A New Design of Coiled-Coil Helix Bundle Peptide-Polymer Conjugates

POSTER

Abstract

Coiled-coil helix bundles, a common tertiary motif found in many natural proteins, underpins many structural and catalytic functions of natural proteins. \textit{De novo }design has shown that the interior of the helix bundle can be tailored to perform well-defined functions, while the exterior dictates the environment in which it is situated. By attaching synthetic polymers to helix bundle-forming peptides, producing peptide-polymer conjugates, the polymer will mediate the interactions between the helix bundle and its environment, enable the macroscopic self-assembly of the bundles, and potentially, allow them to function in non-biological environments. We report a novel design of peptide-polymer conjugates, where upon attachment of polymer to the exterior of the helix bundle stabilizes the peptide secondary and tertiary structures and preserves the built-in function of the bundle. This new design strategy should be applicable to other coiled-coil peptides and shows great promise as an avenue toward peptide-based biomolecular functional materials.

*C. Bertozzi and the Molecular Foundry at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Authors

  • Jessica Shu

    • Department of Materials Science and Engineering, UC Berkeley
  • Cen Tan

    • Department of Materials Science and Engineering, UC Berkeley
  • William DeGrado

    • Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, University of Pennsylvania
  • Ting Xu

    • University of California, Berkeley
    • Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Department of Chemistry, UC Berkeley
    • Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of California at Berkeley
    • UC Berkeley, MSE \& Chemistry