Self-Assembled Peptide-Labeled Probes for Agglutination-Based Sensing

Macromol Res. 2021 Sep;29(9):577-581. doi: 10.1007/s13233-021-9079-3. Epub 2021 Sep 25.

Abstract

The use of polydiacetylene (PDA) vesicles in sensing systems are wide-spread due to the interesting optical properties of this stimuli-responsive material; however, agglutination based sensing with PDA have been relatively underutilized. To demonstrate the means for rapidly generating an agglutination probe based on peptide-displaying polydiacetylene vesicles, we implement here the use of a biotin mimetic peptide functionalized to a diacetylene amphiphile for proof-of-concept detection of a multivalent target, specifically streptavidin. Tuning of the vesicle composition revealed a distinct limit in the surface density of peptide amphiphile that could be displayed for this particular peptide sequence. A wide operational detection range was demonstrated, and the result also revealed an effective agglutination response of the PDA-based probe to streptavidin suggesting possible use of future formulations in profiling other multivalent targets.

Keywords: agglutination; amphiphile; detection; peptide; polydiacetylene.