Nanoribbons self-assembled from short peptides demonstrate the formation of polar zippers between β-sheets

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Abstract

Peptide self-assembly is a hierarchical process, often starting with the formation of α-helices, β-sheets or β-hairpins. However, how the secondary structures undergo further assembly to form higher-order architectures remains largely unexplored. The polar zipper originally proposed by Perutz is formed between neighboring β-strands of poly-glutamine via their side-chain hydrogen bonding and helps to stabilize the sheet. By rational design of short amphiphilic peptides and their self-assembly, here we demonstrate the formation of polar zippers between neighboring β-sheets rather than between β-strands within a sheet, which in turn intermesh the β-sheets into wide and flat ribbons. Such a super-secondary structural template based on well-defined hydrogen bonds could offer an agile route for the construction of distinctive nanostructures and nanomaterials beyond β-sheets.

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Wang, M., Wang, J., Zhou, P., Deng, J., Zhao, Y., Sun, Y., … Xu, H. (2018). Nanoribbons self-assembled from short peptides demonstrate the formation of polar zippers between β-sheets. Nature Communications, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-07583-2

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