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Featured researches published by Kata Hajdu.


Current Protein & Peptide Science | 2014

Photosynthetic Machineries in Nano-Systems

László Nagy; Melinda Magyar; Tibor Szabó; Kata Hajdu; Livia Giotta; Márta Dorogi; Francesco Milano

Photosynthetic reaction centres are membrane-spanning proteins, found in several classes of autotroph organisms, where a photoinduced charge separation and stabilization takes place with a quantum efficiency close to unity. The protein remains stable and fully functional also when extracted and purified in detergents thereby biotechnological applications are possible, for example, assembling it in nano-structures or in optoelectronic systems. Several types of bionanocomposite materials have been assembled by using reaction centres and different carrier matrices for different purposes in the field of light energy conversion (e.g., photovoltaics) or biosensing (e.g., for specific detection of pesticides). In this review we will summarize the current status of knowledge, the kinds of applications available and the difficulties to be overcome in the different applications. We will also show possible research directions for the close future in this specific field.


Langmuir | 2012

Porous Silicon/Photosynthetic Reaction Center Hybrid Nanostructure

Kata Hajdu; Csilla Gergely; Marta Martin; T. Cloitre; László Zimányi; Katalin Tenger; Petro Khoroshyy; Gabriela Palestino; Vivechana Agarwal; Klára Hernádi; Zoltán Németh; László Nagy

The purified photosynthetic reaction center protein (RC) from Rhodobacter sphaeroides R-26 purple bacteria was bound to porous silicon microcavities (PSiMc) either through silane-glutaraldehyde (GTA) chemistry or via a noncovalent peptide cross-linker. The characteristic resonance mode in the microcavity reflectivity spectrum red shifted by several nanometers upon RC binding, indicating the protein infiltration into the porous silicon (PSi) photonic structure. Flash photolysis experiments confirmed the photochemical activity of RC after its binding to the solid substrate. The kinetic components of the intraprotein charge recombination were considerably faster (τ(fast) = 14 (±9) ms, τ(slow) = 230 (±28) ms with the RC bound through the GTA cross-linker and only τ(fast) = 27 (±3) ms through peptide coating) than in solution (τ(fast) = 120 (±3) ms, τ(slow) = 1387 (±2) ms), indicating the effect of the PSi surface on the light-induced electron transfer in the protein. The PSi/RC complex was found to oxidize the externally added electron donor, mammalian cytochrome c, and the cytochrome oxidation was blocked by the competitive RC inhibitor, terbutryne. This fact indicates that the specific surface binding sites on the PSi-bound RC are still accessible to external cofactors and an electronic interaction with redox components in the aqueous environment is possible. This new type of biophotonic material is considered to be an excellent model for new generation applications at the interface of silicon-based electronics and biological redox systems designed by nature.


Nanoscale Research Letters | 2012

Light-harvesting bio-nanomaterial using porous silicon and photosynthetic reaction center

Kata Hajdu; Csilla Gergely; Marta Martin; László Zimányi; Vivechana Agarwal; Gabriela Palestino; Klára Hernádi; Zoltán Németh; László Nagy

Porous silicon microcavity (PSiMc) structures were used to immobilize the photosynthetic reaction center (RC) purified from the purple bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides R-26. Two different binding methods were compared by specular reflectance measurements. Structural characterization of PSiMc was performed by scanning electron microscopy and atomic force microscopy. The activity of the immobilized RC was checked by measuring the visible absorption spectra of the externally added electron donor, mammalian cytochrome c. PSi/RC complex was found to oxidize the cytochrome c after every saturating Xe flash, indicating the accessibility of specific surface binding sites on the immobilized RC, for the external electron donor. This new type of bio-nanomaterial is considered as an excellent model for new generation applications of silicon-based electronics and biological redox systems.


