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Download fileMolecular Engineering of the Peptoid Nanosheet Hydrophobic Core
dataset
posted on 2016-10-26, 13:28 authored by Ellen
J. Robertson, Caroline Proulx, Jessica K. Su, Rita L. Garcia, Stan Yoo, Eric M. Nehls, Michael D. Connolly, Laudann Taravati, Ronald N. ZuckermannThe
relationship between the structure of sequence-defined peptoid
polymers and their ability to assemble into well-defined nanostructures
is important to the creation of new bioinspired platforms with sophisticated
functionality. Here, the hydrophobic N-(2-phenylethyl)glycine
(Npe) monomers of the standard nanosheet-forming peptoid sequence
were modified in an effort to (1) produce nanosheets from relatively
short peptoids, (2) inhibit the aggregation of peptoids in bulk solution,
(3) increase nanosheet stability by promoting packing interactions
within the hydrophobic core, and (4) produce nanosheets with a nonaromatic
hydrophobic core. Fluorescence and optical microscopy of individual
nanosheets reveal that certain modifications to the hydrophobic core
were well tolerated, whereas others resulted in instability or aggregation
or prevented assembly. Importantly, we demonstrate that substitution
at the meta and para positions of the Npe aromatic ring are well tolerated,
enabling significant opportunities to tune the functional properties
of peptoid nanosheets. We also found that N-aryl
glycine monomers inhibit nanosheet formation, whereas branched aliphatic
monomers have the ability to form nanosheets. An analysis of the crystal
structures of several N,N′-disubstituted
diketopiperazines (DKPs), a simple model system, revealed that the
preferred solid-state packing arrangement of the hydrophobic groups
can directly inform the assembly of stable peptoid nanosheets.