Structural role of counterions adsorbed on self-assembled peptide nanotubes.

Archive ouverte

Gobeaux, Frédéric | Fay, Nicolas | Tarabout, Christophe | Meriadec, Cristelle | Meneau, Florian | Ligeti, Melinda | Buisson, David-Alexandre | Cintrat, Jean-Christophe | Nguyen, Khac Minh Huy | Perrin, Lionel | Valéry, Céline | Artzner, Franck | Paternostre, Maïté

Edité par CCSD ; American Chemical Society -

International audience. Among noncovalent forces, electrostatic ones are the strongest and possess a rather long-range action. For these reasons, charges and counterions play a prominent role in self-assembly processes in water and therefore in many biological systems. However, the complexity of the biological media often hinders a detailed understanding of all the electrostatic-related events. In this context, we have studied the role of charges and counterions in the self-assembly of lanreotide, a cationic octapeptide. This peptide spontaneously forms monodisperse nanotubes (NTs) above a critical concentration when solubilized in pure water. Free from any screening buffer, we assessed the interactions between the different peptide oligomers and counterions in solutions, above and below the critical assembly concentration. Our results provide explanations for the selection of a dimeric building block instead of a monomeric one. Indeed, the apparent charge of the dimers is lower than that of the monomers because of strong chemisorption. This phenomenon has two consequences: (i) the dimer-dimer interaction is less repulsive than the monomer-monomer one and (ii) the lowered charge of the dimeric building block weakens the electrostatic repulsion from the positively charged NT walls. Moreover, additional counterion condensation (physisorption) occurs on the NT wall. We furthermore show that the counterions interacting with the NTs play a structural role as they tune the NTs diameter. We demonstrate by a simple model that counterions adsorption sites located on the inner face of the NT walls are responsible for this size control.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Control of peptide nanotube diameter by chemical modifications of an aromatic residue involved in a single close contact.

Archive ouverte | Tarabout, Christophe | CCSD

International audience. Supramolecular self-assembly is an attractive pathway for bottom-up synthesis of novel nanomaterials. In particular, this approach allows the spontaneous formation of structures of well-defin...

Experimental observation of double-walled peptide nanotubes and monodispersity modeling of the number of walls.

Archive ouverte | Gobeaux, Frédéric | CCSD

International audience. Self-assembled nanoarchitectures based on biological molecules are attractive because of the simplicity and versatility of the building blocks. However, size control is still a challenge. Thi...

Directing peptide crystallization through curvature control of nanotubes ‡

Archive ouverte | Gobeaux, Frédéric | CCSD

International audience. In the absence of efficient crystallization methods, the molecular structures of fibrous assemblies have so far remained rather elusive. In this paper, we present a rational method to crystal...

Chargement des enrichissements...