4.8 Article

Trace Solvent as a Predominant Factor To Tune Dipeptide Self-Assembly

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 10, Issue 2, Pages 2138-2143

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.5b06567

Keywords

dipeptide; self-assembly; trace solvent; fibers; hydrogen bonding

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21522307, 21473208, 91434103]
  2. Talent Fund of the Recruitment Program of Global Youth Experts
  3. CAS [2015VTA033]
  4. Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS)

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Solvent molecules such as water are of key importance for tuning self-assembly in biological systems. However, it remains a great challenge to detect the role of different types of noncovalent interactions between trace solvents and biomolecules such as peptides. In this work, we discover a dominant role of trace amounts of solvents for mediation of dipeptide self-assembly, in which solvent-bridged hydrogen bonding is demonstrated as a crucial force in directing fiber formation. Hydrogen-bond-forming solvents (including ethanol, N,N-dimethylformamide, and acetone) can affect the hydrogen bonding of C=O and N-H in diphenylalanine (FF) molecules with themselves, but this does not induce pi-pi stacking between FF molecules. The directional hydrogen bonding promotes a long-range-ordered arrangement of FF molecules, preferentially along one dimension to form nanofibers or nanobelts. Furthermore, we demonstrate that water with strong hydrogen-bond-forming capability can notably speed up structure formation with long-range order, revealing the importance of water as a trace solvent for regulation of persistent and robust fiber formation.

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