Abstract

Supramolecular fibrous materials in biological systems play important structural and functional roles, and therefore, there is a growing interest in synthetic materials that mimic such fibrils, especially those bearing enzymatic reactivity. In this study, we investigated the self-assembly and enzymatic post-modification of short aromatic peptide amphiphiles (PAs), Fmoc-LnQG (n = 2 or 3), which contain an LQG recognition unit for microbial transglutaminase (MTG). These aromatic PAs self-assemble into fibrous structures via π-π stacking interactions between the Fmoc groups and hydrogen bonds between the peptides. The intermolecular interactions and morphologies of the assemblies were influenced by the solution pH because of the change in the ionization states of the C-terminal carboxy group of the peptides. Moreover, MTG-catalyzed post-modification of a small fluorescent molecule bearing an amine group also showed pH dependency, where the enzymatic reaction rate was increased at higher pH, which may be because of the higher nucleophilicity of the amine group and the electrostatic interaction between MTG and the self-assembled Fmoc-LnQG. Finally, the accumulation of the fluorescent molecule on these assembled materials was directly observed by confocal fluorescence images. Our study provides a method to accumulate functional molecules on supramolecular structures enzymatically with the morphology control.

Highlights

  • Supramolecular fibrils formed through molecular self-assembly are abundant in biological systems; examples include extracellular collagen matrices, intracellular actin filaments, and microtubules

  • Since the aromatic stacking interactions of short aromatic peptides have a large impact on the self-organization, we first evaluated the interaction between the Fmoc groups of Fmoc-Ln QG (n = 2, 3) at pH 5–8 by fluorescence spectroscopy below and above the critical aggregation concentrations

  • Since the aromatic stacking interactions of short aromatic peptides have a large im3 of 10 pact on the self-organization, we first evaluated the interaction between the Fmoc groups of Fmoc-LnQG (n = 2, 3) at pH 5–8 by fluorescence spectroscopy below and above the critical aggregation concentrations

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Summary

Introduction

Supramolecular fibrils formed through molecular self-assembly are abundant in biological systems; examples include extracellular collagen matrices, intracellular actin filaments, and microtubules. They play important structural and functional roles. Post-modification of supramolecular fibrils by enzymatic reactions is limited concept. Post-modification of supramolecular fibrils by enzymatic reactions tolimited a few reports [24,25,26] This strategy contributes to addingorfunctions or hierconarchical structures, or both, in biological systems [27,28]; there are limited trolling hierarchical structures, or both, in biological systems [27,28]; therenumare ber of enzymes capable of performing this task.

Conceptual
Evaluation of Interaction between Fmoc Groups by Fluorescence Spectroscopy
Evaluation of Interaction
Evaluation of the Self-Assembled Structure of Fmoc-LnQG in Response to pH by
Confocal Fluorescence Microscope Images of OG on Fmoc-LnQG Peptide Assemblies
General
Synthesis of Aromatic Peptide Amphiphiles
Preparation of MTG
Fluorescence Spectra
Conclusions
Full Text
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