Unraveling the Atomistic Mechanism of Electrostatic Lateral Association of Peptide β-Sheet Structures and Its Role in Nanofiber Growth and Hydrogelation

Mohamed Soliman, Abdulwahhab Khedr, Tarsem Sahota, Rachel Armitage, Raymond Allan, Katie Laird, Natalie Allcock, Fatmah Ghuloum, Mahetab Amer, Reem Alazragi, Charlotte Edwards-Gayle, Jacek Wychowaniec, Attilio Vargiu, Mohamed Elsawy*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Guiding molecular assembly of peptides into rationally engineered nanostructures remains a major hurdle against the development of functional peptide-based nanomaterials. Various non-covalent interactions come into play to drive the formation and stabilization of these assemblies, of which electrostatic interactions are key. Here, the atomistic mechanisms by which electrostatic interactions contribute toward controlling self-assembly and lateral association of ultrashort β-sheet forming peptides are deciphered. Our results show that this is governed by charge distribution and ionic complementarity, both affecting the interaction patterns between charged residues: terminal, core, and/or terminal-to-core attraction/repulsion. Controlling electrostatic interactions enabled fine-tuning nanofiber morphology for the 16 examined peptides, resulting into versatile nanostructures ranging from extended thin fibrils and thick bundles to twisted helical “braids” and short pseudocrystalline nanosheets. This in turn affected the physical appearance and viscoelasticity of the formed materials, varying from turbid colloidal dispersions and viscous solutions to soft and stiff self-supportive hydrogels, as revealed from oscillatory rheology. Atomistic mechanisms of electrostatic interaction patterns were confirmed by molecular dynamic simulations, validating molecular and nanoscopic characterization of the developed materials. In essence, detailed mechanisms of electrostatic interactions emphasizing the impact of charge distribution and ionic complementarity on self-assembly, nanostructure formation, and hydrogelation are reported.
Original languageEnglish
Article number2408213
JournalSmall
Early online date9 Jan 2025
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 9 Jan 2025

Keywords

  • Self-assembly
  • Peptides
  • nanofibres
  • Hydrogels
  • Charge-zipper

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