Solution Phase Protein Adsorption to ss(GT) 15 -DNA Wrapped Single Walled Carbon Nanotubes
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Proteins in solution adsorb to the corona of nanoparticles such as single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs), but these interactions are difficult to predict and analyze due to ambiguities in the structure of the latter. In this work, we employ ss(GT) 15 -DNA wrapped SWCNTs, a commonly used fluorescent sensor construct, to examine protein adsorption by quantifying binding dissociation constants and characterizing the corresponding photophysical effects. A library of 20 proteins are used to evaluate adsorption-induced changes in photoluminescence (PL) intensity (ΔI/I 0 ) and emission wavelength upon solution phase binding. We find that 15 proteins produce monotonic dose–response behavior well described using a single-site Langmuir model. Alternatively, five proteins exhibited more complex, non-monotonic behavior consistent with a two-step binding model representing protein–protein interactions coupled to adsorption. The study reveals that metalloproteins, which comprised 12 of the 20 proteins in the library, induced greater PL quenching compared with metal-free proteins for this system, with maximum binding-associated quenching (ΔI/I 0 ) of 94% for metalloproteins versus 20% for metal-free proteins. For metalloproteins, we introduce a proximity-based quenching framework in which protein size provides a coarse proxy for cofactor–SWCNT separation, offering a mechanistic interpretation of the observed quenching variation across proteins. Together, these results establish the use of metal coordination sites, such as those in metalloproteins, to assist the transduction of certain nanoparticle fluorescent sensors, helping with sensor probe design and interpretation in biological environments.