Coassembly-Induced Transformation of Dipeptide Amyloid-Like Structures into Stimuli-Responsive Supramolecular Materials

Abstract
Conformational transition of proteins and peptides into highly stable, beta-sheet-rich structures is observed in many amyloid-associated neurodegenerative disorders, yet the precise mechanism of amyloid formation at the molecular level remains poorly understood due to the complex molecular structures. Short peptides provide simplified models for studying the molecular basis of the assembly mechanism that governs beta-sheet fibrillation processes underlying the formation and inhibition of amyloid-like structures. Herein, we report a supramolecular coassembly strategy for the inhibition and transformation of stable beta-sheet-rich amyloid-derived dipeptide self-assemblies into adaptable secondary structural fibrillar assemblies by mixing with bipyridine derivatives. The interplay between the type and mixing ratio of bipyridine derivatives allowed the variable coassembly process with stimuli-responsive functional properties, studied by various experimental characterizations and computational methods. Furthermore, the resulting coassemblies showed functional redox- and photoresponsive properties, making them promising candidates for controllable drug release and fluorescent imprint. This work presents a coassembly strategy not only to explore the mechanism of amyloid-like structure formation and inhibition at the molecular level but also to manipulate amyloid-like structures into responsive supramolecular coassemblies for material science and biotechnology applications.
Funding Information
  • National Natural Science Foundation of China (21522307, 21773248, 21802143, 21802144, 51861145304)
  • H2020 European Research Council (694426)
  • Chinese Academy of Sciences (QYZDB-SSW-JSC034)
  • Innovation Research Community Science Fund (21821005)