N-acylated substitutedoligoamides are known to form unique supramolecular nanorods based on a 3-point hydrogen bond self-assembly motif. This motif is an intermolecular extension of the hydrogen bonding network that stabilizes the 14-helix secondary structure unique tooligoamides. Acetylation of the N-terminus of the molecule provides the necessary third hydrogen bond pair of the motif. Here, the possibility of introducing the third hydrogen bond pair via amidation of the C terminus is investigated. While similar in purpose, this modification introduces a chemically distinct new self-assembly motif, also removing the bulky carboxyl group that does not fold into the 14 helix positioning instead as a side chain. Three substitutedoligoamide variants with the base sequence LIA (where the letters denoteresidues with side chains analogous to α amino acids) were compared: N-acylated Ac-[LIA] as a reference, C-amidated[LIA]-CONH, and[LIA] with free unmodified N and C termini as a negative control. The three variants were dissolved in water to promote self-assembly. The self-assembly was characterised using mid- and far-infrared spectroscopy, small angle x-ray scattering (SAXS) and atomic force microscopy (AFM). IR measurements confirmed that all three samples were in a similar conformation, consistent with pseudo 14-helical secondary structures. Far-infrared spectroscopy measurements of[LIA]-CONHshowed distinct peaks consistent with highly organised skeletal modes, i.e. regular supramolecular assembly, that was largely absent from the other two oligoamides. Modelling of SAXS data is consistent with elliptical cylinder structures resulting from nanorod bundling for both[LIA]-CONHand Ac-[LIA], but not in the unmodified sample. Consistently, AFM imaging showed large nanorod bundling structures in[LIA]-CONH, varied bundling structures in Ac-[LIA], and only aggregation in[LIA]. Amidation showed much more organised and robust assembly compared to acetylation, providing a new, easy to synthesize self-assembly motif for helical nanorod assembly that is similar but distinct to N-acylation.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1361-6528/ac2d0c | DOI Listing |
Int J Biol Macromol
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College of Material Science and Engineering, Northeast Forestry University, Harbin 150040, PR China. Electronic address:
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Pharmaceutical Nanotechnology Research Laboratory, Department of Pharmaceutics, National Institute of Pharmaceutical Education and Research Hyderabad Telangana India. Electronic address:
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January 2025
Xiamen Medical College, Xiamen, Fujian 361023, China. Electronic address:
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Key Laboratory for Microstructural Material Physics of Hebei Province, School of Science, Yanshan University, Qinhuangdao 066004 PR China. Electronic address:
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