Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

Supramolecular Nanofibers with Superior Bioactivity to Insulin-Like Growth Factor-I

100

Citations

52

References

2019

Year

Abstract

Bioactive peptides derived from proteins generally need to be folded into secondary structures to activate downstream signaling pathways. However, synthetic peptides typically form random-coils, thus losing their bioactivities. Here, we show that by introducing a self-assembling peptide motif and using different preparation pathways, a peptide from insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-1) can be folded into an α-helix and β-sheet. The β-sheet one exhibits a low dissociation constant to the IGF-1 receptor (IGF-1R, 11.5 nM), which is only about 3 times higher than that of IGF-1 (4.3 nM). However, the α-helical one and the peptide without self-assembling motif show weak affinities to IGF-1R ( K<sub>D</sub> = 179.1 and 321.6 nM, respectively). At 10 nM, the β-sheet one efficiently activates the IGF-1 downstream pathway, significantly enhancing HUVEC proliferation and preventing cell apoptosis. The β-sheet peptide shows superior performance to IGF-1 in vivo, and it improves ischemic hind-limb salvage by significantly reducing muscle degradation and enhancing limb vascularization. Our study provides a useful strategy to constrain peptides into different conformations, which may lead to the development of supramolecular nanomaterials mimicking biofunctional proteins.

References

YearCitations

Page 1