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1.
Protein Sci ; 27(7): 1243-1251, 2018 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29493033

ABSTRACT

The repetitive self-assembled structure of amyloid can serve as inspiration to design functional materials. Herein, we describe the design of α/ß6, a peptide that contains distinct α-helical and ß-structure forming domains. The folding and association state of each domain can be controlled by temperature. At low temperatures, the α-domain favors a coiled-coil state while the ß-domain is unstructured. Irreversible fibril formation via self-assembly of the ß-domain is triggered at high temperatures where the α-domain is unfolded. Resultant fibrils serve as templates upon which reversible coiled coil formation of the α-domain can be thermally controlled. At concentrations of α/ß6 ≥ 2.5 wt%, the peptide forms a mechanically defined hydrogel highlighting the possibility of designing materials whose function can be actively modulated by controlling the folded state of proteins displayed from the surface of fibrils that constitute the gel.


Subject(s)
Hydrogels/chemistry , Peptides/chemistry , Peptides/genetics , Protein Folding , Amino Acid Sequence , Models, Molecular , Protein Structure, Secondary , Thermodynamics
2.
Curr Pharm Biotechnol ; 14(2): 199-208, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23167760

ABSTRACT

Better understanding of protein higher order structures (HOS) is of major interest to researchers in the field of biotechnology and biopharmaceutics. Monitoring a protein's HOS is crucial towards understanding the impact of molecular conformation on the biotechnological application. In addition, maintaining the HOS is critical for achieving robust processes and developing stable formulations of therapeutic proteins. Loss of HOS contributes to increased aggregation, enhanced immunogenicity and loss of function. Selecting the proper biophysical methods to monitor the secondary and tertiary structures of therapeutic proteins remains the central question in this field. In this study, both Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) and vibrational circular dichroism (VCD) spectroscopy are employed to characterize the secondary structures of various proteins as a function of temperature and pH. Three proteins with different secondary structures were examined, human serum albumin (HSA), myoglobin, and the monoclonal antibody, ofatumumab. This work demonstrates that VCD is useful technique for monitoring subtle secondary structure changes of protein therapeutics that may occur during processing or handling.


Subject(s)
Antibodies, Monoclonal/chemistry , Circular Dichroism , Myoglobin/chemistry , Serum Albumin/chemistry , Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized , Humans , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Protein Structure, Secondary , Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared , Temperature
3.
Langmuir ; 28(14): 6076-87, 2012 Apr 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22390812

ABSTRACT

ß-hairpin peptide-based hydrogels are a class of injectable solid hydrogels that can deliver encapsulated cells or molecular therapies to a target site via syringe or catheter injection as a carrier material. These physical hydrogels can shear-thin and consequently flow as a low-viscosity material under a sufficient shear stress but immediately recover back into a solid upon removal of the stress, allowing them to be injected as preformed gel solids. Hydrogel behavior during flow was studied in a cylindrical capillary geometry that mimicked the actual situation of injection through a syringe needle in order to quantify effects of shear-thin injection delivery on hydrogel flow behavior and encapsulated cell payloads. It was observed that all ß-hairpin peptide hydrogels investigated displayed a promising flow profile for injectable cell delivery: a central wide plug flow region where gel material and cell payloads experienced little or no shear rate, and a narrow shear zone close to the capillary wall where gel and cells were subject to shear deformation. The width of the plug flow region was found to be weakly dependent on hydrogel rigidity and flow rate. Live-dead assays were performed on encapsulated MG63 cells 3 h after injection flow and revealed that shear-thin delivery through the capillary had little impact on cell viability and the spatial distribution of encapsulated cell payloads. These observations help us to fundamentally understand how the gels flow during injection through a thin catheter and how they immediately restore mechanically and morphologically relative to preflow, static gels.


