Abstract
BackgroundVarious supra-molecular structures form by self-assembly of proteins in a symmetric fashion. Examples of such structures are viruses, some bacterial micro-compartments and eukaryotic vaults. Peptide/protein-based nanoparticles are emerging in synthetic biology for a variety of biomedical applications, mainly as drug targeting and delivery systems or as vaccines. Our self-assembling peptide nanoparticles (SAPNs) are formed by a single peptide chain that consists of two helical coiled-coil segments connected by a short linker region. One helix is forming a pentameric coiled coil while the other is forming a trimeric coiled coil.ResultsHere, we were studying in vitro and in silico the effect of the chain length and of point mutations near the linker region between the pentamer and the trimer on the self-assembly of the SAPNs. 60 identical peptide chains co-assemble to form a spherical nanoparticle displaying icosahedral symmetry. We have stepwise reduced the size of the protein chain to a minimal chain length of 36 amino acids. We first used biochemical and biophysical methods on the longer constructs followed by molecular dynamics simulations to study eleven different smaller peptide constructs. We have identified one peptide that shows the most promising mini-nanoparticle model in silico.ConclusionsAn approach of in silico modeling combined with in vitro testing and verification yielded promising peptide designs: at a minimal chain length of only 36 amino acids they were able to self-assemble into proper nanoparticles. This is important since the production cost increases more than linearly with chain length. Also the size of the nanoparticles is significantly smaller than 20 nm, thus reducing the immunogenicity of the particles, which in turn may allow to use the SAPNs as drug delivery systems without the risk of an anaphylactic shock.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12951-015-0119-z) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Highlights
Various supra-molecular structures form by self-assembly of proteins in a symmetric fashion
Our self-assembling peptide nanoparticles (SAPNs) are formed by a single peptide chain that consists of two helical coiled-coil segments connected by a short linker region
Our investigation demonstrated that the protein conformation is dependent on point mutations within and nearby the linker region to allow proper self-assembly of the SAPNs
Summary
Various supra-molecular structures form by self-assembly of proteins in a symmetric fashion Examples of such structures are viruses, some bacterial micro-compartments and eukaryotic vaults. Proteins of varied structures have evolved in nature to self-assemble into spherical nanoparticles Examples of such supra-molecular structures are viruses [1], some bacterial micro-compartments [2] or eukaryotic vaults [3], which form by self-assembly of folded proteins in a symmetric fashion. Coiled coils are an ubiquitous protein folding and oligomerization motif that exhibits abundance
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