Supramolecular polymeric peptide amphiphile
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Transcript of Supramolecular polymeric peptide amphiphile

Impact Factor 6.378
Literature Meet-ing M. Ehsan
Bionano Chemistry Lab

Introduction
Supramolecular Polymer A supramolecular polymer is a polymer whose monomer repeat units are held together by noncovalent bonds.
Coordination π-π interactions hydrogen bonding
Quadruple hydrogen bonds
Hydrogen Bond Quadruple AngewChemIntEd 1998 v37 p75
EurJOrgChem page2565 year1998

• Peptide-amphiphiles are attractive candidate biomaterials for
bio-nanotechnology and tissue engineering
• applications ranging from controlled gene and drug release,
• skin care,
• nanofabrication,
• biomineralization,
• membrane protein stabilization
• 3D cell culture and tissue engineering.

Synthetic Strategy
Fig. 1 Schematic representation of the chemical structures of pyrenei midazolium labeled peptide and viologen function-alised PNIPAAm and the formation of a ternary complex with CB[8].

Cucurbiturils are macrocyclic molecules made of glycoluril (=C4H2N4O2) monomers linked by methylene bridges.
drug delivery, asymmetric synthesis, molecular switching, and dye tuning
Cucurbit[8]uril (CB[8]) ternary complex system offers strong binding of two complementary motifs (binding constants Keq = 1012 M-2) in water
The CB[8] is an attractive choice for building stable, modular supramolecular structures in an aqueous environment via a non-covalent route.
Acta Crystallogr B, 1984, 382-387
Cucurbituril gyroscope AngewChem-IntEd 2002 v41 p275

Supramolecular Polymeric Peptide Vesicle Formation
Fig. 2 Schematic representation of the temperature induced formation of a supramolecular
polymeric peptide vesicle.


Thermoresponsive Behaviour
Fig. Thermoresponsive behaviour of 1 + 2 with and without CB[8] (0.05 mM).

TEM micrographs of supramolecular vesicles at 37 oC (solution concentration = 0.05 mM).
Particle size distributions of supramolecular vesicles at 37 oC.

Critical Aggregation Concentration (CAC)
Figure : Determination of the CAC of the supramolecular vesicles in (a) deionised water and (b) 1X phosphate buffer saline (PBS) solution containing 1% fetal bovine serum (FBS) at pH 7.4

Basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF)
Basic fibroblast growth factor is a mitogenic cytokine protein
Regulates many aspects of cellular activity, such as cell migration and ex-tracellular matrix metabolism.
bFGF degrades rapidly when the external environment is above 40 oC or when the pH is less than 5,
Heparin is required to stabilise the protein and to
preserve its bioactivity The efficacy of bFGF in vivo is also limited
its short lifetime and
susceptibility to enzymatic degradation
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basic_fibroblast_growth_factor

• Various approaches have been proposed for the stabilization of bFGF. • These include the Chemical modification techniques, Encapsulation in gels and Powder formulation.
• Vesicles are highly attractive carriers for proteins due to their hydrophilic
interior.• minimises the risk of protein denaturation as it does not expose
the protein to extremes in temperatures or organic solvents

Encapsulation Effect on the Immunoreactivity of bFGF
Fig. 4 (a) Assessment of immunoreactive bFGF in vesicles after encapsulationat various times

Bioactivity of bFGF
(b) Bioactivity of bFGF following storage in vesiclesafter encapsulation at various times.
Effect of freeze-thaw denaturing conditions as compared to heparin treatment on the bioactivity of bFGF encapsulated in the vesicles.

Release Behavior
Figure : bFGF release (37 oC) from the vesicles made from the ternary complexes.

Conclusion
• Protein-friendly nature of the vesicles was demonstrated
by encapsulating bioactive bFGF into the supramolecular nanocarriers without the use of stabilising agents
• The supramolecular vesicles could potentially be used as in-jectable carriers for the release of bioactive cytokines for tis-sue repair and other related applications