Abstract

Assemblies of peptides and proteins through specific intermolecular interactions set the basis for macroscopic materials found in nature. Peptides provide easily tunable hydrogen-bonding interactions, which can lead to the formation of ordered structures such as highly stable β-sheets that can form amyloid-like supramolecular peptide nanofibrils (PNFs). PNFs are of special interest, as they could be considered as mimics of various fibrillar structures found in nature. In their ability to serve as supramolecular scaffolds, they could mimic certain features of the extracellular matrix to provide stability, interact with pathogens such as virions, and transduce signals between the outside and inside of cells. Many PNFs have been reported that reveal rich bioactivities. PNFs supporting neuronal cell growth or lentiviral gene transduction have been studied systematically, and their material properties were correlated to bioactivities. However, the impact of the structure of PNFs, their dynamics, and stabilities on their unique functions is still elusive. Herein, we provide a microscopic view of the self-assembled PNFs to unravel how the amino acid sequence of self-assembling peptides affects their secondary structure and dynamic properties of the peptides within supramolecular fibrils. Based on sequence truncation, amino acid substitution, and sequence reordering, we demonstrate that peptide-peptide aggregation propensity is critical to form bioactive β-sheet-rich structures. In contrast to previous studies, a very high peptide aggregation propensity reduces bioactivity due to intermolecular misalignment and instabilities that emerge when fibrils are in close proximity to other fibrils in solution. Our multiscale simulation approach correlates changes in biological activity back to single amino acid modifications. Understanding these relationships could lead to future material discoveries where the molecular sequence predictably determines the macroscopic properties and biological activity. In addition, our studies may provide new insights into naturally occurring amyloid fibrils in neurodegenerative diseases.

Full Text
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