Investigation of Few-Layer Graphene-Ubiquitin Interactions with Optical Spectroscopy Techniques
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Date
2025
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MDPI
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Abstract
Understanding the molecular mechanisms of protein-nanoparticle interactions is crucial for enabling the development of new applications in biomedicine and nanotechnology. Ubiquitin, an important and structurally small functional protein, plays a central role in numerous cellular processes. Therefore, in the current study, we focused on the few-layer graphene (FLG)-Ubiquitin complexes formed by exfoliating FLG structures using only water. Optical spectroscopic techniques (Raman, FT-IR, UV-Vis and circular dichroism) were employed to investigate these complexes on the molecular level. Overall, both CD and FT-IR data reveal that the formation of the FLG-Ubiquitin complexes occurred without inducing disordered structures in the protein. Based on the existence of a blue shift (hypsochromic shift) in the UV-Vis data, the presence of a single tyrosine and two phenylalanine residues in ubiquitin enables the detection of FLG-induced micro-environmental changes, particularly influencing the protein's beta-sheet and alpha-helix structures. The CD spectral results and CDPro quantitative estimations are in line with ATR FT-IR results, confirming the absence of disordered structure formation while altering the protein's chirality. UV-Vis and CD spectroscopy results revealed concentration-dependent trends consistent with FLG-protein interactions that preserve the overall protein structure. This study has potential applications in both academic research and practical usage, particularly in biomedicine and nanotechnology specifically for FLG.
Description
Güler, Günnur/0000-0002-8485-7372
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Keywords
Nanoparticle-Protein Interaction, Protein Secondary Structure, Optical Spectroscopy, Ubiquitin, Few-Layer Graphene, FT-IR, CD, Raman, UV-Vis
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Q2
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Q1

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N/A
Source
Nanomaterials
Volume
15
Issue
24
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Scopus : 0
