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Aromatic Stacking Facilitated Self-Assembly of Ultrashort Ionic Complementary Peptide Sequence: β-Sheet Nanofibers with Remarkable Gelation and Interfacial Properties
Author(s) -
Jacek K. Wychowaniec,
Ronak Patel,
James Leach,
Rachel T. Mathomes,
Vikesh Chhabria,
Yogita PatilSen,
Araida HidalgoBastida,
Robert T. Forbes,
Joseph M. Hayes,
Mohamed A. Elsawy
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
biomacromolecules
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.689
H-Index - 220
eISSN - 1526-4602
pISSN - 1525-7797
DOI - 10.1021/acs.biomac.0c00366
Subject(s) - stacking , self assembly , nanofiber , ionic bonding , amphiphile , beta sheet , hydrogen bond , chemistry , molecular dynamics , aqueous solution , self healing hydrogels , micelle , chemical engineering , ionic liquid , nanomaterials , peptide , materials science , nanotechnology , organic chemistry , computational chemistry , polymer , molecule , copolymer , ion , biochemistry , engineering , catalysis
Understanding peptide self-assembly mechanisms and stability of the formed assemblies is crucial for the development of functional nanomaterials. Herein, we have adopted a rational design approach to demonstrate how a minimal structural modification to a nonassembling ultrashort ionic self-complementary tetrapeptide F E F K (Phe4) remarkably enhanced the stability of self-assembly into β-sheet nanofibers and induced hydrogelation. This was achieved by replacing flexible phenylalanine residue ( F ) by the rigid phenylglycine ( Phg ), resulting in a constrained analogue Phg E Phg K (Phg4), which positioned aromatic rings in an orientation favorable for aromatic stacking. Phg4 self-assembly into stable β-sheet ladders was facilitated by π-staking of aromatic side chains alongside hydrogen bonding between backbone amides along the nanofiber axis. The contribution of these noncovalent interactions in stabilizing self-assembly was predicted by in silico modeling using molecular dynamics simulations and semiempirical quantum mechanics calculations. In aqueous medium, Phg4 β-sheet nanofibers entangled at a critical gelation concentration ≥20 mg/mL forming a network of nanofibrous hydrogels. Phg4 also demonstrated a unique surface activity in the presence of immiscible oils and was superior to commercial emulsifiers in stabilizing oil-in-water (O/W) emulsions. This was attributed to interfacial adsorption of amphiphilic nanofibrils forming nanofibrilized microspheres. To our knowledge, Phg4 is the shortest ionic self-complementary peptide rationally designed to self-assemble into stable β-sheet nanofibers capable of gelation and emulsification. Our results suggest that ultrashort ionic-complementary constrained peptides or UICPs have significant potential for the development of cost-effective, sustainable, and multifunctional soft bionanomaterials.

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