4.2 Article

Proline-Poor Hydrophobic Domains Modulate the Assembly and Material Properties of Polymeric Elastin

Journal

BIOPOLYMERS
Volume 103, Issue 10, Pages 563-573

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/bip.22663

Keywords

elastin; proline; conformational disorder; beta-sheet; entropic elasticity

Funding

  1. Heart and Stroke Foundation of Ontario [T6725]
  2. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [MOP111145]

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Elastin is a self-assembling extracellular matrix protein that provides elasticity to tissues. For entropic elastomers such as elastin, conformational disorder of the monomer building block, even in the polymeric form, is essential for elastomeric recoil. The highly hydrophobic monomer employs a range of strategies for maintaining disorder and flexibility within hydrophobic domains, particularly involving a minimum compositional threshold of proline and glycine residues. However, the native sequence of hydrophobic elastin domain 30 is uncharacteristically proline-poor and, as an isolated polypeptide, is susceptible to formation of amyloid-like structures comprised of stacked -sheet. Here we investigated the biophysical and mechanical properties of multiple sets of elastin-like polypeptides designed with different numbers of proline-poor domain 30 from human or rat tropoelastins. We compared the contributions of these proline-poor hydrophobic sequences to self-assembly through characterization of phase separation, and to the tensile properties of cross-linked, polymeric materials. We demonstrate that length of hydrophobic domains and propensity to form -structure, both affecting polypeptide chain flexibility and cross-link density, play key roles in modulating elastin mechanical properties. This study advances the understanding of elastin sequence-structure-function relationships, and provides new insights that will directly support rational approaches to the design of biomaterials with defined suites of mechanical properties. (c) 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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