Literature DB >> 32260883

Self-assembly of amphiphilic peptides into bio-functionalized nanotubes: a novel hydrolase model.

Zupeng Huang1, Shuwen Guan, Yongguo Wang, Guannan Shi, Lina Cao, Yuzhou Gao, Zeyuan Dong, Jiayun Xu, Quan Luo, Junqiu Liu.   

Abstract

Herein, we report the construction of a novel hydrolase model via self-assembly of a synthetic amphiphilic short peptide (Fmoc-FFH-CONH2) into nanotubes. The peptide-based self-assembled nanotubes (PepNTs-His) with imidazolyl groups as the catalytic centers exhibit high catalytic activity for p-nitrophenyl acetate (PNPA) hydrolysis. By replacement of the histidine of Fmoc-FFH-CONH2 with arginine to produce a structurally similar peptide Fmoc-FFR-CONH2, guanidyl groups can be presented in the nanotubes through the co-assembly of these two molecules to stabilize the transition state of the hydrolytic reaction. Therefore significantly improved catalytic activity has been achieved by the reasonable distribution of three dominating catalytic factors: catalytic center, binding site and transition state stabilization to the co-assembled peptide nanotubes (PepNTs-His-Argmax). The resulting hydrolase model shows typical saturation kinetics behaviour to that of natural enzymes and the catalytic efficiency of a single catalytic center is 519-fold higher than that without catalysts. As for a nanotube with multi-catalytic centers, a remarkable catalytic efficiency could be achieved with the increase of building blocks. This model suggests that the well ordered and dynamic supramolecular structure is an attractive platform to develop new artificial enzymes to enhance the catalytic activity. Besides, this novel peptide-based material has excellent biocompatibility with human cells and is expected to be applied to organisms as a substitute for natural hydrolases.

Entities:  

Year:  2013        PMID: 32260883     DOI: 10.1039/c3tb20156b

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Mater Chem B        ISSN: 2050-750X            Impact factor:   6.331


  5 in total

Review 1.  Ultrashort Peptide Self-Assembly: Front-Runners to Transport Drug and Gene Cargos.

Authors:  Seema Gupta; Indu Singh; Ashwani K Sharma; Pradeep Kumar
Journal:  Front Bioeng Biotechnol       Date:  2020-05-29

2.  Biocatalysts Based on Peptide and Peptide Conjugate Nanostructures.

Authors:  Ian W Hamley
Journal:  Biomacromolecules       Date:  2021-04-12       Impact factor: 6.988

3.  Monitoring the Hierarchical Evolution from a Double-Stranded Helix to a Well-Defined Microscopic Morphology Based on a Turbine-like Aromatic Molecule.

Authors:  Jun-Yan Zhu; Ya-Lun Xu; Qianqian Li; Chuan-Bao Zhang; Yan-Bo Wang; Lixiong Zhang; Ji-Ya Fu; Lili Zhao
Journal:  ACS Omega       Date:  2020-07-02

4.  Tripeptide Self-Assembly into Bioactive Hydrogels: Effects of Terminus Modification on Biocatalysis.

Authors:  Marina Kurbasic; Ana M Garcia; Simone Viada; Silvia Marchesan
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2020-12-31       Impact factor: 4.411

5.  Co-assembly of charge complementary peptides and their applications as organic dye/heavy metal ion (Pb2+, Hg2+) absorbents and arsenic(iii/v) detectors.

Authors:  Karabi Roy; Monikha Chetia; Ankan Kumar Sarkar; Sunanda Chatterjee
Journal:  RSC Adv       Date:  2020-11-18       Impact factor: 4.036

  5 in total

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