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Customized Peptide Biomaterial Synthesis via an Environment-Reliant Auto-Programmer Stigmergic Approach

Stigmergy, a form of self-organization, was employed here to engineer a self-organizing peptide capable of forming a nano- or micro-structure and that can potentially be used in various drug delivery and biomedical applications. These self-assembling peptides exhibit several desirable qualities for...

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Autores principales: Badhe, Ravindra V., Kumar, Pradeep, Choonara, Yahya E., Marimuthu, Thashree, du Toit, Lisa C., Bijukumar, Divya, Chejara, Dharmesh R., Mabrouk, Mostafa, Pillay, Viness
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5951493/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29659507
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma11040609
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author Badhe, Ravindra V.
Kumar, Pradeep
Choonara, Yahya E.
Marimuthu, Thashree
du Toit, Lisa C.
Bijukumar, Divya
Chejara, Dharmesh R.
Mabrouk, Mostafa
Pillay, Viness
author_facet Badhe, Ravindra V.
Kumar, Pradeep
Choonara, Yahya E.
Marimuthu, Thashree
du Toit, Lisa C.
Bijukumar, Divya
Chejara, Dharmesh R.
Mabrouk, Mostafa
Pillay, Viness
author_sort Badhe, Ravindra V.
collection PubMed
description Stigmergy, a form of self-organization, was employed here to engineer a self-organizing peptide capable of forming a nano- or micro-structure and that can potentially be used in various drug delivery and biomedical applications. These self-assembling peptides exhibit several desirable qualities for drug delivery, tissue engineering, cosmetics, antibiotics, food science, and biomedical surface engineering. In this study, peptide biomaterial synthesis was carried out using an environment-reliant auto-programmer stigmergic approach. A model protein, α-gliadin (31, 36, and 38 kD), was forced to attain a primary structure with free –SH groups and broken down enzymatically into smaller fragments using chymotrypsin. This breakdown was carried out at different environment conditions (37 and 50 °C), and the fragments were allowed to self-organize at these temperatures. The new peptides so formed diverged according to the environmental conditions. Interestingly, two peptides (with molecular weights of 13.8 and 11.8 kD) were isolated when the reaction temperature was maintained at 50 °C, while four peptides with molecular weights of 54, 51, 13.8, and 12.8 kD were obtained when the reaction was conducted at 37 °C. Thus, at a higher temperature (50 °C), the peptides formed, compared to the original protein, had lower molecular weights, whereas, at a lower temperature (37 °C), two peptides had higher molecular weights and two had lower molecular weights.
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spelling pubmed-59514932018-05-15 Customized Peptide Biomaterial Synthesis via an Environment-Reliant Auto-Programmer Stigmergic Approach Badhe, Ravindra V. Kumar, Pradeep Choonara, Yahya E. Marimuthu, Thashree du Toit, Lisa C. Bijukumar, Divya Chejara, Dharmesh R. Mabrouk, Mostafa Pillay, Viness Materials (Basel) Article Stigmergy, a form of self-organization, was employed here to engineer a self-organizing peptide capable of forming a nano- or micro-structure and that can potentially be used in various drug delivery and biomedical applications. These self-assembling peptides exhibit several desirable qualities for drug delivery, tissue engineering, cosmetics, antibiotics, food science, and biomedical surface engineering. In this study, peptide biomaterial synthesis was carried out using an environment-reliant auto-programmer stigmergic approach. A model protein, α-gliadin (31, 36, and 38 kD), was forced to attain a primary structure with free –SH groups and broken down enzymatically into smaller fragments using chymotrypsin. This breakdown was carried out at different environment conditions (37 and 50 °C), and the fragments were allowed to self-organize at these temperatures. The new peptides so formed diverged according to the environmental conditions. Interestingly, two peptides (with molecular weights of 13.8 and 11.8 kD) were isolated when the reaction temperature was maintained at 50 °C, while four peptides with molecular weights of 54, 51, 13.8, and 12.8 kD were obtained when the reaction was conducted at 37 °C. Thus, at a higher temperature (50 °C), the peptides formed, compared to the original protein, had lower molecular weights, whereas, at a lower temperature (37 °C), two peptides had higher molecular weights and two had lower molecular weights. MDPI 2018-04-16 /pmc/articles/PMC5951493/ /pubmed/29659507 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma11040609 Text en © 2018 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Badhe, Ravindra V.
Kumar, Pradeep
Choonara, Yahya E.
Marimuthu, Thashree
du Toit, Lisa C.
Bijukumar, Divya
Chejara, Dharmesh R.
Mabrouk, Mostafa
Pillay, Viness
Customized Peptide Biomaterial Synthesis via an Environment-Reliant Auto-Programmer Stigmergic Approach
title Customized Peptide Biomaterial Synthesis via an Environment-Reliant Auto-Programmer Stigmergic Approach
title_full Customized Peptide Biomaterial Synthesis via an Environment-Reliant Auto-Programmer Stigmergic Approach
title_fullStr Customized Peptide Biomaterial Synthesis via an Environment-Reliant Auto-Programmer Stigmergic Approach
title_full_unstemmed Customized Peptide Biomaterial Synthesis via an Environment-Reliant Auto-Programmer Stigmergic Approach
title_short Customized Peptide Biomaterial Synthesis via an Environment-Reliant Auto-Programmer Stigmergic Approach
title_sort customized peptide biomaterial synthesis via an environment-reliant auto-programmer stigmergic approach
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5951493/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29659507
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma11040609
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