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High‐Throughput Screening of pH‐Dependent β‐sheet Self‐Assembling Peptide

Xin‐Wei Ye, Wen Tian, Lu Han, Yi‐Jing Li, Shan Liu, Wenjia Lai, Yixuan Liu, Lei Wang, Pei‐Pei Yang, Hao Wang

2024Small15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

pH-dependent peptide biomaterials hold tremendous potential for cell delivery and tissue engineering. However, identification of responsive self-assembling sequences with specified secondary structure remains a challenge. In this work, An experimental procedure based on the one-bead one-compound (OBOC) combinatorial library is developed to rapidly screen self-assembling β-sheet peptides at neutral aqueous solution (pH 7.5) and disassemble at weak acidic condition (pH 6.5). Using the hydrophobic fluorescent molecule thioflavin T (ThT) as a probe, resin beads displaying self-assembling peptides show fluorescence under pH 7.5 due to the insertion of ThT into the hydrophobic domain, and are further cultured in pH 6.5 solution. The beads with extinguished fluorescence are selected. Three heptapeptides are identified that can self-assemble into nanofibers or nanoparticles at pH 7.5 and disassemble at pH 6.5. P1 (LVEFRHY) shows a rapid acid response and morphology transformation with pH modulation. Changes in the charges of histidine and hydrophobic phenyl motif of phenylalanine may play important roles in the formation of pH-responsive β-sheet nanofiber. This high-throughput screening method provides an efficient way to identify pH-dependent β-sheet self-assembling peptide and gain insights into structural design of such nanomaterials.

Topics & Concepts

PeptideFluorescenceSelf-assemblyChemistryThioflavinNanofiberCombinatorial chemistryNanomaterialsAqueous solutionBiophysicsNanoparticleHigh-throughput screeningHydrophobic effectNanotechnologyMaterials scienceBiochemistryOrganic chemistryDiseaseBiologyMedicinePathologyAlzheimer's diseasePhysicsQuantum mechanicsSupramolecular Self-Assembly in MaterialsChemical Synthesis and AnalysisRNA Interference and Gene Delivery