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Characterisation of minimalist co-assembled fluorenylmethyloxycarbonyl self-assembling peptide systems for presentation of multiple bioactive peptides

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 01:25 authored by Conor Horgan, Alexandra Rodriguez, Rui Li, K. Bruggeman, Nicole Stupka, Jared Raynes, Li Day, John White, Richard WilliamsRichard Williams, David Nisbet
The nanofibrillar structures that underpin self-assembling peptide (SAP) hydrogels offer great potential for the development of finely tuned cellular microenvironments suitable for tissue engineering. However, biofunctionalisation without disruption of the assembly remains a key issue. SAPS present the peptide sequence within their structure, and studies to date have typically focused on including a single biological motif, resulting in chemically and biologically homogenous scaffolds. This limits the utility of these systems, as they cannot effectively mimic the complexity of the multicomponent extracellular matrix (ECM). In this work, we demonstrate the first successful co-assembly of two biologically active SAPs to form a coassembled scaffold of distinct two-component nanofibrils, and demonstrate that this approach is more bioactive than either of the individual systems alone. Here, we use two bioinspired SAPs from two key ECM proteins: Fmoc-FRGDF containing the RGD sequence from fibronectin and Fmoc-DIKVAV containing the IKVAV sequence from laminin. Our results demonstrate that these SAPs are able to co-assemble to form stable hybrid nanofibres containing dual epitopes. Comparison of the co-assembled SAP system to the individual SAP hydrogels and to a mixed system (composed of the two hydrogels mixed together post-assembly) demonstrates its superior stable, transparent, shear-thinning hydrogels at biological pH, ideal characteristics for tissue engineering applications. Importantly, we show that only the coassembled hydrogel is able to induce in vitro multinucleate myotube formation with C2C12 cells. This work illustrates the importance of tissue engineering scaffold functionalisation and the need to develop increasingly advanced multicomponent systems for effective ECM mimicry.

Funding

Generating multi-component scaffolding to influence the differentiation of embryonic stem cells

Australian Research Council

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History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1016/j.actbio.2016.04.038
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 17427061

Journal

Acta Biomaterialia

Volume

38

Start page

11

End page

22

Total pages

12

Publisher

Elsevier

Place published

Netherlands

Language

English

Copyright

© 2016 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Former Identifier

2006061649

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2016-05-12

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