Materials Science and Engineering: C | 2013

Photosynthetic reaction centers/ITO hybrid nanostructure

Tibor Szabó; Gábor Bencsik; Melinda Magyar; Csaba Visy; Zoltan Gingl; Krisztina Nagy; György Váró; Kata Hajdu; Gábor Kozák; László Nagy

Photosynthetic reaction center proteins purified from Rhodobacter sphaeroides purple bacterium were deposited on the surface of indium tin oxide (ITO), a transparent conductive oxide, and the photochemical/-physical properties of the composite were investigated. The kinetics of the light induced absorption change indicated that the RC was active in the composite and there was an interaction between the protein cofactors and the ITO. The electrochromic response of the bacteriopheophytine absorption at 771 nm showed an increased electric field perturbation around this chromophore on the surface of ITO compared to the one measured in solution. This absorption change is associated with the charge-compensating relaxation events inside the protein. Similar life time, but smaller magnitude of this absorption change was measured on the surface of borosilicate glass. The light induced change in the conductivity of the composite as a function of the concentration showed the typical sigmoid saturation characteristics unlike if the photochemically inactive chlorophyll was layered on the ITO. In this later case the light induced change in the conductivity was oppositely proportional to the chlorophyll concentration due to the thermal dissipation of the excitation energy. The sensitivity of the measurement is very high; few picomole RC can change the light induced resistance of the composite.


Nanoscale Research Letters | 2015

Structural and Functional Hierarchy in Photosynthetic Energy Conversion—from Molecules to Nanostructures

Tibor Szabó; Melinda Magyar; Kata Hajdu; Márta Dorogi; Emil Nyerki; Tünde Tóth; Mónika Lingvay; Győző Garab; Klára Hernádi; László Nagy

Basic principles of structural and functional requirements of photosynthetic energy conversion in hierarchically organized machineries are reviewed. Blueprints of photosynthesis, the energetic basis of virtually all life on Earth, can serve the basis for constructing artificial light energy-converting molecular devices. In photosynthetic organisms, the conversion of light energy into chemical energy takes places in highly organized fine-tunable systems with structural and functional hierarchy. The incident photons are absorbed by light-harvesting complexes, which funnel the excitation energy into reaction centre (RC) protein complexes containing redox-active chlorophyll molecules; the primary charge separations in the RCs are followed by vectorial transport of charges (electrons and protons) in the photosynthetic membrane. RCs possess properties that make their use in solar energy-converting and integrated optoelectronic systems feasible. Therefore, there is a large interest in many laboratories and in the industry toward their use in molecular devices. RCs have been bound to different carrier matrices, with their photophysical and photochemical activities largely retained in the nano-systems and with electronic connection to conducting surfaces. We show examples of RCs bound to carbon-based materials (functionalized and non-functionalized single- and multiwalled carbon nanotubes), transitional metal oxides (ITO) and conducting polymers and porous silicon and characterize their photochemical activities. Recently, we adapted several physical and chemical methods for binding RCs to different nanomaterials. It is generally found that the P+(QAQB)− charge pair, which is formed after single saturating light excitation is stabilized after the attachment of the RCs to the nanostructures, which is followed by slow reorganization of the protein structure. Measuring the electric conductivity in a direct contact mode or in electrochemical cell indicates that there is an electronic interaction between the protein and the inorganic carrier matrices. This can be a basis of sensing element of bio-hybrid device for biosensor and/or optoelectronic applications.


Journal of Nanomaterials | 2016

Real-Time Sensing of Hydrogen Peroxide by ITO/MWCNT/Horseradish Peroxidase Enzyme Electrode

Melinda Magyar; László Rinyu; Róbert Janovics; Péter Berki; Klára Hernádi; Kata Hajdu; Tibor Szabó; László Nagy

