Abstract
We report the induction of chiroptical properties in 2 nm diameter gold nanoparticles passivated with short peptides characterized by the Aib-L-Ala repetition in their sequence. The nanoparticles present relevant ECD signals in the 300-650 nm wavelength region, corresponding to the gold nanoparticle's quantized electronic structure. Although the only chiral amino acid present in the peptide sequences is L-Ala, the particles show mirror image spectra like those of enantiomers according to the number of amino acids in the main chain (odd or even). Such a behavior appears to be strongly influenced by the secondary structure assumed by the peptides when passivating the nanoparticles and vanishes when the sequence is long enough to assume a 3(10)-helix conformation. Moreover, chirality control is a reversible process and can be deactivated or reactivated by increasing or decreasing the temperature.