posted on 2017-12-01, 00:00authored byKai Liu, Han Zhang, Ruirui Xing, Qianli Zou, Xuehai Yan
Biomimetic organization
provides a promising strategy to develop
functional materials and understand biological processes. However,
how to mimic complex biological systems using simple biomolecular
units remains a great challenge. Herein, we design and fabricate a
biomimetic cyanobacteria model based on self-integration of small
bioinspired molecules, including amphiphilic amino acid, 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine
(DOPA), and metalloporphyrin and cobalt oxide nanoparticles (Co3O4 NPs), with the assistance of chemical conjugation
and molecular self-assembly. The assembled amino acid fiber can be
modified by DOPA to form covalently bound DOPA melanin containing
hydroxyl and quinone species via Schiff base reaction.
The adhering template can further tune the self-assembly of metalloporphyrin
and Co3O4 NPs into J-aggregation and dispersive
distribution, respectively, mainly via coordination
binding. Metalloporphyrin molecules in the resulting hybrid fibers
capture light; quinone species accept the excited electrons, and Co3O4 NPs catalyze water oxidation. Thus, the essential
components of the photosystem-II protein complex in cyanobacteria
are simplified and engineered into a simple framework, still retaining
a similar photosynthetic mechanism. In addition, this architecture
leads to efficient coupling of antenna, quinone-type reaction center,
and photocatalyst, which increases the flux of light energy from antenna
to reaction center for charge separation, resulting in enhanced oxygen
evolution rate with excellent sustainability.