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Structure of Self-assembled Peptide Determines the Activity of Aggregation-Induced Emission Luminogen-Peptide Conjugate for Detecting Alkaline Phosphatase

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posted on 2022-01-19, 05:13 authored by Liping Zhang, Yun Li, Ganen Mu, Lijun Yang, Chunhua Ren, Zhongyan Wang, Qingxiang Guo, Jianfeng Liu, Cuihong Yang
The unique property of turning on their fluorescence after aggregation or assembly makes aggregation-induced emission luminogens (AIEgens) ideal luminescent molecules for the construction of self-assembled peptide-based nanoprobes. However, the characteristic highly twisted or propeller-shaped molecular conformation of AIEgens tends to prevent the assembly of AIEgen-peptides. Here, we show that (i) the distance between tetraphenylethene (TPE) and assembled peptides should not be too far (less than five glycines), otherwise the self-assembly of peptides cannot limit the intramolecular rotation of conjugated TPE and the luminous efficiency of TPE-peptide to alkaline phosphatase (ALP) will decrease; (ii) properly increasing the number of amino acids with self-assembly ability (three phenylalanines) can improve their ALP-responsive self-assembly and luminescence ability; (iii) the strategy of co-assembly with a non-AIEgen-capped self-assembled peptide is a simple and effective way to realize the efficient assembly and luminescence of AIEgen-peptides; and (iv) the hydrophilic and hydrophobic balance of the probe should always be considered in the construction of an efficient AIEgen-peptide probe. In addition, AIEgen-peptide probes show good selectivity and sensitivity for ALP detection both in vitro and in live bacteria. These insights illustrated here are crucial for guiding the design of AIEgen-conjugated supramolecular materials, especially for the construction of AIEgen-peptides, for enzymes detection, biomarker imaging, diseases therapy, and other biomedical fields.

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