posted on 2023-08-11, 19:36authored byIsrat
Jahan Duti, Jonathan R. Florian, Anna R. Kittel, Connor D. Amelung, Vincent P. Gray, Kyle J. Lampe, Rachel A. Letteri
Stereocomplexation, or specific interactions among complementary
stereoregular macromolecules, is burgeoning as an increasingly impactful
design tool, exerting exquisite control of material structure and
properties. Since stereocomplexation of polymers produces remarkable
transformations in mechanics, morphology, and degradation, we sought
to leverage stereocomplexation to tune these properties in peptide-based
biomaterials. We found that blending the pentapeptides l-
and d-KYFIL triggers dual mechanical and morphological transformations
from stiff fibrous hydrogels into less stiff networks of plates, starkly
contrasting prior reports that blending l- and d-peptides produces stiffer fibrous hydrogels than the individual
constituents. The morphological transformation of KYFIL in phosphate-buffered
saline from fibers that entangle into hydrogels to plates that cannot
entangle explains the accompanying mechanical transformation. Moreover,
the blends shield l-KYFIL from proteolytic degradation, producing
materials with comparable proteolytic stability to d-KYFIL
but with distinct 2D plate morphologies that in biomaterials may promote
unique therapeutic release profiles and cell behavior. To confirm
that these morphological, mechanical, and stability changes arise
from differences in molecular packing as in polymer stereocomplexation,
we acquired X-ray diffraction patterns, which showed l- and d-KYFIL to be amorphous and their blends to be crystalline.
Stereocomplexation is particularly apparent in pure water, where l- and d-KYFIL are soluble random coils, and their
blends form β-sheets and gel within minutes. Our results highlight
the role of molecular details, such as peptide sequence, in determining
the material properties resulting from stereocomplexation. Looking
forward, the ability of stereocomplexation to orchestrate supramolecular
assembly and tune application-critical properties champions stereochemistry
as a compelling design consideration.