van Hest J C, Tirrell D A
Department of Organic Chemistry, University of Nijmegen, Toernooiveld 1, 6525ED Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Chem Commun (Camb). 2001 Oct 7(19):1897-904. doi: 10.1039/b105185g.
Through billions of years of evolution nature has created and refined structural proteins for a wide variety of specific purposes. Amino acid sequences and their associated folding patterns combine to create elastic, rigid or tough materials. In many respects, nature's intricately designed products provide challenging examples for materials scientists, but translation of natural structural concepts into bio-inspired materials requires a level of control of macromolecular architecture far higher than that afforded by conventional polymerization processes. An increasingly important approach to this problem has been to use biological systems for production of materials. Through protein engineering, artificial genes can be developed that encode protein-based materials with desired features. Structural elements found in nature, such as beta-sheets and alpha-helices, can be combined with great flexibility, and can be outfitted with functional elements such as cell binding sites or enzymatic domains. The possibility of incorporating non-natural amino acids increases the versatility of protein engineering still further. It is expected that such methods will have large impact in the field of materials science, and especially in biomedical materials science, in the future.
经过数十亿年的进化,大自然创造并优化了用于各种特定目的的结构蛋白。氨基酸序列及其相关的折叠模式共同构成了弹性、刚性或坚韧的材料。在许多方面,大自然精心设计的产物为材料科学家提供了具有挑战性的范例,但将自然结构概念转化为受生物启发的材料需要对大分子结构的控制水平远高于传统聚合过程所能达到的水平。解决这个问题的一种越来越重要的方法是利用生物系统来生产材料。通过蛋白质工程,可以开发出编码具有所需特性的蛋白质基材料的人工基因。自然界中发现的结构元件,如β-折叠片和α-螺旋,可以非常灵活地组合,并可以配备诸如细胞结合位点或酶结构域等功能元件。掺入非天然氨基酸的可能性进一步增加了蛋白质工程的多功能性。预计这些方法未来将在材料科学领域,尤其是生物医学材料科学领域产生重大影响。