Resumen
Coassembling peptides offer an additional degree of freedom in the design of nanostructured biomaterials when compared to analogous self-assembling peptides. Yet, our understanding of how amino acid sequences encodes coassembled nanofiber structure is limited. Prior work on a charge-complementary pair, CATCH+ and CATCH- peptides, detected like-peptide nearest neighbors (CATCH+:CATCH+ and CATCH-:CATCH-) within coassembled β-sheet nanofibers; these self-associated peptide pairs marked a departure from an "ideal"coassembled structure. In this work, we employ solid-state NMR, isotope-edited FTIR, and coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations to evaluate the alignment of β-strands within CATCH peptide nanofibers. Both experimental and computational results suggest that CATCH molecules coassemble into structurally heterogeneous nanofibers, which is consistent with our observations in another coassembling system, the King-Webb peptides. Within β-sheet nanofibers, β-strands were found to have nearest neighbors aligned in-register parallel, in-register antiparallel, and out-of-register. In comparison to the King-Webb peptides, CATCH nanofibers exhibit a greater degree of structural heterogeneity. By comparing the amino acid sequences of CATCH and King-Webb peptides, we can begin to unravel sequence-to-structure relationships, which may encode more precise coassembled β-sheet nanostructures.
| Idioma original | English |
|---|---|
| Páginas (desde-hasta) | 4004-4015 |
| Número de páginas | 12 |
| Publicación | Journal of Physical Chemistry B |
| Volumen | 125 |
| N.º | 16 |
| DOI | |
| Estado | Published - abr 29 2021 |
Nota bibliográfica
Publisher Copyright:© 2021 American Chemical Society. All rights reserved.
Financiación
This research was supported by funds from the National Science Foundation Grants CBET-1743432 and OAC-1931430. The authors acknowledge the use of instruments in the NMR Center at the Georgia Institute of Technology.
| Financiadores | Número del financiador |
|---|---|
| U.S. Department of Energy Chinese Academy of Sciences Guangzhou Municipal Science and Technology Project Oak Ridge National Laboratory Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment National Science Foundation National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center National Natural Science Foundation of China | CBET-1743432, OAC-1931430 |
| U.S. Department of Energy Chinese Academy of Sciences Guangzhou Municipal Science and Technology Project Oak Ridge National Laboratory Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment National Science Foundation National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center National Natural Science Foundation of China |
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
- Surfaces, Coatings and Films
- Materials Chemistry