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Peptoid Residues Make Diverse, Hyperstable Collagen Triple-Helices.

Julian L KesslerGrace KangZhao QinHelen KangFrank G WhitbyThomas E CheathamChristopher P HillYang LiS Michael Yu
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2021)
As the only ribosomally encoded N-substituted amino acid, proline promotes distinct secondary protein structures. The high proline content in collagen, the most abundant protein in the human body, is crucial to forming its hallmark structure: the triple-helix. For over five decades, proline has been considered compulsory for synthetic designs aimed at recapitulating collagen's structure and properties. Here we describe that N-substituted glycines (N-glys), also known as peptoid residues, exhibit a general triple-helical propensity similar to or greater than proline, enabling synthesis of stable triple-helical collagen mimetic peptides (CMPs) with unprecedented side chain diversity. Supported by atomic-resolution crystal structures as well as circular dichroism and computational characterizations spanning over 30 N-gly-containing CMPs, we discovered that N-glys stabilize the triple-helix primarily by sterically preorganizing individual chains into the polyproline-II helix. We demonstrated that N-glys with exotic side chains including a "click"-able alkyne and a photosensitive side chain enable CMPs for functional applications including the spatiotemporal control of cell adhesion and migration. The structural principles uncovered in this study open up opportunities for a new generation of collagen-mimetic therapeutics and materials.
Keyphrases
  • amino acid
  • wound healing
  • tissue engineering
  • cell adhesion
  • endothelial cells
  • small molecule
  • minimally invasive
  • mass spectrometry
  • protein protein
  • binding protein
  • electron microscopy
  • pluripotent stem cells