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Effects of Secondary Structures and pH on the Self-Assembly of Poly(ethylene glycol)- b -polytyrosine.

Caixia JiangChonghao ZhaoPeng XuQipeng SongXinfeng TaoShaoliang Lin
Published in: Biomacromolecules (2024)
Different from conventional synthetic polymers, polypeptides exhibit a distinguishing characteristic of adopting specific secondary structures, including random coils, α-helixes, and β-sheets. The conformation determines the rigidity and solubility of polypeptide chains, which further direct the self-assembly and morphology of the nanostructures. We studied the effect of distinct secondary structures on the self-assembly behavior of polytyrosine (PTyr)-derived amphiphilic copolymers. Two block copolymers of enantiopure poly(ethylene glycol)- b -poly(l-tyrosine) (PEG- b -P(l-Tyr)) and racemic poly(ethylene glycol)- b -poly(dl-tyrosine) (PEG- b -P(dl-Tyr)) were synthesized through the ring-opening polymerization of l-tyrosine N -thiocarboxyanhydride (l-Tyr-NTA) and dl-tyrosine N -thiocarboxyanhydride (dl-Tyr-NTA), respectively, by using poly(ethylene glycol) amine as the initiator. PEG 44 - b -P(l-Tyr) 10 adopts a β-sheet conformation and self-assembles into rectangular nanosheets in aqueous solutions, while PEG 44 - b -P(dl-Tyr) 9 is primarily in a random coil conformation with a tiny content of β-sheet structures, which self-assembles into sheaf-like nanofibrils. A pH increase results in the ionization of phenolic hydroxyl groups, which decreases the β-sheet content and increases the random coil content of the PTyr segments. Accordingly, PEG 44 - b -P(l-Tyr) 10 and PEG 44 - b -P(dl-Tyr) 9 self-assemble to form slender nanobelts and twisted nanoribbons, respectively, in alkaline aqueous solutions. The secondary structure-driven self-assembly of PTyr-derived copolymers is promising to construct filamentous nanostructures, which have potential for applications in controlled drug release.
Keyphrases
  • drug delivery
  • drug release
  • high resolution
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • crystal structure
  • climate change
  • reduced graphene oxide