posted on 2025-03-25, 23:33authored byJuan David Figueroa, Sergio D. Garcia Schejtman, Ryan Tu, Marcelo Muñoz, Francisca Salas-Sepúlveda, Horacio Poblete, Marc-André Langlois, Erik J. Suuronen, Emilio I. Alarcón
Ultrashort peptides hold immense potential as structural
tools
for enhancing the colloidal stability of nanomaterials, such as nanogold.
However, such applications have been largely unexplored in part due
to the inherent complexity in designing, synthesizing, and testing
short peptides as colloidal nanoparticle stabilizers. In this work,
we use a motif-function-guided process for peptide synthesis and high
throughput screening to evaluate the colloidal stability of spherical
nanogold solutions and pentapeptides. We have successfully built a
library of peptides capable of stabilizing colloidal nanogold at peptide
concentrations of ≤1.0 μM. This represents a 50–100-fold
reduction in the concentration required for stability compared to
other small molecules used as capping agents, which illustrates the
potential of using short peptide sequences as colloidal nanogold stabilizers.
Our findings could significantly impact the future development of
high-affinity surface modifiers for the custom engineering of nanogold
by providing a deeper understanding of the complex interactions between
nanoparticles and peptides.