De Novo Design of a Versatile Peptide-Based Coating to Impart Targeted Functionality at the Surface of Native Polystyrene.
Yuji YamadaCaleb F AndersonJoel P SchneiderPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2023)
Peptide sequence periodicity is a simple design tool that can be used to generate functional peptide-based surface coatings. De novo-designed peptide N 3 -PEG-VK16 is characterized by a hydrophobic periodicity of two that avidly binds to native polystyrene priming its surface for subsequent targeted functionalization via chemical ligation. The peptidic portion of N 3 -PEG-VK16 is responsible for surface binding, converting polystyrene's hydrophobic surface into a wettable and electrostatically charged environment that facilitates cell attachment. Native polystyrene surfaces are coated by simple peptide adsorption from an aqueous buffered solution, and the resulting primed surface is easily functionalized by cycloaddition chemistry. Herein, we show that ligating a vitronectin-derived peptide to primed polystyrene surfaces enables adhesion, expansion, long-term culture, and phenotype maintenance of human induced pluripotent stem cells. To demonstrate scope, we also show that additional functional ligands can be used, for example, nerve growth factor protein, to control neurite outgrowth.