Subject(s)
Hydrogels/chemistry , Mechanical Phenomena , Peptides/chemistry , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Capsules , Cell Line, Tumor , Injections , Microscopy, Confocal , Molecular Sequence Data , Rats
4.
Biopolymers ; 94(1): 141-55, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20091872

ABSTRACT

Peptide self-assembly can be used as a bottom-up approach to material fabrication. Although many different types of materials can be prepared from peptides, hydrogels are perhaps one of the most common. Gels typically result from the self-assembly of peptides into fibrillar networks. Controlling the structural morphology of these fibrils and the networks they form allows direct control over a given material's bulk properties. However, exerting this control is extremely difficult as the mechanistic rules that govern peptide self-assembly are far from being established. Conversely, several amyloidogenic proteins have been shown to self-assemble into fibrils using a mechanism known as domain swapping. Here, discrete units of secondary structure or even whole domains are exchanged (swapped) among discrete proteins during self-assembly to form extended networks with precise structural control. This review discusses several common mechanistic variations of domain swapping using naturally occurring proteins as examples. The possibility of using these principles to design peptides capable of controlled assembly and fibril formation leading to materials with targeted properties is explored.


Subject(s)
Hydrogels/chemistry , Peptides/chemistry , Protein Conformation , Amino Acid Sequence , Models, Molecular , Molecular Sequence Data , Protein Engineering , Proteins/chemistry
5.
Soft Matter ; 6(20): 5143-5156, 2010 Oct 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21566690

ABSTRACT

ß-Hairpin peptide-based hydrogels are a class of injectable hydrogel solids with significant potential use in injectable therapies. ß-hairpin peptide hydrogels can be injected as preformed solids, because the solid gel can shear-thin and consequently flow under a proper shear stress but immediately recover back into a solid on removal of the stress. In this work, hydrogel behavior during and after flow was studied in order to facilitate fundamental understanding of how the gels flow during shear-thinning and how they quickly recover mechanically and morphologically relative to their original, pre-flow properties. While all studied ß-hairpin hydrogels shear-thin and recover, the duration of shear and the strain rate affected both the gel stiffness immediately recovered after flow and the ultimate stiffness obtained after complete rehealing of the gel. Results of structural analysis during flow were related to bulk rheological behavior and indicated gel network fracture into large (>200 nm) hydrogel domains during flow. After cessation of flow the large hydrogel domains are immediately percolated which immediately reforms the solid hydrogel. The underlying mechanisms of the gel shear-thinning and healing processes are discussed relative to other shear-responsive networks like colloidal gels and micellar solutions.

6.
ACS Nano ; 4(1): 181-8, 2010 Jan 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20028097

ABSTRACT

Self-assembly represents a robust and powerful paradigm for the bottom-up construction of nanostructures. Templated condensation of silica precursors on self-assembled nanoscale peptide fibrils with various surface functionalities can be used to mimic biosilicification. This template-defined approach toward biomineralization was utilized for the controlled fabrication of 3D hybrid nanostructures. The peptides MAX1 and MAX8 used herein form networks consisting of interconnected, self-assembled beta-sheet fibrils. We report a study on the structure--property relationship of self-assembled peptide hydrogels where mineralization of individual fibrils through sol--gel chemistry was achieved. The nanostructure and consequent mechanical characteristics of these hybrid networks can be modulated by changing the stoichiometric parameters of the sol--gel process. The physical characterization of the hybrid networks via electron microscopy and small-angle scattering is detailed and correlated with changes in the network mechanical behavior. The resultant high fidelity templating process suggests that the peptide substrate can be used to template the coating of other functional inorganic materials.


Subject(s)
Biomimetics , Mechanical Phenomena , Peptides/chemistry , Silicon Dioxide/chemistry , Hydrogels/chemistry , Microscopy, Electron, Transmission , Rheology , Scattering, Small Angle , X-Ray Diffraction
7.
Biochemistry ; 48(2): 424-32, 2009 Jan 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19102631

