화학공학소재연구정보센터
Biomacromolecules, Vol.10, No.6, 1374-1380, 2009
Fast Dynamics of Semiflexible Chain Networks of Self-Assembled Peptides
We present the first neutron spin echo (NSE) measurements of self-assembling peptide hydrogel networks to study the fibril dynamics on the nanometer and nanosecond length and time scales. MAX1 and MAX8 are synthetic beta-hairpin peptides that undergo triggered self-assembly at the nanoscale to form a physically cross-linked network of fibrils with a defined cross-section. When subjected to physiological pH and ionic strength (pH 7.4, 150 mM NaCl), the soluble peptides fold into a beta-hairpin and, subsequently, self-assemble to form a structurally rigid hydrogel stabilized by noncovalent cross-links. The sequence of MAX8 is identical to MAX1 with the exception of one single amino acid substitution that reduces the net charge on the peptide. As a result, faster folding and self-assembly kinetics are observed for MAX8 at the same peptide concentration and identical buffer conditions, and gels with a larger storage modulus are formed. NSE measurements of the peptide hydrogels demonstrate that the self-assembled peptide fibrils can be described as semiflexible chains on nanolength and time scales. Alteration of the peptide sequence affected the nanoscale dynamics of the hydrogels but not to an extent comparable to the large difference observed in the bulk viscoelasticity. Small angle neutron scattering (SANS) of the hydrogels reveals increased scattering for MAX8 at low wavevectors, an indication of a heterogeneous network with a tighter mesh size. Therefore, we conjecture that the difference in elastic modulus arises from differences in assembly kinetics that result in increased fibrillar branching and physical cross-links rather than a change in the fibril nanostructure or persistence length.