Abstract
Many drugs adjust and/or control the spatiotemporal dynamics of periodic processes such as heartbeat, neuronal signaling and metabolism, often by interacting with proteins or oligopeptides. Here we use a quasi-biocompatible, non-equilibrium pH oscillatory system as a biomimetic biological clock to study the effect of pH-responsive peptides on rhythm dynamics. The added peptides generate feedback that can lengthen or shorten the oscillatory period during which the peptides alternate between random coil and coiled-coil conformations. This modulation of a chemical clock supports the notion that short peptide reagents may have utility as drugs to regulate human body clocks.
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Liu, M., Yuan, L., Zhu, C., Pan, C., Gao, Q., Wang, H., … Epstein, I. R. (2022). Peptide-Modulated pH Rhythms. ChemPhysChem, 23(16). https://doi.org/10.1002/cphc.202200103
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