ABSTRACT

The success of arsenic trioxide in the treatment of acute promyelocytic leukemia has renewed interest in the cellular targets of As(III) species. The effects of arsenicals are usually attributed to their ability to bind vicinal thiols or thiol selenols in prefolded proteins thereby compromising cellular function. The present studies suggest an additional, more pleiotropic, contribution to the biological effects of arsenicals. As(III) species, by avid coordination to the cysteine residues of unfolded reduced proteins, can compromise protein folding pathways. Three representative As(III) compounds (arsenite, monomethylarsenous acid (MMA), and an aryl arsenical (PSAO)) have been tested with three reduced secreted proteins (lysozyme, ribonuclease A, and riboflavin binding protein (RfBP)). Using absorbance, fluorescence, and pre-steady-state methods, we show that arsenicals bind tightly to low micromolar concentrations of these unfolded proteins with stoichiometries of 1 As(III) per 2 thiols for MMA and PSAO and 1 As(III) for every 3 thiols with arsenite. Arsenicals, at 10 microM, strongly disrupt the oxidative folding of RfBP even in the presence of 5 mM reduced glutathione, a competing ligand for As(III) species. MMA catalyzes the formation of amyloid-like monodisperse fibrils using reduced RNase. These in vitro data show that As(III) species can slow, or even derail, protein folding pathways. In vivo, the propensity of As(III) species to bind to unfolded cysteine-containing proteins may contribute to oxidative and protein folding stresses that are prominent features of the cellular response to arsenic exposure.


Subject(s)
Arsenic/metabolism , Arsenic/pharmacology , Protein Folding/drug effects , Proteins/metabolism , Animals , Arsenites/metabolism , Arsenites/pharmacology , Binding Sites , Cattle , Chickens , Disulfides/chemistry , Dithiothreitol/pharmacology , Escherichia coli/genetics , Glutathione/pharmacology , Humans , Kinetics , Membrane Transport Proteins/chemistry , Membrane Transport Proteins/metabolism , Models, Chemical , Muramidase/metabolism , Oxidation-Reduction , Protein Binding , Protein Disulfide-Isomerases/metabolism , Ribonuclease, Pancreatic/isolation & purification , Ribonuclease, Pancreatic/metabolism , Ribonuclease, Pancreatic/ultrastructure
8.
Macromolecules ; 42(18): 7137-7145, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21566682

ABSTRACT

Physically cross-linked, fibrillar hydrogel networks are formed by the self-assembly of ß-hairpin peptide molecules with varying degrees of strand asymmetry. The peptide registry in the self-assembled state can be used as a design element to generate fibrils with twisting, nontwisting, or laminated morphology. The mass density of the networks varies significantly, and can be directly related to the local fibrillar morphology as evidenced by small angle neutron scattering (SANS) and in situ substantiation using cryogenic transmission electron microscopy (cryo-TEM) under identical concentrations and conditions. Similarly, the density of the network is dependent on changes in the peptide concentration. Bulk rheological properties of the hydrogels can be correlated to the fibrillar nanostructure, with the stiffer, laminated fibrils forming networks with a higher G' as compared to the flexible, singular fibrillar networks.

9.
Faraday Discuss ; 139: 251-64; discussion 309-25, 419-20, 2008.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19048999

ABSTRACT

A de novo designed beta-hairpin peptide (MAX8), capable of undergoing intramolecular folding and consequent intermolecular self-assembly into a cytocompatible hydrogel, has been studied. A combination of small angle neutron scattering (SANS) and cryogenic-transmission electron microscopy (cryo-TEM) have been used to quantitatively investigate the MAX8 nanofibrillar hydrogel network morphology. A change in the peptide concentration from 0.5 to 2 wt% resulted in a denser fibrillar network as revealed via SANS by a change in the high q (q = (4 pi/lambda) x sin (theta/2), where lambda = wavelength of incident neutrons and theta = scattering angle) mass fractal exponent from 2.5 to 3 and by a decrease in the measured correlation length from 23 to 16 A. A slope of -4 in the USANS regime indicates well-defined gel microporosity, an important characteristic for cellular substrate applications. These changes, both at the network as well as the individual fibril lengthscales, can be directly visualized in situ by cryo-TEM. Fibrillar nanostructures and network properties are directly related to bulk hydrogel stiffness via oscillatory rheology. Preliminary cell viability and anchorage studies at varying hydrogel stiffness confirm cell adhesion at early stages of cell culture within the window of stiffness investigated. Knowledge of the precise structure spanning length scales from the nanoscale up to the microscale can help in the formation of future, specific structure-bioproperty relationships when studying in vitro and in vivo behavior of these new peptide scaffolds.


