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Featured researches published by Linlu Zhao.


ACS Nano | 2014

Quantum-Dot-Induced Self-Assembly of Cricoid Protein for Light Harvesting

Lu Miao; Jishu Han; Hao Zhang; Linlu Zhao; Chengye Si; Xiyu Zhang; Chunxi Hou; Quan Luo; Jiayun Xu; Junqiu Liu

Stable protein one (SP1) has been demonstrated as an appealing building block to design highly ordered architectures, despite the hybrid assembly with other nano-objects still being a challenge. Herein, we developed a strategy to construct high-ordered protein nanostructures by electrostatic self-assembly of cricoid protein nanorings and globular quantum dots (QDs). Using multielectrostatic interactions between 12mer protein nanoring SP1 and oppositely charged CdTe QDs, highly ordered nanowires with sandwich structure were achieved by hybridized self-assembly. QDs with different sizes (QD1, 3-4 nm; QD2, 5-6 nm; QD3, ∼10 nm) would induce the self-assembly protein rings into various nanowires, subsequent bundles, and irregular networks in aqueous solution. Atomic force microscopy, transmission electron microscopy, and dynamic light scattering characterizations confirmed that the size of QDs and the structural topology of the nanoring play critical functions in the formation of the superstructures. Furthermore, an ordered arrangement of QDs provides an ideal scaffold for designing the light-harvesting antenna. Most importantly, when different sized QDs (e.g., QD1 and QD3) self-assembled with SP1, an extremely efficient Förster resonance energy transfer was observed on these protein nanowires. The self-assembled protein nanostructures were demonstrated as a promising scaffold for the development of an artificial light-harvesting system.


ACS Nano | 2016

Micelle-Induced Self-Assembling Protein Nanowires: Versatile Supramolecular Scaffolds for Designing the Light-Harvesting System

Hongcheng Sun; Xiyu Zhang; Lu Miao; Linlu Zhao; Quan Luo; Jiayun Xu; Junqiu Liu

Organic nanoparticle induced self-assembly of proteins with periodic nanostructures is a promising and burgeoning strategy to develop functional biomimetic nanomaterials. Cricoid proteins afford monodispersed and well-defined hollow centers, and can be used to multivalently interact with geometrically symmetric nanoparticles to form one-dimensional protein nanoarrays. Herein, we report that core-cross-linked micelles can direct cricoid stable protein one (SP1) to self-assembling nanowires through multiple electrostatic interactions. One micelle can act as an organic nanoparticle to interact with two central concaves of SP1 in an opposite orientation to form a sandwich structure, further controlling the assembly direction to supramolecular protein nanowires. The reported versatile supramolecular scaffolds can be optionally manipulated to develop multifunctional integrated or synergistic biomimetic nanomaterials. Artificial light-harvesting nanowires are further developed to mimic the energy transfer process of photosynthetic bacteria for their structural similarity, by means of labeling donor and acceptor chromophores to SP1 rings and spherical micelles, respectively. The absorbing energy can be transferred within the adjacent donors around the ring and shuttling the collected energy to the nearby acceptor chromophore. The artificial light-harvesting nanowires are designed by mimicking the structural characteristic of natural LH-2 complex, which are meaningful in exploring the photosynthesis process in vitro.


ACS Nano | 2017

Enzyme-Triggered Defined Protein Nanoarrays: Efficient Light-Harvesting Systems to Mimic Chloroplasts

Linlu Zhao; Haoyang Zou; Hao Zhang; Hongcheng Sun; Tingting Wang; Tiezheng Pan; Xiumei Li; Yushi Bai; Shanpeng Qiao; Quan Luo; Jiayun Xu; Chunxi Hou; Junqiu Liu

The elegance and efficiency by which chloroplasts harvest solar energy and conduct energy transfer have been a source of inspiration for chemists to mimic such process. However, precise manipulation to obtain orderly arranged antenna chromophores in constructing artificial chloroplast mimics was a great challenge, especially from the structural similarity and bioaffinity standpoints. Here we reported a design strategy that combined covalent and noncovalent interactions to prepare a protein-based light-harvesting system to mimic chloroplasts. Cricoid stable protein one (SP1) was utilized as a building block model. Under enzyme-triggered covalent protein assembly, mutant SP1 with tyrosine (Tyr) residues at the designated sites can couple together to form nanostructures. Through controlling the Tyr sites on the protein surface, we can manipulate the assembly orientation to respectively generate 1D nanotubes and 2D nanosheets. The excellent stability endowed the self-assembled protein architectures with promising applications. We further integrated quantum dots (QDs) possessing optical and electronic properties with the 2D nanosheets to fabricate chloroplast mimics. By attaching different sized QDs as donor and acceptor chromophores to the negatively charged surface of SP1-based protein nanosheets via electrostatic interactions, we successfully developed an artificial light-harvesting system. The assembled protein nanosheets structurally resembled the natural thylakoids, and the QDs can achieve pronounced FRET phenomenon just like the chlorophylls. Therefore, the coassembled system was meaningful to explore the photosynthetic process in vitro, as it was designed to mimic the natural chloroplast.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2018

Cucurbit[8]uril-Based Giant Supramolecular Vesicles: Highly Stable, Versatile Carriers for Photoresponsive and Targeted Drug Delivery

Cuihua Hu; Ningning Ma; Fei Li; Yu Fang; Yao Liu; Linlu Zhao; Shanpeng Qiao; Xiumei Li; Xiaojia Jiang; Tiezhu Li; Fangzhong Shen; Yibing Huang; Quan Luo; Junqiu Liu

