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Biosensor to probe fibrous/not fibrous polypeptides
3rd International Conference on Nanotek & Expo
December 02-04, 2013 Hampton Inn Tropicana, Las Vegas, NV, USA

U.L. Fulco

Posters: J Nanomed Nanotechnol

Abstract:

The focus of this work is on the numerical investigation of the charge transport properties of the de novo -designed alpha3 polypeptide, a 21-residue with three repeats of the seven-residue sequence Leu-Glu-Thr-Leu-Ala-Lys-Ala, as well as its variants (the so-called 5Q-alpha3 and 7Q-alpha3 peptides), all of them probed by gene engineering. The theoretical model makes use of a tight-binding Hamiltonian within the density functional theory approach. We investigate if the biased alpha3 polypeptide and its variants can be identified by charge transport measurements through current-voltage (IxV) curves, as a pattern to characterize their fibrous assemblies. We found that, from their IxV profiles, the alpha3 peptide, that has the most fibrous assemblies, shows the smaller current saturation; the 5Q-alpha3 variant, which forms fibrous assemblies more attenuated than those of the alpha3 peptide, has a current saturation higher than alpha3, but smaller than 7Q-alpha3 ; finally, the 7Q-alpha3 variant does not form fibrils and shows the highest current saturation, suggesting that charge transport in peptides can turn to be a useful tool for the development of biosensors to probe the onset of amyloidosis- like diseases. We hope that this biomedical application of the charge transport in proteins and polypeptides should stimulate experimental and engineering technological development.

Biography :

U.L. Fulco is a Ph.D. student at the Department of Biophysics, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, in Natal-RN, Brazil. The focus of his Ph.D. thesis is in the field of NanoBiotechnology, mainly with the investigation of charge transport in polypeptides and the development of biosensor devices.