Subject(s)
Hydrogels/chemistry , Peptides/chemistry , Amino Acid Sequence , Cryoelectron Microscopy , Microscopy, Electron, Transmission , Molecular Sequence Data , Neutrons , Scattering, Radiation
10.
Methods Mol Biol ; 474: 61-77, 2008.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19031061

ABSTRACT

Hydrogels based on peptide self-assembly form an important class of biomaterials that find application in tissue engineering and drug delivery. It is essential to prepare peptides with high purity to achieve batch-to-batch consistency affording hydrogels with reproducible properties. Automated solid-phase peptide synthesis coupled with optimized Fmoc (9-fluorenylmethoxy-carbonyl) chemistry to obtain peptides in high yield and purity is discussed. Details of isolating a desired peptide from crude synthetic mixtures and assessment of the peptide's final purity by high-performance liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry are provided. Beyond the practical importance of synthesis and primary characterization, techniques used to investigate the properties of hydrogels are briefly discussed.


Subject(s)
Biocompatible Materials/chemical synthesis , Hydrogels/chemical synthesis , Peptides/chemical synthesis , Biocompatible Materials/chemistry , Biocompatible Materials/isolation & purification , Chromatography, Liquid , Drug Delivery Systems/methods , Fluorenes/chemistry , Hydrogels/chemistry , Mass Spectrometry , Peptides/chemistry , Peptides/isolation & purification , Tissue Engineering/methods
11.
J Am Chem Soc ; 130(13): 4466-74, 2008 Apr 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18335936

ABSTRACT

De novo designed peptides, capable of undergoing a thermally triggered beta-strand-swapped self-assembly event leading to hydrogel formation were prepared. Strand-swapping peptide 1 (SSP1) incorporates an exchangeable beta-strand domain composed of eight residues appended to a nonexchangeable beta-hairpin domain. CD shows that, at pH 9 and temperatures less than 35 degrees C, this peptide adopts a random coil conformation, rendering it soluble in aqueous solution. On heating to 37 degrees C or greater, SSP1 adopts a beta-hairpin that displays an exchangeable beta-strand region. The exchangeable strand domain participates in swapping with the exchangeable domain of another peptide, affording a strand-swapped dimer. These dimers further assemble into fibrils that define the hydrogel. A second peptide (SSP2) containing an exchangeable strand composed of only four residues was also studied. Microscopy and scattering data show that the length of the exchangeable domain directly influences the fibril nanostructure and can be used as a design element to construct either twisted (SSP1) or nontwisted (SSP2) fibril morphologies. CD, FTIR, and WAXS confirm that both peptides adopt beta-sheet secondary structure when assembled into fibrils. Fibril dimensions, as measured by TEM, AFM, and SANS indicate a fibril diameter of 6.4 nm, a height of 6.0 nm, and a pitch of 50.4 nm for the twisted SSP1 fibrils. The nontwisted SSP2 fibrils are 6.2 nm in diameter and 2.5 nm in height. Oscillatory rheology, used to measure bulk hydrogel rigidity, showed that the gel composed of the nontwisted fibrils is more mechanically rigid (517 Pa at 6 rad/s) than the gel composed of twisted fibrils (367 Pa at 6 rad/s). This work demonstrates that beta-strand-swapping can be used to fabricate biomaterials with tunable fibril nanostructure and bulk hydrogel rheological properties.


Subject(s)
Computer Simulation , Hydrogels/chemistry , Hydrogels/chemical synthesis , Models, Chemical , Peptides/chemistry , Models, Molecular , Particle Size , Protein Conformation , Protein Structure, Secondary
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