Highly stable giant supramolecular vesicles were constructed by hierarchical self-assembly of cucurbit[8]uril (CB[8])-based supra-amphiphiles for photoresponsive and targeted intracellular drug delivery. These smart vesicles can encapsulate the model drugs with high loading efficiencies and then release them by manipulating photoswitchable CB[8] heteroternary complexation to regulate the formation and dissociation of supra-amphiphiles that cause dramatic morphological changes of the assemblies to achieve remote optically controlled drug delivery. More importantly, the confocal microscopy analysis, cellular uptake experiment, and cell viability assay have shown that the giant vesicles are able to maintain the structural integrity and stability within actual cellular environments and exhibit obvious advantages for intracellular drug delivery such as low toxicity, easy surface modification for tumor-targeting selectivity, and rapid internalization into different human cancer cell lines. A synergistic mechanism that integrates multiple pathways including energy-dependent endocytosis, macropinocytosis, cholesterol-dependent endocytosis, and microtubule-related endocytosis was determined to facilitate the internalization process. Moreover, cytotoxicity experiments and flow cytometric analysis have demonstrated that the doxorubicin hydrochloride-loaded vesicles exhibited a significant therapeutic effect for tumor cells upon UV light irradiation, which makes the photoresponsive system more promising for potential applications in pharmaceutically relevant fields.


Science China-chemistry | 2016

Protein self-assembly: technology and strategy

Linlu Zhao; Shanpeng Qiao; Junqiu Liu

Proteins, as the premier building blocks in nature, exhibit extraordinary ability in life activities during which process proteins mostly self-assemble into large complexes to exert prominent functions. Inspired by this, recent chemical and biological studies mainly focus on supramolecular self-assembly of proteins into high ordered architectures, especially the assembly strategy to unravel the formation and function of protein nanostructures. In this review, we summarize the progress made in the engineering of supramolecular protein architectures according to the strategies used to control the orientation and the order of the assembly process. Furthermore, potential applications in biomedical areas of the supramolecular protein nanostructures will also be reviewed.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2017

Supramolecular Protein Assemblies Based on DNA Templates

Chunxi Hou; Shuwen Guan; Ruidi Wang; Wei Zhang; Fanchao Meng; Linlu Zhao; Jiayun Xu; Junqiu Liu

DNA plays an important role in the process of protein assembly. DNA viruses such as the M13 virus are typical examples in which single DNA genomes behave as templates to induce the assembly of multiple major coat protein (PVIII) monomers. Thus, the design of protein assemblies based on DNA templates attracts much interest in the construction of supramolecular structures and materials. With the development of DNA nanotechnology, precise 1D and 3D protein nanostructures have been designed and constructed by using DNA templates through DNA-protein interactions, protein-ligand interactions, and protein-adapter interactions. These DNA-templated protein assemblies show great potential in catalysis, medicine, light-responsive systems, drug delivery, and signal transduction. Herein, we review the progress on DNA-based protein nanostructures that possess sophisticated nanometer-sized structures with programmable shapes and stimuli-responsive parameters, and we present their great potential in the design of biomaterials and biodevices in the future.


Journal of Materials Chemistry B | 2018

Photocontrolled protein assembly for constructing programmed two-dimensional nanomaterials

Linlu Zhao; Yijia Li; Tingting Wang; Shanpeng Qiao; Xiumei Li; Ruidi Wang; Quan Luo; Chunxi Hou; Jiayun Xu; Junqiu Liu

Precise self-assembly of proteins with structural heterogeneity, flexibility, and complexity into programmed arrays to mimic the exquisite architectures created by Nature is a great challenge for the development of protein-based functional nanomaterials. Herein, we present a strategy that integrates light stimuli and covalent coupling to prepare size-tunable two-dimensional (2D) protein nanostructures by remote photocontrol. Using Ru(bpy)3 2+ as a photosensitizer, stable protein one (SP1) was redesigned and self-assembled into nanosheets in the presence of ammonium persulfate (APS) through a rapid and efficient oxidative protein crosslinking reaction. In the design, only a serine-to-tyrosine mutation at position 98 was introduced into SP1 by combining computer simulation and genetic engineering for specific covalent coupling under white light illumination. The chemical and topographical specificities of the photosensitized crosslinking reaction allow control of the direction of protein assembly to form extended 2D nanosheets, which are packed in an orderly manner along the lateral surface of ring-shaped SP1S98Y. Notably, the growth of SP1 nanosheets exhibited isotropical characteristics and can be dynamically mediated by illumination time to achieve precise control of the size of the assembled architectures. The subsequent heat treatment further revealed the excellent thermostability of the 2D periodic SP1 nanostructures, which may find promising applications in the fabrication of various nanobiomaterials after functionalization. The present work demonstrates that the visible light-triggered crosslinking strategy is a facile and environmentally friendly method for constructing advanced protein architectures through hierarchical self-assembly.


Angewandte Chemie | 2013

Construction of Protein Nanowires through Cucurbit[8]uril‐based Highly Specific Host–Guest Interactions: An Approach to the Assembly of Functional Proteins

Chunxi Hou; Jiaxi Li; Linlu Zhao; Wei Zhang; Quan Luo; Zeyuan Dong; Jiayun Xu; Junqiu Liu


Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2014

Construction of a highly stable artificial glutathione peroxidase on a protein nanoring

Lu Miao; Xiyu Zhang; Chengye Si; Yuzhou Gao; Linlu Zhao; Chunxi Hou; Oded Shoseyov; Quan Luo; Junqiu Liu


Chemical Communications | 2016

The construction of functional protein nanotubes by small molecule-induced self-assembly of cricoid proteins

Lu Miao; Qiusheng Fan; Linlu Zhao; Qinglong Qiao; Xiyu Zhang; Chunxi Hou; Jiayun Xu; Quan Luo; Junqiu Liu

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