DocumentCode
922703
Title
S-layer proteins as supporting scaffoldings for functional lipid membranes
Author
Schuster, Bernhard ; Gufler, Petra C. ; Pum, Dietmar ; Sleytr, Uwe B.
Author_Institution
Center for NanoBiotechnol., Univ. of Natural Resources & Appl. Life Sci., Vienna, Austria
Volume
3
Issue
1
fYear
2004
fDate
3/1/2004 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
16
Lastpage
21
Abstract
A great challenge is the coupling of very sensitive microelectronic devices to wet biological systems in the generation of biomimetic sensors. Lipid membranes on solid supports (electrodes or semiconductors) may become the matrix of future bioelectronic devices probing and controlling biomolecular processes for scientific and technical applications. A sufficient electrical isolation between the coupling region and the surrounding electrolyte is mandatory. An attached lipid membrane with integral natural or designed proteins may be the material of choice if the biological components are kept in a proper environment. To retain the fluidity and stability of the lipid membrane and to provide an ion reservoir and space for bulky integral proteins, a separating layer composed of crystalline arrays of monomolecular proteinaceous subunits, termed S-layer, can be self-assembled on metal or semiconductor surfaces. In this way S-layer-supported lipid membranes are biomimetic structures mimicking the supramolecular principle of archeal cell envelopes. These composite architectures may ascend toward exciting new key devices, particularly in fields of membrane protein-based biosensors or lab-on-a-chip technology.
Keywords
biomimetics; biomolecular electronics; biosensors; lipid bilayers; molecular biophysics; proteins; self-assembly; S-layer proteins; archeal cell envelopes; bioelectronic devices; biomimetic sensors; biomolecular processes; electrodes; functional lipid membranes; lab-on-a-chip technology; membrane protein-based biosensors; microelectronic devices; self-assembled monomolecular proteinaceous subunits; semiconductors; supporting scaffoldings; wet biological systems; Biological materials; Biological systems; Biomembranes; Biosensors; Electrodes; Lipidomics; Microelectronics; Process control; Proteins; Solids; Bacterial Proteins; Biomimetics; Biosensing Techniques; Cell Membrane; Membrane Glycoproteins; Membrane Lipids;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
NanoBioscience, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1536-1241
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TNB.2004.824267
Filename
1273502
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