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Effect of heterocyclic capping groups on the self-assembly of a dipeptide hydrogel

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-16, 07:33 authored by Adam D Martin, Jonathan P Wojciechowski, Holly Hunt, Peter in het PanhuisPeter in het Panhuis, Pall Thordarson
The mechanism and design rules associated with the self-assembly of short peptides into hydrogels is currently not well understood. In this work, four diphenylalanine-based peptides have been synthesised, bearing heterocyclic capping groups which have different degrees of hydrogen bonding potential and nitrogen substitution. For these four peptides, zeta potential and electrical impedance spectroscopy measurements were undertaken to monitor gelation, with the impedance data showing different gelation times for each peptide hydrogel. Through a combination of atomic force microscopy and rheological measurmeents, including dynamic strain and frequency sweeps, and thixotropic tests, the relationship between the mechanism of self-assembly in these hydrogels and their macroscopic behaviour can be established. It is observed that the degree of nitrogen substitution affects the self-assembly mechanisms of the hydrogels and as such, that there is an interplay between branching and bundling self-assembly pathways that are responsible for the final properties of each hydrogel.

Funding

ARC Centre of Excellence for Electromaterials Science

Australian Research Council

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History

Citation

Martin, A. D., Wojciechowski, J. P., Warren, H., in het Panhuis, M. & Thordarson, P. (2016). Effect of heterocyclic capping groups on the self-assembly of a dipeptide hydrogel. Soft Matter, 12 (10), 2700-2707.

Journal title

Soft Matter

Volume

12

Issue

10

Pagination

2700-2707

Language

English

RIS ID

105919

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