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Probing Membrane Hydration at the Interface of Self-Assembled Peptide Amphiphiles Using Electron Paramagnetic Resonance.

Ian R SmithAlban H R CharlierAmanda M PritzlaffAlexander ShishlovBrooke BarnesKyle C BentzCharles P EasterlingBrent S SumerlinGail E FanucciDaniel A Savin
Published in: ACS macro letters (2018)
The relative hydrophilicity at the interface of a nanoparticle was measured utilizing electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. The supramolecular structure was assembled from spin-labeled peptide amphiphiles (PA) derived from N- carboxy anhydrides (NCA). Cyanuric chloride, or 2,4,6-trichloro-1,3,5-triazine (TCT), was used as a modular platform to synthesize the spin-labeled, lipid-mimetic macroinitiator used for the ring-opening polymerization of γ-benzyl-l-glutamic acid NCA to produce polyglutamate- b -dodecanethiol 2 . Through static and dynamic light scattering, as well as transmission electron microscopy, PAs with DP of 50 and 17 were shown to assemble into stable nanoparticles with an average hydrodynamic radius of 117 and 84 nm, respectively. Continuous wave EPR spectroscopy revealed that the mobility parameter ( h -1 / h 0 ) and 2 A iso of the nitroxide radical increased with increasing pH, in concert with the deprotonation of the PE side chains and associated helix-coil transition. These results are consistent with an increase in the relative hydration and polarity at the nanoparticle interface, which would be dependent on the secondary structure of the polypeptide. This research suggests that a pH stimulus could be used to facilitate water diffusion through the membrane.
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