra- and intermolecular contacts, promoting assembly. This is consistent with the supramolecular diversity of CMP morphologies observed throughout the literature. It also connects CMP self-assembly with a broad range of biomolecular interaction phenomena, providing general principles for modeling and design

    Self-Assembly of Left- and Right-Handed Molecular Screws

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    Stereoselectivity is a hallmark of biomolecular processes from catalysis to self-assembly, which predominantly occur between homochiral species. However, both homochiral and heterochiral complexes of synthetic polypeptides have been observed where stereoselectivity hinges on details of intermolecular interactions. This raises the question whether general rules governing stereoselectivity exist. A geometric ridges-in-grooves model of interacting helices indicates that heterochiral associations should generally be favored in this class of structures. We tested this principle using a simplified molecular screw, a collagen peptide triple-helix composed of either l- or d-proline with a cyclic aliphatic side chain. Calculated stabilities of like- and opposite-handed triple-helical pairings indicated a preference for heterospecific associations. Mixing left- and right-handed helices drastically lowered solubility, resulting in micrometer-scale sheet-like assemblies that were one peptide-length thick as characterized with atomic force microscopy. X-ray scattering measurements of interhelical spacing in these sheets support a tight ridges-in-grooves packing of left- and right-handed triple helices
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