The graphite–water interface provides a unique
environment
for polypeptides that generally favors ordered structures more than
in solution. Therefore, systems consisting of designed peptides and
graphitic carbon might serve as a convenient medium for controlled
self-assembly of functional materials. Here, we computationally designed
cyclic peptides that spontaneously fold into a β-sheet-like
conformation at the graphite–water interface and self-assemble,
and we subsequently observed evidence of such assembly by atomic force
microscopy. Using a novel protocol, we screened nearly 2000 sequences,
optimizing for formation of a unique folded conformation while discouraging
unfolded or misfolded conformations. A head-to-tail cyclic peptide
with the sequence GTGSGTGGPGGGCGTGTGSGPG
showed the greatest apparent propensity to fold spontaneously, and
this optimized sequence was selected for larger scale molecular dynamics
simulations, rigorous free-energy calculations, and experimental validation.
In simulations ranging from hundreds of nanoseconds to a few microseconds,
we observed spontaneous folding of this peptide at the graphite–water
interface under many different conditions, including multiple temperatures
(295 and 370 K), with different initial orientations relative to the
graphite surface, and using different molecular dynamics force fields
(CHARMM and Amber). The thermodynamic stability of the folded conformation
on graphite over a range of temperatures was verified by replica-exchange
simulations and free-energy calculations. On the other hand, in free
solution, the folded conformation was found to be unstable, unfolding
in tens of picoseconds. Intermolecular hydrogen bonds promoted self-assembly
of the folded peptides into linear arrangements where the peptide
backbone exhibited a tendency to align along one of the six zigzag
directions of the graphite basal plane. For the optimized peptide,
atomic force microscopy revealed growth of single-molecule-thick linear
patterns of 6-fold symmetry, consistent with the simulations, while
no such patterns were observed for a control peptide with the same
amino acid composition but a scrambled sequence.
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