Article, 2024

The secondary structure of diatom silaffin peptide R5 determined by two-dimensional infrared spectroscopy

Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics, ISSN 1463-9084, 1364-5455, 1463-9076, 0956-5000, Volume 26, 27, Pages 18538-18546, 10.1039/d4cp00970c

Contributors

Thomassen, Asger Berg 0009-0005-9503-5189 [1] Jansen, Thomas La Cour 0000-0001-6066-6080 [2] Weidner, Tobias 0000-0002-7083-7004 [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Aarhus University
  2. [NORA names: AU Aarhus University; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  3. [2] University of Groningen
  4. [NORA names: Netherlands; Europe, EU; OECD]

Abstract

Diatoms, unicellular marine organisms, harness short peptide repeats of the protein silaffin to transform silicic acid into biosilica nanoparticles. This process has been a white whale for material scientists due to its potential in biomimetic applications, ranging from medical to microelectronic fields. Replicating diatom biosilicification will depend on a thorough understanding of the silaffin peptide structure during the reaction, yet existing models in the literature offer conflicting views on peptide folding during silicification. In our study, we employed two-dimensional infrared spectroscopy (2DIR) within the amide I region to determine the secondary structure of the silaffin repeat unit 5 (R5), both pre- and post-interaction with silica. The 2DIR experiments are complemented by molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of pure R5 reacting with silicate. Subsequently, theoretical 2DIR spectra calculated from these MD trajectories allowed us to compare calculated spectra with experimental data, and to determine the diverse structural poses of R5. Our findings indicate that unbound R5 predominantly forms β-strand structures alongside various atypical secondary structures. Post-silicification, there's a noticeable shift: a decrease in β-strands coupled with an increase in turn-type and bend-type configurations. We theorize that this structural transformation stems from silicate embedding within R5's hydrogen-bond network, prompting the peptide backbone to contract and adapt around the biosilica precursors.

Keywords

B strands, I region, MD trajectories, R5, Unit 5, acid, amide, amide I region, applications, biomimetic applications, biosilica, biosilica nanoparticles, biosilicification, comparing calculated spectra, configuration, contraction, data, decrease, diatoms, dynamics, embedding, experimental data, experiments, field, findings, hydrogen bond network, increase, literature, literature offer, marine organisms, materials, materials scientists, microelectronics field, model, molecular dynamics, nanoparticles, network, offerings, organization, peptide, peptide structure, pose, potential, pre-, precursor, process, reaction, scientists, secondary structure, shift, silaffins, silica, silicate, silicic acid, silicification, simulation, spectra, spectroscopy, structural transformation, structure, structure poses, study, trajectory, transformation, two-dimensional infrared spectroscopy, unicellular marine organisms, views, whales, white whales

Funders

  • European Research Council
  • Carlsberg Foundation
  • European Commission

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