A photoresponsive artificial viral capsid self-assembled from an azobenzene-containing β-annulus peptide

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Abstract

Photoinduced structural changes in peptides can dynamically control the formation and dissociation of supramolecular peptide materials. However, the existence of photoresponsive viral capsids in nature remains unknown. In this study, we constructed an artificial viral capsid possessing a photochromic azobenzene moiety on the peptide backbone. An azobenzene-containing β-annulus peptide derived from the tomato bushy stunt virus was prepared through solid-phase synthesis using Fmoc-3-[(3-aminomethyl)-phenylazo]phenylacetic acid. The azobenzene-containing β-annulus (β-Annulus-Azo) peptide showed a reversible trans/cis isomerization property. The β-annulus-azo peptide self-assembled at 25 µM into capsids with the diameters of 30–50 nm before UV irradiation (trans-form rich), whereas micrometer-sized aggregates were formed after UV irradiation (cis-form rich). The artificial viral capsid possessing azobenzene facilitated the encapsulation of fluorescentlabeled dextrans and their photoinduced release from the capsid.

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APA

Matsuura, K., & Fujita, S. (2021). A photoresponsive artificial viral capsid self-assembled from an azobenzene-containing β-annulus peptide. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 22(8). https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms22084028

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