Self-Assembly of the Tetraphenylethylene-Capped Diserine through a Hierarchical Assembly Process.
Jui-Wen ChangRajan Deepan ChakravarthyNien-Tzu ChuJyun-Cheng LiuMei-Yu YehHsin-Chieh LinPublished in: Bioconjugate chemistry (2023)
We report a new peptide-based urchin-shaped structure prepared through two-step self-assembly of tetraphenylethylene-diserine ( TPE-SS ). Hydrogelation generated nanobelts through the first stage of self-assembly of TPE-SS ; these nanobelts further transformed on silicon wafers into urchin-like microstructures featuring nanosized spines. The presence of the TPE moiety in the hydrogelator resulted in aggregation-induced emission characteristics both in the solution and in the gel phases. TPE-SS has the lowest molecular weight of any TPE-capped hydrogelator with β-sheet-like structures under physiological pH. This new design strategy appears to be useful for generating three-dimensional self-assembled microstructures and multifunctional biomaterials. We found that TPE-SS is biocompatible with human mesenchymal stem cells and breast cancer cells, making them potential applications in tissue engineering and biomedical research.