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Peptide contour length determines equilibrium secondary structure in protein‐analogous micelles
Author(s) -
Marullo Rachel,
Kastantin Mark,
Drews Laurie B.,
Tirrell Matthew
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
biopolymers
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.556
H-Index - 125
eISSN - 1097-0282
pISSN - 0006-3525
DOI - 10.1002/bip.22217
Subject(s) - micelle , peptide , chemistry , random coil , amphiphile , protein secondary structure , aqueous solution , sequence (biology) , moiety , self assembly , crystallography , helix (gastropod) , beta sheet , biophysics , stereochemistry , copolymer , organic chemistry , biochemistry , ecology , snail , biology , polymer
This work advances bottom‐up design of bioinspired materials built from peptide‐amphiphiles, which are a class of bioconjugates in which a biofunctional peptide is covalently attached to a hydrophobic moiety that drives self‐assembly in aqueous solution. Specifically, this work highlights the importance of peptide contour length in determining the equilibrium secondary structure of the peptide as well as the self‐assembled (i.e., micelle) geometry. Peptides used here repeat a seven‐amino acid sequence between one and four times to vary peptide contour length while maintaining similar peptide‐peptide interactions. Without a hydrophobic tail, these peptides all exhibit a combination of random coil and α‐helical structure. Upon self‐assembly in the crowded environment of a micellar corona, however, short peptides are prone to β‐sheet structure and cylindrical micelle geometry while longer peptides remain helical in spheroidal micelles. The transition to β‐sheets in short peptides is rapid, whereby amphiphiles first self‐assemble with α‐helical peptide structure, then transition to their equilibrium β‐sheet structure at a rate that depends on both temperature and ionic strength. These results identify peptide contour length as an important control over equilibrium peptide secondary structure and micelle geometry. Furthermore, the time‐dependent nature of the helix‐to‐sheet transition opens the door for shape‐changing bioinspired materials with tunable conversion rates. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 99: 573–581, 2013.