Fabrication of nanofibrous electrospun scaffolds from a heterogeneous library of co- and self-assembling peptides

July 28, 2017

Title

Fabrication of nanofibrous electrospun scaffolds from a heterogeneous library of co- and self-assembling peptides

Author

Mahboubeh Maleki, Antonino Natalello, Raffaele Pugliese, Fabrizio Gelain

Year

2017

Journal

Acta Biomaterialia

Abstract

Self-assembling (SAPs) and co-assembling peptides (CAPs) are driving increasing enthusiasm as synthetic but biologically inspired biomaterials amenable of easy functionalization for regenerative medicine. On the other hand, electrospinning (ES) is a versatile technique useful for tailoring the nanostructures of various biomaterials into scaffolds resembling the extracellular matrices found in organs and tissues. The synergistic merging of these two approaches is a long-awaited advance in nanomedicine that has not been deeply documented so far. In the present work, we describe the successful ES of a library of diverse SAPs and CAPs into biomimetic nanofibrous mats. Our results suggest that suitable ES solutions are characterized by high concentrations of peptides, providing backbone physical chain entanglements, and by random coil/α-helical conformations while β-sheet aggregation may be detrimental to spinnability. The resulting peptide fibers feature interconnected seamless mats with nanofibers average diameters ranging from ∼100 nm to ∼400 nm. Also, peptide chemical nature and ES set up parameters play pivotal roles in determining the conformational transitions and morphological properties of the produced nanofibers. Far from being an exhaustive description of the just-opened novel field of ES-assembled peptides, this seminal work aims at shining a light on a still missing general theory for the production of electrospun peptidic biomaterials bringing together the spatial, biochemical and biomimetic of these two techniques into unique scaffolds for tissue engineering.

Instrument

J-815

Keywords

Circular dichroism, Secondary structure, Chemical stability, Nanostructures, Materials, Biochemistry