The accurate and sensitive determination of H2O2 is very important in many cases because it is a product of reactions catalysed by several oxidase enzymes in living cells and it is essential in environmental and pharmaceutical analyses. The fabrication of enzyme protein activity based biosensors is a very promising way for this purpose because the function of biological molecules is very specific, sensitive, and selective. Horseradish peroxidase HRP is the most commonly used enzyme for H2O2 detection because it can oxidize hydrogen atoms and, for example, xenobiotics in the presence of H2O2. In order to define the limit of detection LOD of H2O2 we made calibrations with guaiacol and amplex red AR, which are hydrogen donors of HRP. The accumulation of the reaction products, tetraguaiacol, and resorufin, respectively, then can be easily detected by absorption or emission fluorescence spectroscopy. In our experiments an enzyme electrode was fabricated from ITO indium tin oxide, functionalized multiwalled carbon nanotubes f-MWCNTs, and HRP. Although the enzyme activity was smaller by about two orders of magnitude when the enzyme was bound to the f-MWCNTs ca. 10−2 M H2O2/M HRP·sec compared to ca. 2 M H2O2/M HRP·sec and 5 M H2O2/M HRP·sec with AR and guaiacol in buffer solution, LOD of the H2O2 decomposition was about 6 pM H2O2/sec and 10 pM H2O2/sec in the case of AR and guaiacol, respectively.


Materials | 2017

Detection of Singlet Oxygen Formation inside Photoactive Biohybrid Composite Material

Kata Hajdu; Ateeq Ur Rehman; Imre Vass; László Nagy

Photosynthetic reaction center proteins (RCs) are the most efficient light energy converter systems in nature. The first steps of the primary charge separation in photosynthesis take place in these proteins. Due to their unique properties, combining RCs with nano-structures promising applications can be predicted in optoelectronic systems. In the present work RCs purified from Rhodobacter sphaeroides purple bacteria were immobilized on multiwalled carbon nanotubes (CNTs). Carboxyl—and amine-functionalised CNTs were used, so different binding procedures, physical sorption and chemical sorption as well, could be applied as immobilization techniques. Light-induced singlet oxygen production was measured in the prepared photoactive biocomposites in water-based suspension by histidine mediated chemical trapping. Carbon nanotubes were applied under different conditions in order to understand their role in the equilibration of singlet oxygen concentration in the suspension. CNTs acted as effective quenchers of 1O2 either by physical (resonance) energy transfer or by chemical (oxidation) reaction and their efficiency showed dependence on the diffusion distance of 1O2.


International Journal of Photoenergy | 2017

Functional Nanohybrid Materials from Photosynthetic Reaction Center Proteins

Kata Hajdu; Tibor Szabó; Abd Elaziz Sarrai; László Rinyu; László Nagy

Application of technical developments in biology and vice versa or biological samples in technology led to the development of new types of functional, so-called “biohybrid” materials. These types of materials can be created at any level of the biological organization from molecules through tissues and organs to the individuals. Macromolecules and/or molecular complexes, membranes in biology, are inherently good representatives of nanosystems since they fall in the range usually called “nano.” Nanohybrid materials provide the possibility to create functional bionanohybrid complexes which also led to new discipline called “nanobionics” in the literature and are considered as materials for the future. In this publication, the special characteristics of photosynthetic reaction center proteins, which are “nature’s solar batteries,” will be discussed in terms of their possible applications for creating functional molecular biohybrid materials.


Notulae Botanicae Horti Agrobotanici Cluj-napoca | 2010

Photosynthetic Reaction Centres - from Basic Research to Application Possibilities

László Nagy; Kata Hajdu; Béla Fisher; Klára Hernádi; Krisztina Nagy; János Vincze


Physica Status Solidi B-basic Solid State Physics | 2011

Photosynthetic reaction center protein in nanostructures

Kata Hajdu; Tibor Szabó; Melinda Magyar; Gábor Bencsik; Zoltán Németh; Krisztina Nagy; Arnaud Magrez; László Forró; Gyoergy Varo; Klára Hernádi; László Nagy

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Arnaud Magrez

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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László Forró

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Endre Horváth

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Krisztina Nagy

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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