Peptide TZ1H, based on the heptad sequence of a coiled-coil trimer, undergoes fully reversible, pH-dependent self-assembly into long-aspect-ratio helical fibers. Substitution of isoleucine residues with histidine at the core d-positions of alternate heptads introduces a mechanism by which self-assembly is coupled to the protonation state of the imidazole side chain. Circular dichroism spectroscopy, transmission electron microscopy, and microrheology techniques revealed that the self-assembly of TZ1H coincides with a distinct coil-helix conformational transition that occurs within a narrow pH range near the pKa of the imidazole side chains of the core histidine residues.
A synthetic mimic of viral structure has been constructed by the synergistic co-assembly of a 16-amino acid peptide and plasmid DNA. The rational design of this short peptide, including segments for binding DNA and forming β-sheet, is inspired by viral capsid protein. The resulting nanostructures, which we term nanococoons, appear as ellipsoids of virus-like dimension (65 × 47 nm) and display repeating stripes of ∼4 nm wide. We propose that the co-assembly process involves DNA as a template to assist the organization of peptide strands by electrostatic interaction, while the bilayer β-sheets and their lateral association stabilize the peptide "capsid" and organize the DNA within. The hierarchy affords an extremely stable structure, protecting peptide and DNA against enzymatic digestion. It opens a new and facile avenue to fabricate viral alternatives with diverse functions.
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