Self-Assembly of High Molecular Weight Polypeptide
Copolymers Studied via Diffusion Limited Aggregation
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Abstract
The
assembly of high molecular weight polypeptides into complex
architectures exhibiting structural complexity ranging from the nano-
to the mesoscale is of fundamental importance for various protein-related
diseases but also hold great promise for various nano- and biotechnological
applications. Here, the aggregation of partially unfolded high molecular
weight polypeptides into multiscale fractal structures is investigated
by means of diffusion limited aggregation and atomic force microscopy.
The zeta potential, the hydrodynamic radius, and the obtained fractal
morphologies were correlated with the conformation of the polypeptide
backbones as obtained from circular dichroism measurements. The polypeptides
are modified with polyethylene oxide side chains to stabilize the
polypeptides and to normalize intermolecular interactions. The modification
with the hydrophobic thioctic acid alters the folding of the polypeptide
backbone, resulting in a change in solution aggregation and fractal
morphology. We found that a more compact folding results in dense
and highly branched structures, whereas a less compact folded polypeptide
chain yields a more directional assembly. Our results provide first
evidence for the role of compactness of polypeptide folding on aggregation.
Furthermore, the mesoscale-structured biofilms were used to achieve
a hierarchical protein assembly, which is demonstrated by deposition
of Rhodamine-labeled HSA with the preassembled fractal structures.
These results contribute important insights to the fundamental understanding
of the aggregation of high molecular weight polypeptides in general
and provide opportunities to study nanostructure-related effects on
biological systems such as adhesion, proliferation, and the development
of, for example, neuronal cells