4.7 Article

Sequence Control of the Self-Assembly of Elastin-Like Polypeptides into Hydrogels with Bespoke Viscoelastic and Structural Properties

Journal

BIOMACROMOLECULES
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.biomac.2c01405

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Program under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie Grant
  2. Convergence programme Syn-Cells for Health (care) [SUPERB 892369]

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The biofabrication of structural proteins with controllable properties via amino acid sequence design is important for biomedicine and biotechnology. However, a complete framework connecting amino acid sequence to material properties is currently unavailable. This study developed a model to classify a library of de novo elastin-like polypeptides (ELPs) based on their thermoresponsive properties, providing a pathway for accelerating the design of de novo ELPs with specific phase behavior and material properties.
The biofabrication of structural proteins with controllable properties via amino acid sequence design is interesting for biomedicine and biotechnology, yet a complete framework that connects amino acid sequence to material properties is unavailable, despite great progress to establish design rules for synthesizing peptides and proteins with specific conformations (e.g., unfolded, helical, beta-sheets, or beta-turns) and intermolecular interactions (e.g., amphipathic peptides or hydrophobic domains). Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations can help in developing such a framework, but the lack of a standardized way of interpreting the outcome of these simulations hinders their predictive value for the design of de novo structural proteins. To address this, we developed a model that unambiguously classifies a library of de novo elastin-like polypeptides (ELPs) with varying numbers and locations of hydrophobic/hydrophilic and physical/ chemical-cross-linking blocks according to their thermoresponsiveness at physiological temperature. Our approach does not require long simulation times or advanced sampling methods. Instead, we apply (un)supervised data analysis methods to a data set of molecular properties from relatively short MD simulations (150 ns). We also experimentally investigate hydrogels of those ELPs from the library predicted to be thermoresponsive, revealing several handles to tune their mechanical and structural properties: chain hydrophilicity/hydrophobicity or block distribution control the viscoelasticity and thermoresponsiveness, whereas ELP concentration defines the network permeability. Our findings provide an avenue to accelerate the design of de novo ELPs with bespoke phase behavior and material properties.

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