Self-assembly of rationally designed peptides under two-dimensional confinement.
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ABSTRACT: The rational design of interfacially confined biomolecules offers a unique opportunity to explore the cooperative relationship among self-assembly, nucleation, and growth processes. This article highlights the role of electrostatics in the self-assembly of β-sheet-forming peptides at the air-water interface. We characterize the phase behavior of a periodically sequenced sheet-forming peptide by using Langmuir techniques, Brewster angle microscopy, attenuated total reflection Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, and circular dichroism spectroscopy. We find that peptides with an alternating binary sequence transition at high pressures from discrete circular domains to fibrous domains. The qualitative behavior is independent of surface pressure but dependent on molecular areas. In addition, thermodynamic models are employed to specifically quantify differences in electrostatics by obtaining parameters for the critical aggregation area, the limiting molecular area, and the dimensionless ratio of line tension/dipole density. Using these parameters, we are able to relate localized charge distribution to phase transitions, which will allow us to apply these molecules to examine how the dynamics of self-assembly can be directly coupled to the formation of composite nanostructures in biology.
SUBMITTER: Leon L
PROVIDER: S-EPMC2965942 | biostudies-literature |
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
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