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Photoinduced Amyloid Fibril Degradation for Controlled Cell Patterning
Author(s) -
Kaygisiz Kübra,
Ender Adriana M.,
Gačanin Jasmina,
Kaczmarek L. Alix,
Koutsouras Dimitrios A.,
Nalakath Abin N.,
Winterwerber Pia,
Mayer Franz J.,
Räder HansJoachim,
Marszalek Tomasz,
Blom Paul W. M.,
Synatschke Christopher V.,
Weil Tanja
Publication year - 2023
Publication title -
macromolecular bioscience
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.924
H-Index - 105
eISSN - 1616-5195
pISSN - 1616-5187
DOI - 10.1002/mabi.202200294
Subject(s) - fibril , biophysics , extracellular matrix , chemistry , chinese hamster ovary cell , cell adhesion , peptide , amyloid (mycology) , cell , biochemistry , biology , inorganic chemistry , receptor
Amyloid‐like fibrils are a special class of self‐assembling peptides that emerge as a promising nanomaterial with rich bioactivity for applications such as cell adhesion and growth. Unlike the extracellular matrix, the intrinsically stable amyloid‐like fibrils do not respond nor adapt to stimuli of their natural environment. Here, a self‐assembling motif (CKFKFQF), in which a photosensitive o ‐nitrobenzyl linker (PCL) is inserted, is designed. This peptide (CKFK‐PCL‐FQF) assembles into amyloid‐like fibrils comparable to the unsubstituted CKFKFQF and reveals a strong response to UV‐light. After UV irradiation, the secondary structure of the fibrils, fibril morphology, and bioactivity are lost. Thus, coating surfaces with the pre‐formed fibrils and exposing them to UV‐light through a photomask generate well‐defined areas with patterns of intact and destroyed fibrillar morphology. The unexposed, fibril‐coated surface areas retain their ability to support cell adhesion in culture, in contrast to the light‐exposed regions, where the cell‐supportive fibril morphology is destroyed. Consequently, the photoresponsive peptide nanofibrils provide a facile and efficient way of cell patterning, exemplarily demonstrated for A549, Chinese Hamster Ovary, and Raw Dual type cells. This study introduces photoresponsive amyloid‐like fibrils as adaptive functional materials to precisely arrange cells on surfaces.