posted on 2023-11-02, 02:33authored byValeria Castelletto, Lucas de Mello, Emerson Rodrigo da Silva, Jani Seitsonen, Ian W Hamley
There has been considerable
interest in peptides in which the Fmoc
(9-fluorenylmethoxycarbonyl) protecting group is retained at the N-terminus,
since this bulky aromatic group can drive self-assembly, and Fmoc-peptides
are biocompatible and have applications in cell culture biomaterials.
Recently, analogues of new amino acids with 2,7-disulfo-9-fluorenylmethoxycarbonyl
(Smoc) protecting groups have been developed for water-based peptide
synthesis. Here, we report on the self-assembly and biocompatibility
of Smoc-Ala, Smoc-Phe and Smoc-Arg as examples of Smoc conjugates
to aliphatic, aromatic, and charged amino acids, respectively. Self-assembly
occurs at concentrations above the critical aggregation concentration
(CAC). Cryo-TEM imaging and SAXS reveal the presence of nanosheet,
nanoribbon or nanotube structures, and spectroscopic methods (ThT
fluorescence circular dichroism and FTIR) show the presence of β-sheet
secondary structure, although Smoc-Ala solutions contain significant
unaggregated monomer content. Smoc shows self-fluorescence, which
was used to determine CAC values of the Smoc-amino acids from fluorescence
assays. Smoc fluorescence was also exploited in confocal microscopy
imaging with fibroblast cells, which revealed its uptake into the
cytoplasm. The biocompatibility of these Smoc-amino acids was found
to be excellent with zero cytotoxicity (in fact increased metabolism)
to fibroblasts at low concentration.