Tryptophan as an aromatic amino acid with a hydrophobic indole group plays important roles in stabilizing protein structures and enhancing molecular bindings in nature, but was rarely used in the molecular design of self-assembling peptides or gelators. Therefore, we prepared a series of short peptides from Trp amino acids and examined the potential roles of Trp residues for regulating peptide self-assembly and gelation. The introduced Trp amino acids not only diversify the molecular structures of peptide gelators, but also promote aromatic and hydrogenbonding interactions for supramolecular self-assembling and gelation, which generates self-assembled nanostructures with twisted helical morphologies and supramolecular hydrogels with low minimal gelation concentrations. More importantly, the self-assembling peptides with Trp residues displayed strong preference for interacting with the lipidic membranes of bacteria, which resulted in bacterial flocculation and the death of E. coli and S. aureus.
A glycopeptide hydrogel displaying galactoses on their surface was prepared, which inhibited Pseudomonas aeruginosa virulence and growth through multivalent interactions.
Alkaline phosphatase, as an enzyme involved in the process of bone mineralization and regeneration, was incorporated into the solution of SF to induce its gelation and mineralization through consecutive dephosphorylation...
On the basis of cyclotrixylohydroquinoylene (CTX), a novel water-soluble phospholate-based CTX derivative (WPCTX) was prepared with facile synthetic procedure and satisfying yield. Several model guest molecules were selected to investigate WPCTX's host-guest properties. Based on the study of the host and model guest complexation, a tetraphenylethylene derivative from model guest was employed as a guest molecule (G) to form WPCTX�G nanoparticles (NPs) with WPCTX through further supramolecular self-assembly in water. Moreover, a hydrophobic fluorescent dye, Eosin Y(ESY) or Nile red (NiR), was encapsulated in WPCTX�G NPs to construct two types of artificial light-harvesting systems. Their high antenna effect demonstrated such NPs successfully mimicked light-harvesting systems in nature.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.