4.7 Article

Molecular, Local, and Network-Level Basis for the Enhanced Stiffness of Hydrogel Networks Formed from Coassembled Racemic Peptides: Predictions from Pauling and Corey

Journal

ACS CENTRAL SCIENCE
Volume 3, Issue 6, Pages 586-597

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acscentsci.7b00115

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Funding

  1. Intramural Research Programs of the National Cancer Institute
  2. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases of the National Institutes of Health
  3. National Institute of Standards and Technology, U.S. Department of Commerce

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Hydrogels prepared from self-assembling peptides are promising materials for medical applications, and using both L- and D-peptide isomers in a gel's formulation provides an intuitive way to control the proteolytic degradation of an implanted material. In the course of developing gels for delivery applications, we discovered that a racemic mixture of the minor-image beta-hairpin peptides, named MAXI and DMAXI, provides a fibrillar hydrogel that is four times more rigid than gels formed by either peptide alone-a puzzling observation. Herein, we use transmission electron microscopy, small angle neutron scattering, solid state NMR, diffusing wave, infrared, and fluorescence spectroscopies, and modeling to determine the molecular basis for the increased mechanical rigidity of the racemic gel. We find that enantiomeric peptides coassemble in an alternating fashion along the fibril long axis, forming an extended heterochiral pleat-like beta-sheet, a structure predicted by Pauling and Corey in 1953. Hydrogen bonding between enantiomers within the sheet dictates the placement of hydrophobic valine side chains in the fibrils' dry interior in a manner that allows the formation of nested hydrophobic interactions between enantiomers, interactions not accessible within enantiomerically pure fibrils. Importantly, this unique molecular arrangement of valine side chains maximizes inter-residue contacts within the core of the fibrils resulting in their local stiffening, which in turn, gives rise to the significant increase in bulk mechanical rigidity observed for the racemic hydrogel.

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