3 research outputs found
A self-reporting tetrazole-based linker for the biofunctionalization of gold nanorods.
A photochemical approach based on nitrile imine-mediated tetrazole-ene cycloaddition is introduced to functionalize gold nanorods with biomolecules. For this purpose, a bifunctional, photoreactive linker containing thioctic acid as the Au anchoring group and a tetrazole moiety for the light-induced reaction with maleimide-capped DNA was prepared. The tetrazole-based reaction on the nanoparticles' surface results in a fluorescent pyrazoline product allowing for the spectroscopic monitoring of the reaction. This first example of nitrile imine-mediated tetrazole-ene cycloaddition (NITEC)-mediated biofunctionalization of Au nanorods paves the way for the attachment of sensitive biomolecules, such as antibodies and other proteins, under mild conditions and expands the toolbox for the tailoring of nanomaterials
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A self-reporting tetrazole-based linker for the biofunctionalization of gold nanorods.
A photochemical approach based on nitrile imine-mediated tetrazole-ene cycloaddition is introduced to functionalize gold nanorods with biomolecules. For this purpose, a bifunctional, photoreactive linker containing thioctic acid as the Au anchoring group and a tetrazole moiety for the light-induced reaction with maleimide-capped DNA was prepared. The tetrazole-based reaction on the nanoparticles' surface results in a fluorescent pyrazoline product allowing for the spectroscopic monitoring of the reaction. This first example of nitrile imine-mediated tetrazole-ene cycloaddition (NITEC)-mediated biofunctionalization of Au nanorods paves the way for the attachment of sensitive biomolecules, such as antibodies and other proteins, under mild conditions and expands the toolbox for the tailoring of nanomaterials
Clickable Tyrosine Binding Bifunctional Linkers for Preparation of DNA–Protein Conjugates
We
have prepared bifunctional linkers containing clickable functional
groups that enable preparation of protein–DNA conjugates through
binding onto tyrosine residues. Mild conjugation strategy was demonstrated
using two proteins, streptavidinÂ(STV) and myoglobin (Mb) and it resulted
in conjugates with preserved functionality of both the proteins and
DNA strands. Furthermore, we show that protein–DNA conjugates
can be successfully immobilized onto solid surface containing complementary
DNA strands and the enzymatic activity of Mb–DNA conjugates
is even higher than that of corresponding conjugates prepared through
Lys binding