Projects per year
Abstract
β-Peptides have great potential as novel biomaterials and therapeutic agents, due to their unique ability to self-assemble into low dimensional nanostructures, and their resistance to enzymatic degradation in vivo. However, the self-assembly mechanisms of β-peptides, which possess increased flexibility due to the extra backbone methylene groups present within the constituent β-amino acids, are not well understood due to inherent difficulties of observing their bottom-up growth pathway experimentally. A computational approach is presented for the bottom-up modelling of the self-assembled lipidated β3-peptides, from monomers, to oligomers, to supramolecular low-dimensional nanostructures, in all-atom detail. The approach is applied to elucidate the self-assembly mechanisms of recently discovered, distinct structural morphologies of low dimensional nanomaterials, assembled from lipidated β3-peptide monomers. The resultant structures of the nanobelts and the twisted fibrils are stable throughout subsequent unrestrained all-atom molecular dynamics simulations, and these assemblies display good agreement with the structural features obtained from X-ray fiber diffraction and atomic force microscopy data. This is the first reported, fully-atomistic model of a lipidated β3-peptide-based nanomaterial, and the computational approach developed here, in combination with experimental fiber diffraction analysis and atomic force microscopy, will be useful in elucidating the atomic scale structure of self-assembled peptide-based and other supramolecular nanomaterials.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 2311103 |
Number of pages | 16 |
Journal | Advanced Materials |
Volume | 36 |
Issue number | 24 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 13 Jun 2024 |
Keywords
- beta peptides
- molecular dynamics
- self-assembly
Projects
- 1 Finished
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Atomic Scale Precision Engineering of Cell-Material Interfaces
Aguilar, M. (Primary Chief Investigator (PCI)), Yarovsky, I. (Chief Investigator (CI)) & Serpell, L. C. (Partner Investigator (PI))
29/04/19 → 28/04/22
Project: Research