Structure, self-assembly, and properties of a truncated reflectin variant

Author:

Umerani Mehran J.,Pratakshya Preeta,Chatterjee AtrouliORCID,Cerna Sanchez Juana A.,Kim Ho Shin,Ilc Gregor,Kovačič MaticORCID,Magnan Christophe,Marmiroli BenedettaORCID,Sartori Barbara,Kwansa Albert L.,Orins Helen,Bartlett Andrew W.,Leung Erica M.,Feng Zhijing,Naughton Kyle L.,Norton-Baker Brenna,Phan Long,Long James,Allevato Alex,Leal-Cruz Jessica E.,Lin Qiyin,Baldi PierreORCID,Bernstorff SigridORCID,Plavec JanezORCID,Yingling Yaroslava G.,Gorodetsky Alon A.

Abstract

Naturally occurring and recombinant protein-based materials are frequently employed for the study of fundamental biological processes and are often leveraged for applications in areas as diverse as electronics, optics, bioengineering, medicine, and even fashion. Within this context, unique structural proteins known as reflectins have recently attracted substantial attention due to their key roles in the fascinating color-changing capabilities of cephalopods and their technological potential as biophotonic and bioelectronic materials. However, progress toward understanding reflectins has been hindered by their atypical aromatic and charged residue-enriched sequences, extreme sensitivities to subtle changes in environmental conditions, and well-known propensities for aggregation. Herein, we elucidate the structure of a reflectin variant at the molecular level, demonstrate a straightforward mechanical agitation-based methodology for controlling this variant’s hierarchical assembly, and establish a direct correlation between the protein’s structural characteristics and intrinsic optical properties. Altogether, our findings address multiple challenges associated with the development of reflectins as materials, furnish molecular-level insight into the mechanistic underpinnings of cephalopod skin cells’ color-changing functionalities, and may inform new research directions across biochemistry, cellular biology, bioengineering, and optics.

Funder

DOD | USAF | AFMC | Air Force Office of Scientific Research

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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